Plans for the long weekend.

May 26, 2007 at 10:28 am (bathroom, books, fiberswap, games, garden, gnome swap, knitting, sockapalooza iv, socks, swaps)

I’ve been traveling most of this week - Denver Sunday evening through late Tuesday and then Madison Wednesday and Thursday - and while it’s been a productive and useful week, I’m very glad not to be traveling again this weekend (especially because I only get seven days at home before I’m off again to Kansas City for six!).

Sometime today I need to run into town to deliver some games to our Garden Gurus, the male half of which will be chaperoning a class of pre-teens on a trip to our nation’s capital next week. They’re taking the train and, knowing how hard it can be to keep preteens occupied for a long trip, MGG (Male Garden Guru) asked if we could loan them some of our board games. We’ve sort of collected quite a few, thanks in large part to some friends who have come to spend the last three New Year’s Eves with us playing games, and this is just a sampling of what we’re sending along for their trip:

Starting on the top left and going what will end up being more or less counter-clockwise: Phase 10, Peasantry, Queen’s Necklace, Rook, Carcassonne: The Castle, Carcassonne (original with a couple expansions), Ticket to Ride, Tsuro, double 12 dominoes, the 1910 expansion for Ticket to Ride, and Monkeys!. I tried to pull a selection that would allow for some smaller groups (The Castle, Tsuro, and dominoes can be played with two people) as well as larger groups (Tsuro can go to 8, but most of the rest top out around 5 or 6). I’m contemplating sending Mystery of the Abbey, but I’m a bit worried it might just be a bit too complex for the average pre-teen. And while we have Settlers of Catan and two of the larger expansions, as well as the expansion for 5-6 players, I think it just has too many little pieces that could too easily get lost on a train (and technically, so does Ticket to Ride, but I can’t resist sending game about trains along on a train trip!). Similarly, the Catan card game and Jambo (both two player games) are staying home (though I admit that the Catan card game is staying mostly because we just picked up the expansions from Pegasus Games while we were in Madison and haven’t had a chance to play it ourselves yet; we also just got Guillotine, which is also staying here for the same reason.) Yes.. we like good games and our friends know it. *smile*

When I drop off the games, I’ve been invited to peruse the GG’s garden for anything that I’d like to add to my own. I already know that I want to get some balloon flower from them, and hopefully some of the small Japanese irises. And some garlic chives (which I think Jack actually already got and just need to be planted). If the weather clears up tomorrow or Monday, I’ll likely go plant the seeds for the vegetable garden (I don’t want to plant them and then have a thunderstorm roll in right away for fear the seeds will flood out and all clump in one place).

I also plan to round out the packages for the summer swaps I’m doing. I sat down last Saturday before I left and ordered a bunch of stuff for my spoilees and was quite pleased that it all arrived by the time I got home:

I won’t go into detail on what’s all there just in case one of my spoilees happens to drop by and figure things out (and there are some things that were intentionally kept out of this picture because I was worried they’d be too easily identified by their intended recipients!), but I will say that it’s going to be hard to let some of this stuff go! There are just a few finishing touches needed for each of them, and of course, I still need to knit my sockapalooza pal’s socks, but I have a couple months for that still.

In the meantime, I finished the first of the toe up socks:

I didn’t really use a pattern, but the yarn is Lorna’s Laces in Buck’s Bar and I just worked the leg until I ran out of yarn. As I realized how tall these were going to be, I added in some calf shaping, which I think turned out pretty well considering I made it up as I went along!

(Thank goodness for Blogger’s new auto-save feature! I just accidentally clicked on a shortcut in my menu bar and thought I’d lost this entire post.. Whew!)

And as long as the weather stays chilly and storm-threatening, I snuck a skein of Louet Euroflax in Lilac in with the orders for my spoilees so I can snuggle in and watch a movie (we got both Babel and Pan’s Labyrinth from Netflix while I was gone) while making a couple washcloths (modified from the hand towel pattern from Mason-Dixon Knitting) for the upstairs bathroom.

