I don't know if this is clear, but this is Adam up in the attic. It is so small that you have to basically crawl on your belly and you need to not be allergic to fiberglass (I'm still itching). The job took very little time compared to what we thought it would and now we have a comfy, cozy, warm house.
We took out the built ins in Nate's office to access the eaves one side of the house |
The insulation project took so little time that we were able to get some other projects done! We had spent most of the summer on the backyard that we had neglected the front yard. One of the major issues was our retaining wall. The cap on the retaining wall was not present when we bought the house and it was obvious that it hadn't been there for awhile. This was causing some issues since the bricks were the type with holes in them and water was getting down in them and during the winter it was freezing and breaking the bricks. Before this happened again this year we wanted to get a cap on the wall. Jill came down and spent her afternoon off helping us lay the caps.
Before cap |
After cap |
We are also going to stain the brick to give it a more uniform look but we didn't have time for that today.
From the picture above you can see that we got A LOT of stone. Luckily, we made a new purchase for our house that allowed us to get the stone delivered. When we went to Lowe's on Saturday, they had a bunch of appliances out front on clearance for various reasons. One was a stainless steel convection stove, double oven and 5 burner. Basically our dream stove. It had dent on the side that the cabinet hides so they had knocked 600 dollars off the price. However, it was still too much for us so we got what we had gone to the store for, and left. On Sunday, Nate went back to Lowe's to get the insulation and the stove was still there.... AND another $200 had been taken off the price! Once they added a 4 year warranty to the deal we caved. They delivered it today (for free and they delivered the stone for free too ... I think they wanted to get rid of the stove) and now the eye sore of our stove is no more (oh and if anyone wants a working stove let me know)!
New Chalkboard: We have this awesome huge chalkboard that will not fit on any of our walls in our house. Anyone that knows us knows that we can't live without a chalkboard so we had to figure something out. The school Nate worked at this summer happened to have extra slate chalkboards left over and so we compromised and now have two small chalkboards instead of one large one. We have now put one of them up in the kitchen.
New porch roof: Our roof on our house is actually really new. However our porch roof leaked. We figured out that this was because they put the shingles over slated wood instead of plywood. This was starting to be an issue since we are closing up that porch and so we decided to rip the shingles off and do it right. Nate found a 4 day period that was supposed to be really good weather and went to work. He got the old shingles up, the plywood down and the water and ice shield down. Now this shield is made of tar and when the sun hits it, it melts and fills in all the cracks. Nate put it on the entire roof since it's shallow. Now, this is supposed to keep all the water out. The only problem is when it rains a day early and not just rains, but POURS for hours. I woke up Monday morning with it raining in the inside of the porch which, just in case you couldn't guess, is a bad way to start your day and week. Since it had decided to rain early, the tar on the seam between the old and new roof had not had time to seal and so the water was going under the new roof into our porch. After some quick work on Nate's part (with me at work being neurotic and calling every 5 min to figure out what was going on) the water situation was taken care of. Nate finished shingling the roof later that week and we now have a non leaky roof!
OK. I think this post has gotten long enough. Next up: Progress on the back porch