Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Wow- First Layer







What a day... I am a little nervous to say it was a good day because we might get a payback tomorrow.








First off, this is the husband posting for the first time; not Penny. Its kind of ironic since Penny and our crew were the ones who did 99% of the work today.








We were able to stack our first layer of logs today. From our class, we were told that this is the hardest part of staking. To give you a quick overview of the process, we had (or I should say they had) to drill holes in our first 4 logs and make sure they aligned with the foundation rebar that runs vertical (perpendicular) to the logs. Its a tight fight and everything has to be about perfect. We have heard stories of the first layer taking 4 complete working days. They were lucky and good I guess and had the first layer completed in 8 hours!!!








We have good help. Mitch and Landon really help me and Penny a lot. We are really pushing to be dried in by winter. We will need luck and a lot of work put in to the process in order to make it happen.













Friday, September 10, 2010

2nd load of logs

We have really had a hard time getting our logs for this home! As mentioned in the the 2nd post, the first guy bailed on us. He was supposed to bring our second load the next week, but we haven't heard from him in 2 weeks, so we scrambled around and found another guy and finally got our second load of logs. These are a Spruce, but they are much straighter and bigger than the 1st load. Plus, as a bonus, 1/2 the bark is already off the logs! We just got this load today, and have started peeling, we have a lift scheduled in a few days to start stacking!
Here are a few pics and videos:



This is the 1St load of logs all peeled


This is the second load of logs


A close up view (look, lots of bark already gone!)

The Ends of the logs



All laid out and ready to start peeling

Peeling the 1st load of Logs

We wanted to try to use a power washer to see how well it worked, we are in a little bit of a rush before it gets cold here (it can get to -30 degrees in the winter) we borrowed a friends power washer to try it out. It was awsome! After checking on a rental price, it was going to cost us $300/week, we decided to buy our own at Home Depot for the same price. we got 46 logs peeled in about 80 hours, so a little under 2 hours each, and we really peeled them clean!
here is a video of how well it worked.