I’m admittedly a bit torn because I’d really love to make hand towels for the new bathroom as well, but the Euroflax is a bit spendy. I’ve checked out KnitPicks new CotLin, though, and I think I could make a couple hand towels with the Linen colorway using the Royal Plum for accents that would work well and would come in around $7.50 per towel instead of the $20 it would be if I used Euroflax. And if they turn out well, I might just make some for gifts, too.. I know at least a couple folks who have done bathroom remodels lately!

Oh, and sometime soon I need to do a book post. I finished Eat, Pray, Love a few weeks ago, and since have also finished The Life of Pi and started Middlesex. And I picked up a couple new books while in Madison as well - Tayari Jones’s The Untelling (you knew this one was coming, right?) and Gabriel Garcia Marques’s One Hundred Years of Solitude. The stack on my bedside table doesn’t seem to be getting smaller, but I couldn’t be happier at having so much good literature to read!

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With a little help…

May 10, 2007 at 3:27 pm (bathroom, garden, house, remodeling)

.. from my friends and family (all pictures are clickable thumbnails; click them to load a bigger version):

The yard is, effectively, complete now. We picked up the last two bushes (wine & roses weigela) from a local nursery and planted them Monday. We did the bulk of the mulch on.. um.. Tuesday? I think, and put in the accent bits - the shepherd’s crook with the bird feeder and hanging basket of johnny-jump-ups (okay, okay, I know they’re really violas), the plant stand with three gerber daisys, and the fire-pit-turned-bird-bath*. I think I strung the twine for the morning glories to climb on Tuesday too.. might have been a different day, though. Now things just need to grow.

The raised beds are now about half full of dirt, with a few more barrow-fulls to get added to each one.

I’m a little concerned that the dirt won’t be deep enough in some spots (we threw in some brick edgers that were lying around in the yard unused to try to help with drainage in the beds, but that may have been a mistake because the soil over them is a bit thin now), but it’s fixable, so it’s not a deal-breaker. The last of the dirt will hopefully get moved tomorrow - I had to stop Tuesday when I couldn’t lift the shovel anymore and my right elbow has been decidely cranky since then from the overuse and abuse; since there’s no real rush, I took a few days off from shoveling to let it rest and heal up a bit. I’ll likely start getting the seeds and plants planted next week - the tomatoes and other live plants from Burpee are expected to arrive on the 15th (except the Walla Walla sweet onions, which are already here).

The crowning glory of the week, though, is the bathroom. Here is the finished tile floor:

And this is what it looked like yesterday:

It’s gorgeous. It represents a fair amount of sweat equity - mostly my dad’s, but there’s also enough of mine in there for me not to feel *too* guilty - but oh, boy, has it been worth it. We finished the last of the trim & got the heating vent in today, so here it is, more or less finished:

We still need to pick up a linen shelf/cabinet for the near corner, and we’re looking for a corner medicine cabinet, but will likely have to built that to spec. The window - which until now was effectively blocked by the &#$%(@#*@& plywood that they used to back the &#*%&@#$) shower - needs another coat of polyuerethane and a blind, but I’ll gladly get that installed as a final farewell to the ugliness that used to be there (as seen below):

And I realized yesterday as we were hanging the washcloth ring and the hand towel rack that I really rather desperately need some new washcloths! Up to now, all my bathrooms have been a variation on hunter green, so most of my towels and washcloths are darker colors that just don’t look right in the new bathroom. They’re also all at least 4.5 years old - the newest having been wedding gifts - so it’s definitely time! I might have to hunt around for some linen yarn to make a few..

*The fire-pit was thrown by the woman I got my pottery wheel from, out of raku clay, and bisqued; she was moving to Florida and couldn’t take it with her and asked if I could test it out for her. Unfortunately, we can’t have an uncovered fire in our yard, and the piece is too large for us to pack safely when we go to events, so it’s never been tested. However, lining it with a large plant tray and putting some leftover tile bits under and in the tray makes it a more or less effective bird bath. *shrug*

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Not so much..

