A daily happening over at Francis bay. (Not my photo.)To the good life. Working in the shade.
While posing as the architect, engineer and builder I get to make changes, within reason, without the endless consultations, call backs and redraws. We won't even talk about the money saved.
It can't be stressed enough about the benefits of living on the property full time during the construction. Now I admit most folks would not do a unibomber shack but live on the property they should. Beyond the short commute the land comes alive, the seasons, the sun and views to name a few.
As I previously mentioned, who knows when, we moved the splash pool from the upper patio to the lower because of the sun position during the winter. The jungle hides it for about four months where we originally thought to put the pool. Had I not been there we would be pissing and moaning about how chilly the pool was during the winter. A pool needs to be in the sun and out of the wind all year. It is now.
The second major change. A small "Juliet" balcony off the dining room replacing a picture window. A small room just got larger with French doors opening onto a balcony, better ventilation and ascetically a much nicer look indoors and out. The romantics can now step out and look at the stars and moon!
The third major change we made as we put up the studs--enclosing what was to be a small screened porch off the living room. By doing this we created a small den/office/library or junior bedroom. Aside from a better use of space it made the house stronger and easier to build. The framing and detailing are now consistent with the entire footprint.
The final major change. I replaced the upper patio bedroom windows with french doors. It's a living room now! There will be no bed against that wall. Out opening doors, with no thresholds, will be a seamless transition from the patio to the porch. Indoor, outdoor living.
In short none of these changes probably would have happened had I not been there. Strike that, they would have happened years later in an expensive remodel.
Help arrives, my buddy Jimmy, on the left in the pic below with Ryan.
Of course I put him up in my "One Seasons" accommodation. Not to be outdone, it comes with a crab toilet. We aim for the total experience! By the end of his stay he called himself "jumpin" Jimmy.
The view from the tent zipper window looking through the planned french doors. Hey, it could be worse, I could have charged!
Now the question. What to do with three people. You get so used to working with one, two seems like too much. Jimmy is like Thor, he disappears and starts doing things. It's a Virgo thing. Everything is now organized temporarily. It's a little unsettling to have screws arranged by size! Better still, Jimmy is a successful contractor back in California so he instinctively tried to take over until he ran into "Daddy". I mean, I have to keep the pretension going.
Thankfully he ignored me for the most part and we finished the hardest part of the red iron assembly--erecting the three 20' porch columns. I'll save you the details but they were a bitch. 250 pound monsters wanting to go their own directions. Anchor bolts which had drifted, overpowered hammer drills, columns recessed 3/4" from the building edges off by 1/4" and other things I forget. Concrete is not as plum and square as you would like. That's why god invented stucco guys. Plus I wanted a 1" slope on the porch that wasn't in the plans which affected the plates on the wall.

Ryan and I discussing the placement of the wall plates relative to the slope I want, to the drawings, the floor coming out the dining room and its effect on the roof line. Taken by Jimmy with his crackberry. Mine's almost showing. Scary indeed.
Yes we assembled scaffold towers and used the block and tackle again to get these beasts up and on the bolts. Don't forget, most anywhere else there would be a boom truck lifting every piece in place. The entire red iron structure would go up in two days with long lunches. With two people, humping everything down the mountain by hand, two/three weeks. Trust me, I know. The columns alone took us a couple of days.
The boss comes in a couple of weeks.
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