Sunday, November 29, 2015

A short three months



Sand dune hills under the sea.


August 17th, my latest return ever. Generally, I'm back on island by the 1st coinciding with the start of the second month of hurricane season. In addition, by arriving so late, I'll be getting back on a plane in three months. Starting up and shutting down kills a couple of weeks so if there are any delays on materials etc. very little gets done. The marble tile being a perfect example delaying my departure back in July.

Not a good start, my red eye was delayed in Miami. I arrived late and my ride was long gone. Humping 140 lbs of tile to the truck was not the welcome I had in mind. Fifty on my back, fifty hanging from my hand, and forty on some shaky carry on wheels in addition to my computer bag stuffed to over flowing. Remember, there are no sidewalks to speak of.

Our door knocker is getting impatient with how long this is all taking.
The good news---the truck started right up. Sitting idle for a month never seems to be a problem especially when it's parked in the sun. Shack was in good shape and Lizzy was immediately at the door. The world makes sense again!

Home Depot came through as promised. The tile was all on STT waiting for pickup. I laid around Tuesday and hoped over on Wednesday, picking up half the shipment. Mighty Mouse can't handle 1000 pounds any longer. The clutch is slipping, the ball joints are shot and the power steering leaks like a sieve. Thursday for the second half.



No rest for the wicked, by Friday hurricane Danny projected to be a direct hit. Thankfully it's more art than science and he moved south by Monday.


The standing joke in hurricane ally, "it's the one behind that you have to worry about"! Life imitating art. By Thursday, here she comes, Erika. I always wait until the last second before I do my Mexican fire drill.



Ericka was not a lady. While not a direct hit and downgraded to a tropical storm, the open waters of Coral Bay still wrecked havoc. Some sinkings and two boats on the rocks. From previous postings you may recall, Jaws, a repeat offender was always on the rocks dragging anchor in any major blow. Earlier in the year, a storm sunk her in the middle of the bay. Well, there's her hull back on the rocks. You can't make this up.






Back to the grind. To get my motor going I chose the kitchen backsplash first. The color was pretty good which is always helpful with the mental agony my mind puts me through. Hour after hour of this tedium, laying and setting each little tiny tile with all the spacers, my fat fingers getting thinset everywhere, constantly having to clean the joints, knowing all the while if the merchant hadn't fucked me in Florida I would have been putting up 24x24 marble tiles matching the counter tops. The job would have taken hours instead of days. As some one who had it beat into them, and I mean beat into them, you never, lie, cheat or steal from an individual. I have never understood people who do. The merchant knew exactly what he was doing to me. I have done a lot of things the priests had problems with but not those. If I give you my word on anything, no matter how trivial, I will either be dead or in the hospital before I break it. It's a weird code, I know. I dodge it by being a hermit. haha.


It's the little things. Had to wait weeks for the pencil trim around the border.

Cutting in my driveway. Just kidding, sort of.



This is the best video I have found that puts St John and the VI in perspective. It's why we live here.


With the kitchen taken care of, the downstairs bath was next. Look at the picture above. Home Depot did it again. You get what you pay for. Fuck, the tiles are not uniform as regards their thickness. Maybe for professional tilers it would not be a problem. For me, it was the end of the world. I only discovered the problem several courses in when I thought I was putting up the thinset unevenly. At eight tiles to a box with 150 boxes, I had 1200 tiles to sort through with three different sizes. I wanted to kill myself. The good deal just turned into the royal screw job. Barabbas in the salt minds with a little Sisyphus thrown in for good measure.




This is where I put as many of the wrong sized tiles as I could, behind the sink and the toilet to come. I had no choice as Home Depot had no other tiles to choose from. We won't even discuss the color variations from the original boxes I bought. The wrong sized tiles were a shitty color. 


By putting all the odd sized tiles on the sink wall, the reflecting light/shadows didn't make them jump out. I'm too embarrassed to tell you how long the bathroom walls took me. What I will tell you is it easier to put up 12x12 or larger tile than it is to put up 3x6 when you account for cleaning, spacing and finally the grout. I totally get the slabs in spas now! I also REALLY get porcelain tile with its exact sizing in every dimension. If all natural stone is uneven, I'm done. Life is too short. I am definitely not tiling the patios. I have to find a way to have a professional team do that.

The only therapy that works for me.