April 29, 2007 at 5:31 pm (bathroom, garden, house, remodeling)

Hrm. The plants are all in pots, but the front yard still needs to be cleared. It appears that we either need to wait until next weekend when dad gets here with the truck to get a powered sod cutter, or rent a non-powered one - which I’m told is a lot more work; my dad actually said that he’d opt to dig it by hand instead of use a non-powered sod cutter - sometime this week. We don’t want to just rototill the sod into the dirt because the “lawn” is actually mostly weeds and we don’t want to give them a head start to disrupt the new plants. Cutting out the sod won’t completely eliminate the weeds, but it will at least make it less likely that they’ll come through right away (and yes, we’re putting down some gardening fabric to block them further as well).

Also, just because I’m not sure I’ve clarified, we’re clearing the sod out because we’re just replanting the front yard; the raised beds are actually in the side yard where we took out all the bushes last year. We have been warned not to try to plant in the soil where the bushes were because those type of bushes apparently turn the soil very acidic. So the solution is to build the raised beds, which will allow us to plant over that spot and give me room for a veggie garden.

On that subject, the rock plan for the beds just isn’t going to work. It’s (a) a bit pricey, and (b) too much work. Essentially, we’d be getting four loads of different materials and paying for delivery for that would be exorbitant; the alternative is to pick it up ourselves, which would require no less than 8 round trips in my dad’s pick up. Since the suppliers is about 20 miles from our house, that’s.. well.. more than I’m willing to pay and/or drive.

So, Plan B will be to put the sod we cut from the front yard (great suggestion, Cathy!) into the bottom of the beds to take up some space and feed the worms and then fill the rest with a mixture of black dirt, compost and sand. The supplier we’ve found will mix the black dirt & compost for us and deliver it - we’ll be getting 6 yards total (and can I tell you how long it took me to figure out just exactly how much a “yard” is?) - and then we’ll mix in some bags of sand here to “taste”. Since we’ll be finishing building the rest of the beds next Saturday or Sunday, I’m planning to have the dirt delivered Monday or Tuesday. Of course, at the moment the long term forecast shows rain next Saturday through Tuesday, so that plan might change..

Which really, would be okay as long as we can control when the delivery of dirt comes, because we also need to finish the bathroom floor. I started laying tile this weekend and have about half of it finished. I need to pick up more tile cement stuff tomorrow so we can lay the remaining two full-tile rows this week. Dad will help cut the tiles around the door and along the one wall that needs 3/4 tiles, which is also where we’ll need to cut tiles to go around the toilet. Once the floor is in, we’ll move the vanity out of the dining room (finally!) and install it, and put the toilet back (I can’t wait.. I’ve so missed having a toilet upstairs in the middle of the night). We’ll still need to do the trim around the room - which will likely mean we’ll have to disconnect the sink to pull the vanity back out - but we’re pr’bly going to wait on that for now because we haven’t decided what kind of trim we want in there yet.

In other news (back to gardening), our neighbor from across the street came over to pick up some raspberry bushes this afternoon. We still have a fair number of them, but I’d say she took about half of what was out there, which is sort of nice. I’m re-thinking the plan of keeping any - they’re just a bit too much maintenance for something we don’t really use. In any case, the rest will get dug up the end of next week for delivery to folks up in the Cities who want them and/or transplant to the back of the fence. Then we’ll RoundUp over that spot to try to kill any remaining raspberries and re-seed the spot with grass in a couple weeks.

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Light of day..

April 23, 2007 at 5:50 pm (bathroom, breedswap, garden, house, remodeling)

The paint’s dry and it’s daylight, so I was able to get some better shots of the paint in the bathroom:

But in much more exciting news.. It’s HERE!

