Monday, November 22

Floored!

Marty commented when he was here working last weekend that he checks the blog three times a day when he is home at work, hoping for new pictures... I have taken his rebuke to heart and will try to post more promptly! :)

The first task for Mick and Marty to accomplish after the excavators and masons did their piece was the 4-ply girder spanning the basement.


They started working on it Thursday afternoon, and I couldn't believe that they had finished it up by the time I got home from work that evening!


The next task was to fit the sill in place.


Marty did a lot of drilling...


...while Mick worked on plywood sheathing to reinforce the girder.


They laid down the sill seal and drilled the sill onto bolts anchored in the concrete. You can see in the background a couple of lally columns waiting to be transported to their positions of supporting the girder.


By Saturday morning, the sill and the inside box were all in place, ready to receive their joists.


My parents had come to visit and very graciously pitched in! The timing was great, because laying joists went significantly more quickly with three skilled carpenters than it would have with two skilled carpenters plus me. This picture shows portions of the three men at work.


Even Mom, uh, "helped." :)


This picture is posed because I couldn't snap the shot quickly enough, but she really did hand a drill to a man on a ladder!


This picture shows the nearly-finished joists. You can see the hole for the staircases in the front center of the picture.


The next task: subflooring. There were sooooo many screws. I don't know how Mick and Marty's arms weren't vibrating from all the drilling! Advantech is great, sturdy stuff.


We got to test Advantech's weathering ability when we woke up the next morning and found that we had to shovel our floor! Also, you can see that Tim had come to backfill, so the drop wasn't quite so steep anymore.


The floor did thaw and melt and dry, and the subflooring was completed.


This is our very first welcome mat -- Roscoe's car blanket transformed as a buffer zone between sloppy mud and a brand new floor.


The next task was to square and snap a chalk line for the sill seal and the walls.


I got out from behind the camera to unroll the sill seal along the chalk line. Mick caulked before me and nailed behind me.


With the sill seal secured, the cabin was ready to receive its walls.

3 comments:

  1. Thank you! We could never have been so far along without all of your help.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the pix and the stories! It is great to follow the action, if even from a distance. Keep up the hard work!!

    ReplyDelete