Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Our New House–The Garage Rises!

A brief visit to our new house this afternoon – yesterday my hubby discovered the kitchen drain was blocked, and he wanted to return today to deal with it, which he did with little difficulty – it seems some builders’ concrete and other bits and pieces had been washed down there and he was able to clear it fairly quickly.

Work is going well on the new garage. Paul was setting out the studwork frames while Chris sawed the timber.

01 Assembling the Studwork Frames

02 Chris Sawing Timber

Here is Otto, the Builder’s Mate, lying down on the job!

03 Otto the Builder's Mate

He is Paul’s dog, quite an old gentleman now at age 10. He was so friendly and came right over to say hello, and lay on his back waving his paws, asking for a tummy rub! He spent most of the time flopping about in the shade and he was as good as gold. A real little softie!

Paul laying out the frames.

04 Paul Working on the Timber Frames

The damp proof course.

05 Damp Proof Course

The frames going up! So exciting to see my hubby’s Man Cave taking shape at last! A nice big window from the annexe, which will have to come fairly low down below the work bench because of the height of it – it reaches right up to the roof! My hubby says he wants to cut those trees down, but I am trying to persuade him just to trim them down a bit – the one on the left is a bay, and I am looking forward to using its leaves in my cooking.

06 Studwork Frame being Erected

Inside, I popped in to the annexe kitchen to find that Paul had been as good as his word, and grouted the tiles that he put up yesterday. After he’s run the silicone sealant around, I can clean up in there, and start putting Mum’s stuff in. The window hinges need replacing because the window won’t stay open at present, and Andy will probably see to that on his return from holiday.

07 Annexe Kitchen Tiling Completed

While my hubby was busy with various outside jobs, I unpacked another six boxes – of books this time, which are now in the bookcases in my ARTHaven and office. There’s a lot of dust, and I expect we’ll be struggling with that for several weeks but we’ll get on top of it in the end.

On the home front, my hubby has got most of the boxes and suitcases down from the loft, and we can decide what to keep and what to get rid of. He goes up there in the early morning before the sun has had a chance to heat the roof space – it gets extremely hot up there later in the day, above the insulation!

This morning I spent quite a time on the phone, contacting the local council who have made a bit of a pig’s ear out of our council tax bills, billing Mum as well as us! It’s all sorted now, hopefully. It was a bad start in our relationship, as they had not answered my letter of over a month ago. I also phoned the utility companies informing them of the date of our move and setting up direct debits etc., and transferring our broadband from the local firm we’ve been using to Sky who will handle everything from now on – TV, phone and broadband. I have opted for unlimited fibre broadband and I think we are in for a shock when we experience the lightning speed – between 30 and 40 Mbits/sec. – after the miserable 1 or less that we’ve had to put up with out here in the back of beyond in Rural Devon! Our downloads will be arriving yesterday… I am very pleased, because our entire package is going to cost considerably less than at present. We will be without the phone and the Internet for a week after our moving day while it’s all set up. It will be up to me to set up the router and I hope I can get the internal network running without any problems – but we do know someone in our village who is a total genius with computers and network problems and he will probably come and sort us out if necessary!

Monday, 2 September 2013

My New ARThaven–Completed Work

The second of two posts today.

Finally today, the work was completed on my ARTHaven and office. Chris put up the two shelves in the office section. The one on the left is mainly for my ring binders and lever arch files. I have some cardboard units for these – without them, they are hard to store on a shelf.

01 Shelf for Ring Binders in Office

The second shelf is similar, on the opposite wall.

02 Second Shelf in Office

Unfortunately these shelves are not proving strong enough for everything I want to put on them. I had planned on storing all my store of packs of A4 paper and card, and my large zip-bags of DVDs on them, but they are bowing under the weight so I have removed everything for now. I will either have to have a rethink about office storage, or I am going to have to consult with Andy on his return from holiday and see if a better solution can be found.

I spent some time this afternoon bringing more things into both sections, but concentrated primarily on the office.

Today Chris brought his daughter, and she and I had such a lovely time – I gave her the guided tour, and then showed her some of my art work (the small amount that I could find!) including the beginning of the album I am making about Dad’s life – it was really lovely opening that particular box up and seeing it all again after so long!

My work from now on is to complete the emptying of the the boxes (still quite a lot more stuff to bring in!) and then the ongoing work of organising it all. Today I made a happy discovery – that the space to the right of the fireplace is exactly the same measurement as my metal pegboards, so I am going to install one here, and the other one will most probably go above the sink. We also have some large sheets of normal pegboard (not metal) and I propose putting up several small areas of pegboard for extra storage of small items within easy reach of the relevant work station.

Our New House–The Garage

The first of two posts today.

Work is definitely progressing on the garage. Today the timber for the studwork arrived.

01 Arrival of Garage Timber

02 Timber Coming In 1

03 Timber Being Stacked 1

04 Paul Bringing In Timber

Paul helped the delivery driver to unload and stack the timber on the grass.

05 Stacking the Timber

My hubby cut up some scrap timber to lay the new timber on, in order to protect the grass.

06 Protecting the Grass from the Timber

07 Paul Bringing In More Timber

The timber all stacked and ready for use.

08 Timber Stacked and Ready for Use

Chris mixing concrete for the blockwork on the garage.

09 Chris Mixing Concrete for Garage

Chris laid one course of blockwork on the foundation.