The box with my Breed Swap fleece and research arrived today! There are samples of 27 different types of fleece (apparently some were shipped to the coordinator, but never arrived) and research on 32 breeds of sheep. The fleece samples include an ounce of prepared fiber, a clean lock, and about a yard of 2-ply yarn. The research was all bound up in a 3-ring binder in plastic page protectors. On the right hand page of each is an attached plastic envelope for the lock and yarn samples (I already have mine sorted and put in the book .. yes, I’m a geek, I know) and room for our own notes as we spin each of the 1-ounce samples. The coordinator did a really excellent job in compiling all our research and formatting the books; I’m sure she had a fair amount of editing to do since I know that the research I sent her was originally much longer than what she was able to include (see above re: geek)! I’m really excited to really get to know each of these fleeces, it was about all I could do not to end each of the sentences above with an exclamation point!

Oh, and Cathy (sorry, I don’t have a link or an email so I’m answering here!) asked why we were putting rock and sand in the bottom of the garden boxes. I’m doing it because it was recommended by my Expert Gardening Consultant(tm) (aka, good friend who used to do landscaping professionally). The beds are about 16 inches deep and we were discussing getting in a load of dirt to fill them when EGC mentioned that if I wanted them to really last and have really good drainage, I could do layers like that. Apparently, the rock helps the drainage and the sand keeps the good soil from working out as fast. Since I am sort of stuck on the idea that if you’re going to do something, it’s worth it to pay a little extra to make sure it will last, so I’m going to call some landscaping places to price options. If it’s not something like twice as expensive to do the layers, we’ll do that.

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What a difference a coat of paint makes!

April 22, 2007 at 6:58 pm (bathroom, garden, house, remodeling)

Mom and dad came to visit this weekend and, as is usually the case when there are projects to be worked on, we .. well, worked on projects! Namely, we got the bathroom walls sanded, did the last coat of drywall mud, sanded again, and painted; brought some yard debris to the green dump; and did some gardening prep.

Here are some in progress shots of the bathroom.. first (because really, the sanding and drywall mud is sort of.. boring.. unlike.. watching.. paint.. dry..) the primer:

Dad predicted, and was correct, that once we got the walls all one color the room would look markedly improved; it also looked a good deal larger. Next, the first coat of the lavender paint (I don’t remember the exact name), which is still a bit wet in these pictures:

Just a little bit ago, we finished the second coat (and therefore also still a bit wet):

I noticed the pictures sort of washed out the lavender, so I tried to get a shot that would show it a bit better. Not sure if it worked, though.. For what it’s worth, if you click through to Photobucket for any of the pictures, the color of my default Photobucket pages is about the right color.

In addition to running some yard debris to the green dump, we brought the debris from the demolition of the bathroom to the dump, which meant we got our sitting area on the front porch back:

The wooden boxes on the front of the porch contain some of the composted soil we got from the green dump and some morning glory seeds. I also started some peppers - jalapeno’s, Anaheim’s, and a rainbow mix - but they’re not terribly exciting yet. What is exciting is that we built the first of what will eventually be four 8′x8′ raised garden beds:

When dad comes back in early May, we’ll finish building the rest of the garden beds and fill them (at the moment the plan is to get a delivery from a landscaping supply place and do a layer of river rock, a layer of sand, a layer of composted soil, and a layer of black dirt mixed with peet) and plant the front yard (right in front of the porch; the plants for that should arrive this week). In the meantime, next weekend we’ll be tiling the bathroom floor.

And since you asked.. um.. no.. I haven’t really been knitting much lately. *shrug*

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A quickie before moving on to other things..

March 31, 2007 at 8:45 pm (bathroom, house, jaywalker, knitting, remodeling, socks, stairs)

The pansy Jaywalkers are finished!

They’re.. well, not my favorite socks. :/ Even though I knit the ribbing on needles a size smaller than the leg, the ribbing is loose and the leg is still a bit snug at the top, due to my shapely calves. The foot is a bit loose as well, because the stockinette for the sole should also likely have been done on a smaller needle size but switching between two different sized needles for each round would have driven me to distraction. *shrug* I’ll wear them, I just won’t likely make another pair.

In other areas of productivity, we’ve been back at the remodeling this weekend. Dad came to help us finish hanging the rest of the drywall:

That’s Dad hamming it up as he paused before mudding the last corner so I could take the picture. *smile* You may also remember that there was a heating vent over the large hole in the wall on the right that was painted that lovely (*choke*) green; that was picked up this morning, along with the hardware from the door, by a man who lives just outside of town who does sandblasting. We should get them back all nice and clean later this week. We won’t be painting them. Ever.