And in local news, the following. How this island with only 21 sq miles and four thousand residents creates all this, month in, month out, is unexplainable.





The only way to clean your feet

The truck finally gave up the ghost trying to make it up the mountain. The clutch couldn't make it. In a break for the good guys, Jack is a mechanic at the bottom of the hill who used to run the Porsche dealership in Carmel, Ca. What are the chances? Anyway, he agreed to work on my truck despite its age. Everything is rusted solid. Toyota even offered at one time to buy it back at twice the bluebook plus a new truck at cost. I just didn't have the money to take advantage. The bad news, with parts necessary I'll be stuck on the mountain for perhaps two weeks. Thank god for tuna fish!

Eight days later for $1286 I had a new clutch and flywheel, new front struts and one ball joint. He couldn't get the other off. I spent the time finishing the bathroom, this time dealing with the shower snafu.




If you look at the picture above you can see I used steel studs to create a level line around the shower and the entire room for my first course of tile. Sometimes I come up with good ideas. The blind squirrel routine. Now for the other shoe. Last year when I laid in the drain and tile, spending all my time concentrating on my weird drain location caused by increasing the closet on the other side of the wall, I had a swale along the back wall that I did not know about until I put up the level steel stud. At its deepest point in the center it was about 3/8". How bad would it look when I grouted the wall?

It was bad, especially sitting on the toilet. You couldn't miss it. Trust me, I tried. Fixing it would be a nightmare. Worse still, I would need new stone tile. Not a easy thing to come by. Well, you can see from the picture above I decided I couldn't look at it. That's a new concrete bed I put down on top of the existing tile. Now I have to find new stone.



On a positive note, and it helped me decide, I could center the drain with a little finagling. It couldn't be circular, the hole is not moving. I saw a picture of a spa with long rectangular drains along two walls. I had a heart attack when I saw the prices they wanted. Google it, you'll see. Ebay to the rescue. I found this stainless 12" piece for next to nothing.



Sure the drain was in the wrong place but that's why god invented grinders and hole saws so I could relocate it the end and place it over the existing hole in the floor.


Job done, and now a nice spa drain centered on the floor hiding a closet screw up. 


A happy camper...


Back to searching for stone tiles for the shower. Previously I had searched everything available on St Thomas and in San Francisco settling on the rectangular shaped stone at Home Depot. Nothing was even close. The problem remains the same, when you wet the tile with sealant, grout or even water it changes color, dramatically. The original floor stone was pure white. What a shock when I sealed it and it turned into a multi colored floor. With that, I went looking online talking to manufacturers, retailers etc. Most were getting out of the business or finally warning installers that the stone changes colors significantly on some occasions. Thankfully all I needed was 20 sq ft so I took a chance on a Amazon vender who said his tile was white and they would ship to the VI. We shall see.


The "universal" fitting wasn't so universal. Had to cut out the old one. While I waited for the stone to arrive I proceeded to hook up the shower, toilet, and sink.


The last of the brushed nickel fixtures. Not available any longer in California. Parts per trillion apparently cause cancer in mice. Stupid is as stupid does. I hope everyone enjoys chrome, we don't. Interiors on STT was giving it away preparing for their move.


Feeling quite civilized. After so many years in the shack, it doesn't feel right. I have to train myself to use a toilet again!  ;~) Oh my god, a mirror and a sink to shave over. Hot water. Who knew! 


It's always something. When I hooked up the upstairs bathroom, besides flooding the downstairs with about 1/4" of water--I put the pipe in years ago but forgot I never finalized it, I had no pressure after I glued every thing together. Toilet yes, but further down the line to the sink, nothing. Check after check, I couldn't figure it out for the life of me. Where was I losing all my pressure. God forbid it was inside the wall  I had tiled. Hours went by, going up and down floors looking for a tell tale leak. Nothing. I knew wherever it was it had to be between the toilet and the sink or so I thought. Yes, there was water coming out of the tap, but little compared to the norm. I took apart the fixture just to double check. A little manufacturer dirt but all was good. With that, I started crawling on my hands and knees with a hose listening to the walls. Just call me House! Low and behold on the outside shower wall I heard something in the concrete floor. I went downstairs and measured where the pipes passed through the 10" wall. With my 20lb pry bar I went outside on the shower floor and started breaking up the floor. As you can see, there it was. A cracked pipe leaking all my pressure. The slab outside had settled about 1/2" over the years and cracked the pipe. They are now capped and both baths are good to go. The funny part is I have told everyone I don't believe in the common practice of putting water lines in slabs for earthquake reasons. I figured I could get away with three feet. Haha. Perfect justice.


