![]() |
Teenager |
![]() |
Adult |
Upon returning from St Thomas with the lumber to finish trimming out the kitchen baseboards and the front door porch I stacked it to left it dry out for a couple of weeks. The stuff is literally dripping with the treatment. It gets all over the truck when it is really fresh. Like I said, I put it up wet but not dripping!
Home Depot finally received more of the travertine bullnose I needed to trim out the porch. Because they never had enough I had been buying 8-10, one foot pieces, whenever they had any over the last year. Now I had the forty I needed. I was really looking forward to getting this work done. Despite my best efforts water was still finding its way in along the edge. Not a lot but just enough to piss me off on occasion, leaving a water mark after it would dry.
What you can no longer see in the photo above is the seam between the 2x12 and 2x4 that I used as a combo fascia board to encapsulate the red iron i beam. There were no 2x16's available and even if there were I couldn't afford it--not to mention the weight. To cover the seam I cut the 16" tiles in four inch strips. They are already in place above waiting for the bullnose.
Place camera on scaffolding, run down plank, pick up bullnose and smile!
There's always drama with everything. As I mentioned I bought all the bullnose over the course of a year. All from the same supplier in Turkey. I was so looking forward to put it up. I laid it out to get the color mix right and got to it. Well as it turns out every batch while looking the same was slighly different, each in a different way. Either the curve was bigger or smaller, likewise for the height, depth and all the ways it could be measured. Basically everything was off about an 1/8". Maybe no big deal to a professional but a huge headache to me. If you know where to look you will see it.
The finished look before grouting.
![]() |
A baby burro having its leg fixed after being hit by a car |
In what has to be a first, Tortola's Road Town Ferry sunk in the harbor while being worked on.
![]() |
Drying out! |
Priming the baseboards before putting them up.
I had not shaved in so long that when I did, I had this! Denise's worst fears about me turning into Grizzly Adams came true when we did a Skype call. She can handle a lot of things but facial hair is not one of them! I figure with the gray hair folks will stop thinking I'm in my 40's. ;~)))))
![]() |
Tropical storm Rafael taking shape |
![]() |
What a nice hurricane. Changing course several times to miss everyone!
You have your info commercials and we have ours! ;~))
|
Full screen a must....
Next up, downstairs.
The router, miter saw and the table saw you don't see. |
I should have taken some before and after pics. What you don't see, this area was piled high with everything that had been stored inside and was moved to pour the floor during the last concrete work.
It was a good two days before I had everything stored and new work benches in place. I relocated everything from upstairs. All future messes will be made down here. It feels so good. Progress.The work benches also doubled as my scaffolding while I put in the electric for the fans, lights and put up metal furring strips to drop the ceiling below the red iron. I screwed up the electric. More on that later.
After trimming out the columns etc I started putting up the ceiling. A lot of the 4x8 beadboard panels had suffered some cosmetic termite damage with their long years in the containers.
No worries however. These two products, which I tested by applying them to another board and leaving it out in the weather for several months, passed the test. One for bulk, the other for skim coating. With time and patience it makes crude treated lumber look like its been milled.
Same drill as everywhere else, multiple coats of paint to get a build with wood putty skim coats in between. In the end four or five coats. Hey, its new construction--that's what it takes.
It feels like a death in the family. My sander of 17 years gave up the ghost. I can't bring myself to throw it in the garbage yet. I'm getting pathetic! |
After multiple coats the columns are starting to look pretty good. A half column will be put up on the far concrete corner, housing a two way light switch for the covered porch lights. With all the small changes I make as I go along, things I thought out years ago sometimes get overlooked. This time it was the layout and location of the lights. I got carried away with the idea of wall sconces on each side of the bedroom doors and another by the utility room. Wired everything and put up the ceiling only to remember why I did not do that years ago--the storm shutters have to go where the sconces would be! Duh. My hope, with four inch recessed lights I should be able to get my arm up into the ceiling and get a hold of the wires. If not, I'll have to take down the ceiling.
This is how it happens.
The best nine minutes for anyone building, buying or remodeling.This is how it happens.
In another surprise I found I was allergic to the new treated lumber. Blistering everywhere the saw dust and sweat mixed. The itching later was worse than poison ivy. The first attack was everywhere over my chest and arms. The old stuff never bothered me.
Back to the crash chronicles. I guess they are happy the retaining wall was done! Thankfully no one was hurt.
On a truly sad note there was a small airplane crash at sea between St Thomas and St Croix. One survivor. The wreckage arrives in St Thomas.

the day after
The discarded original screens got recycled into the porch railings. Copper tubing with number 3 rebar inserts. Simple, strong and a very inexpensive to construct. Did I mention the patina?
Waiting for the top rail.
That's is far as I got when I ran out of my 10' copper pipe. I'll get the rest when I return from San Francisco. This year I'm leaving the day before Thanksgiving and staying for six weeks. Denise was not able to make her October visit so we are doing a twofer! See you next year assuming the Mayans are wrong!
No comments:
Post a Comment