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Showing posts with label home maintenance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home maintenance. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

"Can't Never Did Nuthin" (A bit of a rant)

Those of you who have followed for the past year know I have an elderly uncle I dearly love.  Well, he isn't able to get around as well as he once did and last winter he was afraid to go outside in the bad weather because he might fall down his steps.


As you can see the steps are slick and steep.  I decided to make him some new steps and a deck.  So the last time I was home I measured and measured and discussed it with my uncle Frank.  He agreed with my plan. I bought the lumber, sawed it to fit in the back of my truck and took a day off work with a helper in tow.  Here are some pictures of the drive from my brother's house to my uncle's trailer.

The sun was just rising when we left.





We drove along a ridge and the fog was lovely.



Its nice to see working farms.  The farmers were taking in late hay and tobacco and some corn fields were ready to combine.





I was in the right frame of mind when we arrived to start working.  Unfortunately,  that quickly turned sour when an elderly neighbor man who was a carpenter came over.  Just as we began to frame the deck he announced that women couldn't build anything.  At that time I thought he was teasing.  He wasn't. You see, I was raised in a family where work is work.  There was no "women's work" or "men's work".  If you were physically able to do it you worked.  PERIOD.   It went from bad to worse from there.  About every hour he would come back and make sexist remarks which I ignored.  He had a foul mouth and talked about his private parts as well.  Finally, I handed him the saw and put him to work when it became unbearable.  In the end the deck got built.  He couldn't find fault with it in spite of himself.  I thanked him for his help.  After all, my aunt informed me, he was good to my uncle.  I just don't approve of his attitude toward women and talking nasty in mixed company.  I'm no prude, but I do respect my elders.


The shot above shows clearly how dangerous the old steps were.  You had to step down to shut the door.  We replaced it with standard steps and a 6 x 5 deck.


Nothing fancy, but there is space for two to sit outside, and access to take stuff in and out of the house without carrying it down the steps.



While the old sexist man worried us to death it made me grateful at the same time.  I am grateful that I had a father and two brothers that never discouraged me when I built things.  They showed me how to do it and helped me and never ridiculed.  I had a grandmother that gave me a hammer, nails and an old board to play with when I was a child.  I don't remember ever not knowing how to use a hammer.  I had a mother that told me to do it again when I tried to quit because I thought I couldn't do something. I am also grateful that I was raised in a family that worked together and enjoyed it.  My uncle isn't as agile or fast as he once was, but by golly, he got out there and helped us.  I had forgotten just how enjoyable it was to work with him.



I am not a carpenter, but I refuse to decline to work by saying I can't do something.  I may not be the best at it, but I will try and I will learn.  This may not be the best deck, but as Frank would tell you "it's just fine for me".  That, my friends, is what we set out to do.

Never listen to other people who want to tell you what you cannot do.  Especially don't listen if they tell you that you cannot do something because of your gender.  I couldn't throw hay bales on the wagon when I was a kid so I drove the tractor.  I was not excused from working because I was a girl.  I stopped the tractor by standing on the clutch with both feet because I was too small to sit in the seat and reach the pedals.  I was not excused from working when we cut and housed tobacco.  I stacked it on the wagon.  I handed it off the wagon.  I was a girl but I worked alongside the men doing what I was physically able to do.  I really didn't know others weren't raised like that.

Likewise, the men in my family can cook and clean.  My father cooked.  He could fry a chicken or make candy.  He washed dishes.  My brothers cook.  In fact, one of my brothers is an exceptional cook and both, in my experience, are better cooks than their wives.  (God help me if they read this!)  They were never told they couldn't cook.  They were encouraged to do what had to be done for themselves.

Not all of my projects are successful.  Some are learning experiences, never failures.  I am so grateful that I was taught from an early age that basic fact.  I was never told that.  It didn't have to be said.  I saw it all around me.  It is so much a fabric of who I am I am still shocked when I encounter a sexist old man that tells me I can't do something because I am not a man.

Finally, I found it ironic that the whole while this old man was using foul language about sex acts and dropping "f bombs" right and left me, my helper, and my aunt and uncle were calling him Mr. Hobbs.  I truly believe that once a child is taught to respect their elders it cannot be unlearned.

I am proud to be a woman.  I am proud to be a member of a hard working, positive and honest family.

After all, Can't never did nuthin'.

Friday, September 16, 2011

A Day In The Life

Come and spend the day with me! 


Arrive at work before dawn and boot up the computer.  Check Blogger and see what my fellow bloggies have been doing. 


Storm Sewer Pipe Profile
Gotta get oriented for work.  If you've ever wondered where the water goes from a road with curb and gutters this might interest you!  If you cut right down the middle of the road and  look from the side you can see the pipes.  That would be the white lines.  The dashed green is the existing road and the red/orange is the future top of the asphalt.  The little white rectangles sticking up are the boxes that open into the gutter to collect the water.


Later I feed Bobbi.  It is a rainy morning and as it turns out no one shows up.  I work all morning and only one person stops by my desk.  Work is a very solitary experience for me.  I like that too.