If you look closely you will see two butts sticking out from under the shack. There's ten more underneath. I know when heavy rain is coming. The wild goat herd shelters under the shack.

 Lizzy meets Billy






Very affordable if you do it yourself. New mask and replacement vision lenses. When I stopped wearing contacts snorkeling went out the window. I tried gluing old glasses to the inside but it didn't work. Not to mention looking like an idiot. I do need a cane to get from the water to my towel, however! If I grope you as I stumble forward it was just an accident. ;~)


The white tile arrived. As you can see, it was anything but white. Hard gray even before it was wet. I even tried ripping out the worst offenders and it didn't help. The saga continues. It did give me an idea which I wish I had thought of last year.


I hopped over to Home Depot and bought the stone shown above. We had previously considered last year and rejected it. It has always been available but we turned it down because of all the black and gray stones. Stateside they sell a version with light brown to golden stones that would have worked. With time running out I cherry picked through all the tile they had on hand trying to get the least amount of gray and black. I even took some to the bathroom to see how bad the color change would be. At my wits end after more than a year of this madness I bought it.


I dry laid the floor and then ripped off all the dark pieces. Madness, I know. Every replacement stone has to be handed glued in place attempting to keep the same spacing. At least the spa drain looks good and the grout line along the back wall will be perfect!


A week later, after some extreme tedium, I had the final floor. What a circle jerk that started over a year ago. I laid three floors in that stupid shower. WTF. The moral of the story that I have since found out--don't put stone in your shower, it leaves little pockets of water. Very tiny but you have to brush it out otherwise bad things will happen to your grout. Live and learn. But I did have a rewarding hot shower.


Two days later, mentally exhausted, I was waiting for the ferry to get to the airport. Two months in the land of milk and honey. It was one of those years where if I didn't keep this blog and the assorted pictures I would have felt I didn't get anything done. Everything seemed to be a constant struggle. There's always next year!


Thankfully a quiet 2015 Season with a couple of near misses.




Saturday, August 29, 2015

SF, I still pinch myself as I walk in the front door

 
 
 
The welcome home committee! 27 years through the same front door and counting.
 
A little SF history...
If you don't know Chinatown, you don't know San Francisco. The largest outside of China since its beginning. It is a world all its own where generations live and die and where English is not necessary.
 

1886
 
 
1930's
 
 
1960's
 
 
2000's
 


Now
 
When the laundry disappears, Chinatown will be officially dead.
 
Retired crouching tigers
 
Once again spent the SF break looking for tile. Bought 35 sq ft for the kitchen backsplash. Nothing is easy. Originally I thought I had purchased enough of the Calcutta marble to take care of this but playing me for an export rube when I was in Florida the entire shipment was not consistent. Part of me is convinced that once merchants hear, for export, things get dodgy. If you recall I was shipped a very bad load of veneer plaster. Everyone along the shipping line blamed it on someone else. The end result is you get stuck with it, thousands of miles from its origins and no one to look for compensation.

What should have been an easy task, putting up 24" tiles now turned into a real pain trying to find a shade of white that remotely matched the marble of the counters. Who knew so many shades of white could be such a pain in the ass. Cabinets, two types of marble, window and door paint, and now a backsplash. Being a glutton for punishment I decided I could carry the 140 lbs in my luggage. The breakage of the glass tile convinced me to be an idiot. My buddy Roger said he would pick me up at the ferry and drive me to my truck.

 
Best movie I saw
 
 
 
 

 

Saw this movie last year but it really came alive when we saw this exhibit at the DeYoung.
 
 


Angelique Kerber, 2015 Bank of the West tourney winner. We went to the quarter finals at night. Wow, watching the sunset and then pros under the lights. Too fabulous.


 


 

It's amazing how much has changed in 100 years and yet it all feels the same having been here almost 40 of those years.


Saturday, July 25, 2015

Back to the hermitage

 
Now that's love. Two months gone and Lizzy shows up the minute I walk down the path to the shack. Inside everything in in working shape. Electricity is still on and the refrig is working. No small feat. It makes returning after a red eye bearable. It means coffee in the morning and food in the freezer to tide me over until the jet lag ends and I can get over to St Thomas.

