Our future view....A new year with one last big push to finish the majority of the concrete work and finally start on the house. Thor is expected mid January. Between us we should knock it out in a couple of months weather permitting.
I changed my mind again. The septic doesn't work as planned. I'll never be able to get it serviced. No current company will run 200' feet of pumping pipe down to it. Even Jeff, the concrete pumper, will not run pipe down that far. I have to build a sluice from the lower deck. With all that in mind I now plan on building another cistern. It fills the hole solving a safety problem for people and animals and provides another six thousand gallons of storage. In addition at some future date I can put a small in-law unit on top of it. I now have to change the rebar again and enlarge the footprint. No big deal in the grand scheme of things.That solved one problem. Next, where to put the septic, how to dig the hole and how to get the equipment in place? Yikes.
I brought Elvis up to run my ideas by him.
I decide the only real place the septic can go is down and to the right of the cottage. Among other reasons, really the most important, it will allow any future servicing from the driveway above.
We have at it for a couple of days in shifts but I had enough. I call Jose with the big cat.
Why didn't I call Jose to begin with? For one thing he's not available on short notice and when he does show up it is like having Godzilla rumble through the property. Among other things it also means there is a good chance my thin concrete temporary driveway is going to suffer some damage. Not to mention a $500 delivery charge. For that money I have to think of multiple tasks before I commit.
Plan K!Dig septic, grade side of cottage for future steps, level upper patio and ready for rebar/concrete, build temporary wood retaining wall and back fill it with the patio dirt. Reshape lower driveway and raise the turn so I can back all the way down to the cottage to deliver materials, steel, siding etc. Add four feet to upper retaining wall for the future driveway turnaround.
Someday I'll get to the house itself! None of this was in Building for Dummies!
Grading the upper driveway and patio. We put in the steel floor during the two weeks we waited for Jose. Remember everything has to be carried by hand down the hill.
Finishing the septic, breaking through the rock.The graded upper patio with the beginnings of a house.
Jose took ten hours at $125/hr plus delivery spread over two days which allowed us a late afternoon to build the 8' high wood retaining wall. Ultimately we had to rebuild it the next day when the rebar spikes gave out. Dig out the back fill, take it apart and sink the 4x4's in post holes. Put it all back together and hope like hell it holds all the tonnage. Jose got a nice two hours talking on the phone.
The view from the bedroom downstairs. Eight foot doors, seven and half feet across.
Leo, who has the only other truck that can make it up the mountain, once again became the back up guy. This time I called his uncle ahead of time and got the pricing straightened out beforehand. As usual I had Leo provide the extra crew that I pay once the concrete starts pumping and not a moment before. Laying pipe etc is on his dime. My clock stops once the concrete does.
During the scheduling wait we put more steel up and spread plywood around for walking and safety for the upcoming pour.
Still to be put in are floor joists over the cisterns. I found the pool ladder in the dumpster while diving!
Once again we are in a race with the concrete delivery and Thor's having to leave. If there is a delay Thor is gone. This is how he generally leaves or comes. This is how he came from Maine.
Looking through the navigation station to the captain's quarters
They let me pretend.
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