Lunch!  Remember the pickled radishes?  They are very good with kale.  The red stuff is hot sauce.
I eat and remember I have to run and errand.



Guess where I'm going?



I have to return "Wild Fermentation".  Someone else wants it now or I would keep it awhile longer.

I pick up a couple of books.



I have used the public libraries in every place I have ever lived.  We have a fantastic library system here in the USA.



Back at the office I have a few minutes to look at my new books.  How could I pass up a crock pot cook book with PLASTIC covers.  It just screamed  I'm durable!  Use me!  Winter is coming!  It did not disappoint either.  And the Moosewood book.  I own most of them.  That and the Joy of Cooking are the only cookbooks I use with any regularity.

Oh LOOK!  They dedicated the cookbook to me! I love you Moosewood Restaurant!



Back to work.


Pipe Cross Section
I have to redo the entire system because I didn't get the new manual.  Oh, they put them in the empty cubicles where NO ONE works, but not mine.  Oh well, I'm glad I caught the error before I was done.
The dashed lines from left to right is the existing box in the median.  The solid lines portray the new pipe to be attached.  Into the Manhole it goes!  (Engineering has lots of personifications like breast walls, toes, crowns, etc)



The water changes direction at the Manhole and flows to the curb box inlets downhill until it gets to the ditch that will take it down to the creek.  Pipes Pipes and more PIPES!!

I have a visitor after lunch.  I call him Richard the Lionhearted.  My first and only visitor of the day.  Midafternoon there is an announcement that there is turtle pie in the kitchen!




We are celebrating an old employee's birthday.  Not all of us get this treatment!  I almost forgot to take the picture.  This has to be the most decadent dessert ever.  Chocolate, ice cream, sugar coated nuts, caramel and whipped cream.

I work all afternoon and almost get back to where I was the day before when I discovered the error.  Sigh. 

Home and time to start supper.  Had a request for chili.  Sorry but no pictures of the finished product.  I got distracted.



While the ground turkey thawed I tilled the back garden where some kale will go later.  I had all but abandoned it earlier this summer.



Back to the chili.




I sauteed some peppers and onions then added some chili powder and garlic.  Then I dumped it in with the ground turkey to which I added a dash of Kitchen Bouquet.  Gave it a stir.  Added some hot chili beans and a small can of V8 juice and the usual salt and pepper.  Nothing fancy. Mild.  I will add jalepenos to mine.

Outside!  Time to check the front.  Swing and have a beverage.


Kale is looking good in the jar.


Picked the squash.  Played with Uno and his Birdie the neighbor gave him.



I thought you might enjoy seeing and okra bloom.  It is a member of the hibiscus family (I think).  The okra and squash grow where the dead maple was removed.



Back in to check the chili.  On the way I look up.


Remember the rusty mailbox?  This isn't it but it I have one just like it.   These are old old boxes.



Chili is fine.  I move 2 gallons of wine from primary fermentation to the carboys and fit an airlock.  I'm done for the day except to sit and swing until dark.


Good Night!  It was a good day!

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Refurbishing Windows - House Maintenance Pt III

Remember the neglected windows?  I've been hard at work and fairly successful at restoring them to an acceptable state.  However, it is a learning process as you will see.

I started with this:


I removed all the loose peeling paint and rotted wood.



Got the wood hardener out.



I have to admit I was not convinced this stuff would work.  It is made by the Elmer's glue people and it looks just like Elmer's glue.  Like a 2nd grader I got it all over my hands and slathered it on the bare wood.



And no I didn't eat it like so many of my classmates did in 2nd grade.  I can still hear Mrs. Luney scolding them and shudder at the thought of getting whacked with her wooden ruler on the palm of my hand!  (elementary school could be brutal at times!)

I let the hardener dry completely.  It completely sealed the wood!  Then I mixed up some Bondo and sealed all the cracks.



As you can see I didn't work quite fast enough and it hardened before I could get it applied.  But it sands easily.  The point wasn't to make the windows look new again.  I wanted to seal them from the weather before they were totally ruined.

I glazed the panes that needed it and put a thick coat of paint on top of it all.  This step alone took 2 hours and I'm probably supposed to wait to paint the putty in the panes, but I thought I'd try it and see how it worked.





I think the next windows will not only be easier, but will look better now that I know how to do it!

I still have the top of this one to do today.  My ladder was too short to reach last night.



Remember the chest of drawers?  Well it ended in disaster.  I kept it wrapped in a tarp for weeks til I had time to work on it with no rain in the forecast.  I got it primed and got one coat of paint on when the thunderstorm struck.  It rained for 2 hours.  I had covered it with the tarp but by the next day after the overnight drizzle and a day in the damp it had swollen and smeared and looked awful.  I put a case of water on each of the drawers to force the dovetail back in place when it dried and hoped for the best.



The drawers are fine and now fit in the chest!  I, personally, think it looks dreadful, but the recipient declared it beautiful and wouldn't let me repaint it.  There really is no accounting for taste.


Uno is tired from all the work!


This is Bobbi's baby.  He is the only one that won't take peanuts from my hand.

Have a great day!  The inside of the house is finished and I'll post some final pictures later.