I knew it was too good to be true. The truck wouldn't start the next day. Tim shows up to give me a jump. Still no luck. It's not the battery as best we can tell. I'll have to wait until Monday to get a mechanic to come by. Money I did not want to spend. With nothing to do on Sunday, I take the battery out, clean everything including the grounding wires to the engine block etc. Put it all back together and miracle of miracles it starts just as the battery is being run down from constant trying.
Elation is an understatement. All the fear and loathing about serious problems, ordering and waiting for parts, all the while stranded on the mountain while trying to figure out how to pay for it. Poof, all gone!

Not a good way to start the day. Mongoose Junction fire. Ultimately put out by all hands with a giant bilge pump rushed over from Coral Bay.

 
 
 
 

It was this ship's pump, the Silver Cloud, that saved the day in Cruz Bay. She's anchored in Coral Bay. As a coincidence would have it I was invited aboard for a surprise birthday party for David Silverman.

Here we are waiting in the hold. Surprise...

 

The usual suspects. Without David I'm not sure Save Coral Bay would be so successful. Summer's End Group had no idea they would run into such a force. With our Go Fund Me fund raising I think it is safe to say we have a very good chance of prevailing.


Serenity

 


That was quick! Three days later the tile arrived. Two of the boxes suffered major damage. Hmm, will I have enough now? Add that to my rookie fears of worrying about the walls being plumb, the ceiling and window being level etc. I never gave any of this a second thought until I actually started to tile and I realized what the implications could possibly be from my original plaster job. The tile is perfect and it is definitely going to show if my work isn't. I made a minor adjustment at the base board and started. The first hurdle was at the window sill. Pass. Then the top of the window and finally the ceiling line.
 
Despite my starting fears it turns out cutting glass tiles, even with the wrong blade is a lot easier than travertine. Perfect cuts every time. There is an enormous amount of tedium however. Each tile has to set with spacers etc. The same effort as laying a 16" tile but you have to place eight tiles to cover the same area. Plus you have to be very meticulous with the thinset coverage. Any hollows will show through the glass when it cures. They try to help by putting paper on the back of each tile. In the future I will definitely lean towards tiles already on a mat so that you are putting up eight or more at one time. While this wall was only 40 sq. feet it felt like doing 300sq ft of floor tile. I am not looking forward to the down stairs bath where I plan on doing the entire shower and a chair wall all the way around the room. 
 

In another break for the good guys the pattern layout allowed me to make use of all the broken tiles filling in the end pieces.  In the end it all worked out. All my self induced tension produced a reoccurring pinched nerve that numbs part of my left arm and elbow. Haha.
 
The color looks much better in person.
 


Thank god they don't bite!
 
 

My new toaster/convection oven The old Black and Decker bought the farm after eight years. Totally absurd for a shack kitchen but it makes a great pizza.
 
Carnival 2015
 
 
 
 
With the wall finished I figured I'd put the sink and toilet in upstairs. As you can see the termites constantly remind me who's the boss in the tropics.
 
 
From the ongoing boating chronicles...all in a couple of months.
 
 

 
 The boat above, Jaws, is Coral Bay's constant nightmare owned by a local reprobate. Always dragging anchor fouling other lines etc. This is his third time on the rocks. He's also connected to the marina people. Well, nature took it's course and sunk her after a small storm.
  
 
 

 In really horrible news the wreck above killed two people.

A flipped water truck
 
 
In more tragic news a crane truck from St Croix shipped over to St John to help on a Park project flipped over on a steep grade and slid off the road killing the passenger.

 
The bladder arrived with the hardware above. As you can see the piece being held is larger than the opening it is supposed to go into. Everything comes in individual baggies so you don't realize there's a problem until it is time to assemble and use. Of course the manufacture doesn't believe it, hence the picture is taken and forwarded.
 

Assembled waiting for the part. This is how my punch list gets so long and half the time I forget how I originally did something or why. When the part comes I'll have to stop doing whatever I'm working on and remind myself what the original problem and solution was. It's all very manageable until your punch list gets pages long. I have some electrical circuity issues downstairs that are going to drive me nuts when the time comes. The labeling has faded in the humidity over the years.
 
 
 


Another marina proposal
In the category of you can't make this shit up, this is what the clowns envision for Coral Bay.
 
Interesting parking job. Using a small tree as the parking break.
 