10 Course of Blockwork on Garage Foundation

The position of the side access door. The door itself is the one rescued from the old garage.

11 Position of Side Door of Garage

The handrail for the annexe steps from the new door. This is just balanced in place and not yet installed.

12 Annexe Outside Handrail Ready to Install

Moving indoors, after finishing the last bit of tiling in the annexe kitchen, ready for grouting tomorrow, Paul was hard at work back in the en-suite bathroom, which he abandoned a few weeks ago in favour of completing the work on the annexe. This had to be done because of the carpet fitting and arrival of Mum’s furniture. Here Paul is working on the shower room floor. The original idea of a wet room is not going to work unless they cut away some of the joists, which obviously isn’t a good idea as they are structural, and it could weaken the floor. I am now having a shower tray similar to the one in the annexe bathroom, and as it extends virtually over the whole floor, the effect will be the same as a wet room.

13 Paul Working on Shower Floor

Paul has created an access panel in the bathroom floor.

14 Access Hatch in Bathroom Floor

In the shower room, Paul has fixed battens on either side of the joists. These will support the plywood which will lie flush with the tops of the battens.

15 Preparing Shower Floor for Plywood

Finally, I just had to share with you a picture of a typical builder’s radio. This radio (and another one upstairs) are permanently tuned to Radio 2 – I said to Andy one day that there are certain advantages in having more mature builders – at least they listen to decent music!!

In this photo, note particularly the lump of plaster splattered onto the dented speaker. Also, the somewhat eccentric aerial! The whole thing is covered with plaster, paint, concrete, dust, etc. etc. and last time I was there, they went off and left it running, and it took me several seconds to discover the on-off switch!!

16 Builders' Radio

Sunday, 1 September 2013

Outing to Dawlish

We are both so busy at the moment with our impending house move and there’s always something needing doing, but the weather was so lovely today that after lunch my hubby said, “Do you want to go out?” We decided to let all the work go hang for an afternoon, and set off to the seaside, ending up in Dawlish, where I took some of my best seaside photos a while back – that time was a mid-winter visit – really my favourite time to visit the sea.

Armed with my camera, we set forth and I got some more photos of nice old boats and ropes and grungey rust – I was in my element!

01 Children on the Sea Wall

02 Blue Sea

03 Railway Pebbles

04 Seawall Seagull

Wonderful encrustations of rust. The rust had even stained the stones underneath the metal railings. Also, I love the heavy duty wire netting holding the stones in place beside the railway.

05 Rust Encrust

The rust in the next picture reminds me of a contour map. Look at those gorgeous colours…

06 Rusty Contours

Boat decay… The underside of this upturned boat was worn away and you could see the layers of colour of the different paint layers it had received over the years.

07 Boat Decay

Boat lines. Again, I love how the red paint has worn away.

08 Boat Lines

Boat stacks. I love the faded colours – the once bright paint has weathered down to subtle shades as a result of exposure to salt, sun and wind.

09 Boat Stacks

The subtly coloured brick wall is a perfect foil for the lobster pots.

10 Lobster Pots and Bricks

One of my favourite shots from today – ropes and floats.

11 Ropes and Floats

Giant lobster pot. I love the rings around the top, made from bits of old tyre.

12 Lobster Pot

Lobster pots en masse. Gorgeous subtle shades, and lots of texture.

13 Lobster Pots

A mist of fishing net. I love how the faded turquoise floats are partially covered with the layers of net.

14 Fishing Net Mist

Fishing net ropes. Lovely textures and subtle shades again.

15 Fishing Net Ropes

This heap of boat pennants, floats and ropes reminds me of part of a stage set for the American Civil War… battle pennants and canon balls!

16 Battle Pennants

More delicious rust. I love how the rust interacts with the remnants of paint, and how the surface has bubbled up, revealing more layers of rust beneath.

17 Rust Glorious Rust

Steampunk decay. Fabulous heavy gearwheels and flaking rust. (I think I’m a rust junkie…)

18 Steampunk Decay

Rust acne? Eruptions of rust!

19 Rust Acne

Even the landscape in Dawlish is rusty. It is surrounded by red sandstone cliffs and the railway tunnels its way through. I love the strata and the weathered shapes, and the texture of the larger stones in amongst the layers.

20 Rusty Rock Face

Out of this barren rock, amazing to find small plants appearing to thrive! In this picture, I also love the pebbles embedded in concrete – the decaying remnants of some man-made structure.

21 Life from Barrenness

In a world of entropy and decay, beauty is all around us. Even things falling into decay and oblivion can be beautiful, if we only open our eyes and look.

22 A Life on the Ocean Wave

A life on the ocean wave – and a life on the edge!

23 Life on the Edge

I love the beautiful lines of this boat – irresistible.

24 Beautiful Boat

Returning to the car, along the sea front wall beside the railway, as the sea made the sound of thunder as it collided with the undercut of the sea wall, the afternoon sun cast interesting shadows.

25 Shadowlines

What I love about the seaside is not sun and sand and bathing, and all the conventional things people love about it, but the juxtaposition of the man-made and the natural, and the effects of natural forces of erosion, wind, water and salt on everything. The colours become muted and outlines become softened. Objects are redolent of earlier industry which is also now decaying and in decline – there’s a nostalgia about it all, and visions of personal struggle against the elements in boat, net, pot and winch. Most people observing these things tend to think they are old and ugly, if they even notice them at all.

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