Sunday

27 May 2012.

What happened just now reminds me of the joke about the computer user who had a problem. She called in a technician and he sorted it in a few seconds. She wanted to know what the problem has been? He replied:"It was an ID ten T error". She wrote it down to tell her friends: "ID10T" I nearly had my post finished, and accidentally touched a wrong key somewhere, and lost it all.

Now where were I?

Last week I said the window was nearly finished. We have removed the rotten frame and built a new frame, leaving the windowsill in place. Every night we put the sliding sashes back in to close the big hole. We had some broken or cracked panes of glass  in the sashes, which obviously needed replacing. If bought new, they cost $ 57.

When we first saw the house in 2009, there were windows lying on the deck. In 2006 they installed one in place of a rotten one in the western wall. When we bought the place, the other was still lying there, with pieces of the rotted one as well. We put them in storage. Beginning to work on the windows, we learnt that the original ones were 40 inches, as opposed to 34 for the replacement ones. We also learnt that two panes could possibly be salvaged from the sashes that was thrown out. Now, my rate of success in removing old glass from wooden frames is nearly zero. But I have seen an tool advertised on TV which cuts with a vibrating action, like they used to remove plaster casts in the old days. These tools cost up to $ 260, but I bought a cheap one at $ 60. I managed to remove two panes from the old sashes, and all the broken and cracked ones from our window. In lifting one glass out of the frame, it just shattered in my hands. Well, one was still in the sash, and we had three more.

We sanded the sashes down, and repainted them all. Sometimes the humidity was too high outside, and we had to put them in the house and put a heater on. I fitted the new/old glass. We also installed the new sash cords.

As we had to refit the sashes every night, I learned that my frame was too narrow at the top. Luckily it was screwed together. I quickly removed the screws and refitted it a bit wider. Now it turned out it was too wide, and the frame was too tall. We would have a nice draught over the top. Next day I measured again, and cut back where necessary and reassembled the frame. Nice fit now.

At last we could start with the final assembly. We first fitted the top or outside sash, and it worked just fine. Next was the bottom one. I put it in position, and asked Elna to look for the weights while I went outside to fetch something. I heard a big crash. A gust of wind had blown the sash out, breaking tie only pane of glass that was not replaced. We stuck a piece of perspex over it, and installed the weights. Next we sealed all the air gaps between the timber architraves. Much better now.

I have been buying aluminium windows on Trademe to salvage the glass and try and cut it down About 50% success rate. On Friday I won an auction for two windows at $ 15.50. We went to pick it up yesterday, and it turned out it was a group of people converting a house into a church. When I explained what I was doing, the guy said they had a lot of glass, I could help myself. I got  two more sheets of glass. I gave them $ 20, thus $5 each. The window is still not finished, but we are getting there, slowly.

Our two sheep were complaining about their grass. Totally unjustified, but they were bleating a lot. On Saturday afternoon we decided to put them each on a chain. It worked for about 30 minutes, they broke their collars, bad leather. Now they were running free in the yard. I have been planning to repair the street fence, since there is only three steel wires. Now it became a necessity. We put chicken fence against the wire, as a temporary measure. Tomorrow I will be doing some fencing again.We have a nice steel farm gate that should fit. We will not be moving over this week.

Never a dull moment

Bye
G&E

20 May 2012

Tomorrow it will be one year since we took possession of the house. Our first night in the house was a few days later. Now, we had a target of one room every six months, disregarding or forgetting about the outside. We have nearly achieved that.

Our front room is sooo nearly finished. We finished painting the walls and now we are working on draught proofing the windows. We learned that the bay was definitely installed at a later stage. They re-used the original window and added two narrower windows, one on either side. Now, the original window was made of Kauri, and was riddled with borer. As soft as Weet Bix and broke in several places. It had to be repaired / replaced. The sliding sashes are OK, why I don't know. So I set out to remake the surrounding frame. Not as easy as it seems. I am more of a carpenter than a joiner, so everything takes a lot of time. Hopefully it will be finished some time this week. We have a forecast for the coming week of clear sunny days and frosty nights. I want to move over as soon as possible.

Marike notified us that she is coming to visit us in June, for a month. We need another bedroom. No pressure.
Just joking. she has slept in an Ice Hotel in Norway, so the Waikato climate should not be too bad.

6 May 2012

The previous week, we had to do some repairs and maintenance to our Cambridge property. We replaced the bathroom ceiling. That was quite an effort. We cut the gib panels to size, and pre-painted them. On Wednesday Barco offered to help, and we managed to put the panels up. A little akward to move between the bath, vanity and toilet, but we made it. Then gibstopping, and gibstopping. and eventually painting the new ceiling. Finished at five on Friday and the new tenant started moving in at six. Thank God for the new tenant.


This week we had more gibstopping, in the bay room this time. We tried contacting two different gibstoppers, without success. Eventually I started doing it myself. The first layer is done, and on Saturday I started on the second layer. Obviously it first has to dry properly, then it has to be sanded before the next layer can be put on. If I hold the plastering trowel with two hands, I manage a sort of finish, because of my shaking. Will see if we eventually will need four or five sandings. The previous week we also managed to buy curtain rails and a curtain on a roll. The Ruffelette is already sewn on, and you buy it by the meter. We selected a plain pale green curtain with a gold speck in it. We had a minimum requirement of 9 meters, but the roll had 9.8, so we took it all. That is 2.4 m high. Will just fit.

We have a lovely fireplace in the room, dating from about 1920. We tested it by burning newspaper, and it seems to work. It is really intended for coal, because it is narrow, but we will be using wood. Imagine how nice it will be to lie in bed with a fire going next to us.

Till next time