 
 

The part arrived six weeks later. Then the drama started. Following the directions I assembled the unit as instructed. Checked and rechecked the system, pump and filters, bladder and all the lines. Whenever I powered up the system the pump would not stop running nor would the system hold any pressure. Of course I thought the bladder had suffered in transit. I even pulled the filters from the cisterns (below) thinking I did something was wrong, perhaps they were too low and plugged? With no luck, I called the bladder help line, to no avail. Finally I called the unit manufacturer--different from the bladder people--and explained my situation. After reading them the instructions they said it was backwards. The printed directions were for a different set up. Say it ain't so. Now all my plumbing is off by about one inch. After I stopped crying I took everything apart and started all over.



Finally a temporary working toilet! Just in time for Denise's arrival. On the way to the airport I stopped at Home Depot and ordered 150 sq. ft. of  white Carrera 3x6 tiles for the lower bath. It was an orderable product. Delivery expected in 3-4 weeks. At $5.69 a sq ft. it was a great deal.

Yea, two weeks of beach time with Denise.
 




While Denise was on island we allowed ourselves to be seduced into a real time waster. Previously Denise had been contacted by a loan officer of a bank that shall go unnamed. The basic premise was they wanted to loan us up to 80% of the assessed value of our property. Money to be used as we saw fit at 5%. Given out precarious financial situation relative to finishing the house in our lifetimes, haha, we had to take a look. Building the house on Social Security checks was getting very old. I don't mind poverty, been there done that a few times, but with no end in site it was getting extremely demoralizing. I hadn't had a drink at a bar in years. Thank god for books!

So with financial records in hand and despite warnings from Elvis Marsh that it was a scam of sorts, we went through the interviews, as in plural. Appointment after appointment, review after review, each time wanting another piece of data despite our rating over 800. All we wanted was 100k, a paltry percent of the appraised value. Sadly it was following the script that Elvis had outlined. In a nutshell, your loan gets approved but they flip it to a construction loan in the fine print with a deadline for completion which then turns into a mortgage, throw on mandatory hurricane and earthquake insurance for 12k a year with a 100k deductible and a maximum payout of 60% of replacement value. As an added bonus thousands of dollars in closing cost! Dumfounded I asked the agent if we looked that stupid reminding her that I built the house and damage could not reach 100k. She pretended to act insulted. Yes, yes, I want to pay you about 150k for insurance I don't need to get nothing in return. No wonder peeps that buy/build houses with a mortgage have to charge so much when they rent it and then walk away if there is major damage from a hurricane.
 
 
 
Well, at least my special order sink arrived. I put it in sideways so it doesn't protrude into the door opening. The bathroom tile is now past due. I have to scramble now to have work within the constraints of our budget. The tile was going to take me until I returned to San Francisco in July.
 
 
 
These are the pictures of the unfinished retaining walls. That's the project. Wire brush and sand off the crud build up over the years and put a stucco finish on.
 
 
I found a very affordable material out of Puerto Rico that is a combo cement/marble dust product that can be used indoors or out, $17 a bag, that leaves a very smooth surface as opposed to a sandy stucco finish. Something along the lines you see on Greek islands. Manual labor that I'll have to teach myself as I go. 


 
 
 
They make it look so easy
 
 
 
 
 
 
The major benefit of this product besides a ultra smooth finish is it's all in one bag, nothing to be added. With professional stucco folks they get the cement and sand delivered separately both of which have to be protected from the elements. Until I found this product, doing the walls was way down the road when the driveway/parking area was completed.  I can have nothing delivered. Everything has to be carried by hand. Packaged in 40lb bags was an added bonus.
 

The first coat turned out pretty good. It's definitely labor intensive but it worked as well as I was hoping. The second coat will be a long time coming and then finished with a paint job. Somewhere down the road I'll get a new electric power washer which will make the prep that much easier. The wire brushing and sanding was horrible and took forever.
 

Slowly but surely....

With the marble tile now being six weeks late and Home Depot on St Thomas showing no respect I took to social media and left negative comments on their Facebook page. BOOM!!! The next day I received a private message asking for my telephone number. The regional  director in Atlanta wanted to chat. Profuse apologies followed with his personal guarantee that the product would be on STT when I returned from San Francisco in late August. The betting was against.

Finally boarded the flight I kept putting off waiting for the tile that never came.