Hanging the rest of the drywall also meant that I could dig the door out from under the tarp (where it had been stored with the drywall to keep it from getting rained on - really an extra cautious step since it takes a very hard blowing wind to get rain back to the porch wall!). Now, before you look at the next set of pictures, remember that this door had been painted over completely at least four times, on top of a coat of varnish…

The worst part, not surprisingly, were the bits around the panels - they’re rounded, or concave or however you describe them; the paint stripped out pretty clean thanks to the varnish underneath, but getting the varnish out required quite a bit of hand detail sanding and at least an entire pack of medium grain sandpaper. It looks infinitely better, but in truth, we still need to strip the varnish off the other side. :(

In a fit of.. something.. not quite sure what.. we also decided that it was time to make the stairs not quite so squeaky. At the moment, each and every stair creaks when you step on it. And this morning, there were rectangles of what used to be an off-white, rather thick nap carpet on each step that was *impossible* to clean - the vacuum couldn’t quite get to the back corners, it was nearly impossible to clean the area up to the edge of the carpet without a toothbrush, etc. So the first step was to rip out all the little carpet pieces. Fortunately, they weren’t glued down, just nailed, so while dad was mudding corners upstairs, I pulled nails out of the stairs, swept and mopped:

They’re still rough - they really need to be properly refinished, but that’s a bigger project than we’re ready to undertake at the moment, so we’re doing what we can with the knowledge that we’ll need to undo it at some later time to do it all properly.

Tomorrow, Jack will nail the steps all down again, which dad tells us should stop the squeaking. Once that’s done, we’ll put in the carpet runner I picked up this evening:

(You can really see how bad the stairs are in this shot.. *cringe*) I think it will look really nice with the woodwork, but it does somewhat limit our options for painting the wall in the stairwell. *shrug*

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A different type of fiber..

March 25, 2007 at 2:29 pm (bathroom, house, remodeling)

Specifically, fiberglass.

This is how our upstairs bathroom looked Wednesday (all pictures are clickable thumbnails; click them to get a bigger version):

You can see that we’ve already started ripping up the linoleum flooring, and that we’ve removed the sliding glass shower doors, but otherwise, very little has changed. Yet. (Yes, we had lovely hardwood floors throughout the upstairs.. lovely hardwood floors that someone decided to cover with linoleum. Poorly, at that.) Note the absolutely atrocious paint - that’s some brand of aqua green and it’s the same as the color I’m trying to eradicate from my kitchen. What you can’t see in the picture is that they also painted the entire door a combination of this aqua and white - an entire, old, farmhouse door with four recessed panels. The most egregious part of this bathroom, however, isn’t clearly visible from the door.

Those are two shots of the plumbing nightmare that Dumba$$ Do-It-Yourselfer who decided that a 5×8 foot bathroom needed a shower concocted. You’ll notice in the second shot, which was taken with the camera resting on the floor of the bathroom, that the copper pipes come up above the level of the floor. Presumably, this was done to allow the pipe to travel over a floor joist (though we’re not quite sure why that was necessary at all) rather than acquiring the tools to route the pipe through the floor joist. To cover this unsightly mess, said DDIY built a shoddy “box” out of 2×4 and plywood that created a still unsightly and unstable step up at the back of the bathroom. Also note that there’s a sewer trap that’s just barely visible in the second picture that also comes up through the floor boards. This trap was installed for the shower and connects to the toilet sewer drain.

