Saturday, September 28, 2019

Summer projects

We had a great summer, got lots of small and some large projects completed.

We hired our son-in-law, Daniel, a handyman in Las Vegas, to work with us for the month of June.  It was a match made in heaven.  Daniel is a hard worker, we hired him by the month and he worked 50 to 60 hours a week.  When I say we, I mean that Daniel did the work and I sat in a chair and supervised the work... it turned out to be a great team, we had a good time.

We worked on several outdoor projects.  Daniel installed a small deck, 3 feet wide, next
to the patio doors in the master bedroom.  There is just enough space for a chair and it has a commanding view of the "zen" raked gravel garden, what the Japanese refer to as karesansui, a garden without water.  Daniel finished installing flower bed borders and installed an irrigation system under the gravel.  The deck gets the afternoon shade and is a great "zen" place to read a book or just sit for a spell.

















Daniel installed about 30' of boarders for the entryway garden and filled in with pea rock.  And
Daniel built a lantern with my instruction.  He learned a lot about how to use a table saw with this project, there were lots of odd angles.  I would explain the next step in the construction at the end of the day and the next morning the work would be done, Daniel had gone out after supper and completed the next step.  This lantern took the better part of the month as we worked on it only short periods at a time.

Here are three pictures of the entry garden that I took today.  The rock retaining wall was another project that Daniel and I did several years ago.













The wood shed Daniel built last year and the lantern in the foreground is the one he built in June.  The boxwoods in the round garden bed are deer resistant, evergreen and will grow 4 feet tall.
























We installed trim in the master bedroom shower using Ipe (tigerwood), the same wood you see being used for exterior decks, it is water-resistant and shower trim is a perfect application.  This was really finicky work and it took the better part of a week to complete.  It was a new skill for him so I really appreciated that he worked slow and got it right.  Before Daniel got here, one day I heard a hissing sound from the shower area and it went away before I could figure out where it was coming from.  Then the next morning, I discovered Obi, our cat in the tub trying to figure out where the hiss was coming from.  I guessed that one of the water hoses was leaking under the tub deck, so I turned off the water and as Daniel was due in a day, it was the first project that he accomplished, remove the tile panel and disconnect the plumbing for the tub faucet.  So my desire to not reinstall the plumbing under the tub deck, I fabricated a "steampunk" faucet that I think looks pretty appropriate to the house.

Lets see, what else?  I welded up some brackets and Daniel installed a railing in the tower room above the front entrance.  He used up some timber frame lumber from the house construction and built railings on the deck for the shop.  He installed trim on the fireplace surround.  He replaced the fuel line on the lawn and garden tractor.  He sorted through a ton of misc steel pipe, siding, etc.  He cleaned and organized the garage and shop.

We miss you Daniel!!!!!  You are such a good son-in-law!



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