We decided some time ago that there is no need for this house to have two full bathrooms (or rather, 1 and 3/4 bathrooms), especially given the terror that was the upstairs bathroom. We’ve speculated that this bathroom may at one time have been the only bathroom in the house and that there may have been a small-ish clawfoot tub where the shower was installed. However, the owner prior to us had an addition put on the first floor that consisted of a large full bathroom and a back entry/laundry room, so there’s no longer a need for a full bathroom upstairs (and we’ve never used the shower, not least because the drain in the floor was set 1/2 an inch too high so it wouldn’t drain properly). The first order of business, then, was to remove the damned shower:

That’s my dad - who is really quite an accomplished carpenter, plumber, electrician, etc. This is at least his fourth bathroom remodel - he did the bathroom in my parent’s home some twenty years ago and has more recently constructed and/or remodeled both bathrooms in my sister’s house extensively. We hope this will be his last bathroom remodel, but there are no guarantees!

At any rate, you can see pretty clearly the mess they made in installing this shower. To begin with, the room simply isn’t big enough, so in order to brace the back wall of the shower, they had to install a piece of 3/4 inch plywood that covers most of the window. They then proceeded to epoxy the shower surround to the plywood and the adjacent wall. We had to utterly destroy the surround to get it out, but both glass doors were salvageable.

We removed all the trim in the room because the better part of it needed to be replaced anyway; they cut through the window sill to install the shower, so we need to completely reconstruct the trim around the window. We didn’t think it was worth stripping the paint off the 6 inch kick board, or the door trim, so we’ll be replacing it all with something likely smaller and pr’bly more modern (for better or for worse) once the rest of the room is finished. In so doing, though, we found that the lumber for the trim in this room (and likely the whole house) was supplied by H.P. Nelson & Sons, Caledonia, MN:

Up next, we wanted to move the vanity. We’re almost 100% certain that the vanity has been in the front corner of the bathroom since the house was built because they worked the lathe-and-plaster around the drain and the water pipes. However, we wanted more counter space in the bathroom and without a tub or shower by the window, there’s plenty of room to put in a 4 foot vanity and still leave adequate space around the heating vent. So we moved the vanity and sink over by the window. (By the by, if anyone knows someone in the SE MN/SW WI/NE IA area who wants a 30 inch wide by 22 inch deep bathroom vanity and sink, have them contact me.)

Because the shower was already plumbed (albeit poorly), we didn’t have to run new water pipes up to the bathroom; we just had to fix the ones for the shower and route them properly through the floor. (We also capped the water pipes and drain for the old sink.) We opted to move the only outlet in the room from the front corner to the back corner so it would be closer to the new vanity, and to remove the built in medicine cabinet that was above the old vanity.

The plumbing and electric work took dad the better part of Thursday, Friday and Saturday. In the meantime, I stripped the paint and old varnish off the door (no pictures - it’s out on the porch under a tarp with the remaining drywall at the moment), which involved no small amount of detail sanding. Sometime after dinner last night, though, we were able to lay the first concrete board for the new floor:

You can also just barely see the new outlet in this shot, as well as the fully unobstructed window and the mess of the wall left after we removed the shower. The wire that you see along the back wall is actually our phone line, which was glued in behind the shower and tacked to the kickboard to run through the room into the den, which is the next room over on the right.

This morning, we laid the rest of the concrete board for the floor and hung the drywall on the left hand wall:

Dad will be coming back next weekend to help us finish hanging the drywall (he has a small bit of plumbing work left, too: the old sink drain is capped, but sticks out too far from the wall, so he needs to open up the wall and remove the elbow just inside to put the cap inside the wall), after which we’ll prime and paint the room (we picked up a lovely lavender paint) and then lay down ceramic floor tile (a matte grey that looks like chiseled rock) over the next few weeks. (We’ll put the toilet back in after next weekend so we can use it in the interim; not that it’s necessary, just nice in the middle of the night!) Dad will be back in early May, at which point we expect to finish the last bit of floor tiling (some of the tiles will need to be cut to go around the toilet and the plumbing for the new sink and we’re not quite up to that job without supervision!) and install the vanity & trim.

All in all, it’s been a very productive and moderately exhausting week, especially as all of this remodeling fell immediately on the heels of a work-related trip to South Carolina for three days. That said, I’m very, very pleased to have this project started and well on it’s way and can’t wait to get the rest of the dry wall hung so we can start the painting and tiling in earnest.

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