December 28, 2009

Beer Box to Nest Box

I got the idea for this nest box after recycling a beer box. The dividers for the beer bottles are similar in construction.

The individual parts are simple to make and easy to disassemble. This makes it easy to clean. The pieces are 1 foot wide and when assembled, create a 1'x1' series of nests.


With this box set on a shelf and wedged between the walls of the coop, it is sturdy. The additions of cleats in the front of the box will help hold in nesting material and eggs.

December 20, 2009

Christmas Colors


I have been working on this coop to make it a bit more weather tight. After painting the primer on, I thought the colors were appropriate for the season.

Happy December 21st! The days will be getting longer!

December 7, 2009

Huge Egg


This is the largest egg I've ever seen. I can't even close the carton partway. It was laid on a day when I collected fewer eggs than usual and the temperatures haven't warmed above freezing. This is one chicken that likes cold weather!
(This is Anna writing-when Vince is out of town you get non-scientific blogs such as these.)

December 3, 2009

Freeze


The last two nights have been clear and cold and it makes for a beautiful sunrise. We have had frosts already but this is the first freeze.


The chickens take a little extra care with this weather. Some of the openings in the coop need to be closed and the waterer needs to be cleared from ice and replenished with H2O in its liquid state.

November 22, 2009

Chicken Drag

Anna on the Kubota pulling the coop and run.

I was repairing one of the chicken coops this weekend and it occurred to me that it was about a year ago that we had all kinds of coyote problems. Those coyotes caused us to build an enclosed run which we have used for the whole year without need of any major repair.

We built those runs out of PVC pipe and did not expect them to hold up as well as they have. A few of the glued joints came apart, but we just ran a deck screw through the pipe to hold it together. We drag these coops each week with the PVC run attached. The chickens are always excited on the weekend when we drag the coop forward a few yards to expose some fresh vegetation.

November 15, 2009

Starting a Greenhouse

Anna brought Pieter down to help with the construction of our first greenhouse.
The structure is made up of 6 ft posts of 1 1/4" galvanized pipe driven into the ground two feet. These posts are tied together with boards of wood at the top and base of what is to become the side walls. The actual hoops are 1" galvanized pipe that neatly fits into the pipes of the sidewalls. Each hoop is fastened to a purlin that runs the length of the house at the peak.
After all of the bolts are tightened and the hoops set plumb, we pulled a plastic covering over the top. These structure are relatively cheap and strong. If we go much wider than 16 feet, the little snow we get could collapse the structure without a bunch of extra supports and purlins. We also know that if we go much longer than 60 feet, it is hard to keep the temperature regulated with one heater and one exhaust fan. This size and length is popular because of its simplicity and efficiency.

November 8, 2009

This House Is Getting Old Part III: fixing mistakes and roofs

The concrete cured and when we were able to inspect it, we found a rough surface with a large number of flaws. The concrete was dyed and suppose to be the finished floor. I wanted a glass surface and after speaking with the concrete flat work contractor, I decided to apply an epoxy to give us a smooth surface.




The floor was cleaned with muriatic acid and rinsed with water and baking soda to neutralize the acid. After the floor dried we applied two coats of the epoxy with a paint roller. The end result is a glossy floor that accented the flaws in the concrete. It is not what I pictured but we will call it "character."




Before the rains got too serious here in the northwest, we rebuilt the front porch and re-roofed the front half of the house.




I will re roof the back side when I remove the deteriorating brick chimney and add vents for the water heater, plumbing and exhaust fans. That will have to be next summer when the rains quit.

November 2, 2009

Gladiolus


We both like flowers so Anna and I decided to put gladiolus in the garden last spring. We pulled the plants this fall and should have twice as many flowers next summer. Each gladiolus corm shriveled up and produced a couple new corms and a ton of cormels (the little bulb looking growths). The cormels will not flower next year but we could put them in a "nursery" and allow them to get large enough to flower in a few years.

October 6, 2009

Last Farmer's Market

We finally made it back to the Mukilteo Farmer's Market last week for the last market day of the year. It was beautiful weather and we were able to spread out in the sun without the canopy. (Should we admit we forgot it?) Theresa is our display expert and came armed with African fabric and piles of baskets. We were not sure what the customer numbers would be without the summer beach-goers, but it turned out that there were many people excited about fall produce and we sold plenty of carrots, parsnips, pumpkins, potatoes, onions, tomatoes, beets, garlic and bell peppers. It was a good way to end the market season.

October 3, 2009

Work Party

Winter is fast approaching and neither the garden nor the house are prepared. So we called in the reinforcements and they came, gloves and boots on, ready to work. What a work party! It was so helpful and really neat to look out over the farm and see activity all over. It certainly made working so hard much more fun! Here is a photo-journal of just some of what was accomplished. Photo credits go to Sarah and Vesta, who took their photo job very seriously.
Alan and Chris disassembling the tall chicken coopSusan freeing the asparagus from weeds

Jesse appeared in dress clothes to supervise and give Susan and Theresa a break from weeding. Theresa is our master-weeder. The garden would be lost without her.


Mom took babysitting duty seriously and sat for hours on the front porch cleaning potatoes for storage.
Bill getting a lesson on rototilling with the tractor.
Bob rototilling
Christopher and Vesta bringing up melons from the field
Shu-ha's parents didn't have bean-picking on their list of things to do on their visit from Taiwan, but they sure picked a lot of beans
Vesta picking strawberries
Joanie weeding the beets
Sara cleaning up the flower beds
Karen and Tim the pumpkin tossers. Leave it to them to come up with a creative way to get the pumpkins out of the field quickly and have fun at the same time.

We want to thank everyone who came to work. We appreciate it!

October 2, 2009

Pumpkin Pickin'

Perhaps our biggest enterprise this year has taken us by surprise. We harvested an abundance of pumpkins, expecting them to go to waste rotting on the ground. On a chance, we loaded some of them into the trailer during our work party and parked it on the side of the road. Vince fashioned our old mailbox into a pay-station and we painted make-shift signs. Every day this week the pumpkins are disappearing faster than we could have imagined and money is making it's way into the mailbox. It looks like all of those beautiful pumpkins won't go to waste at all. And we joke-now maybe Pieter can go to college after all!

September 21, 2009

Meadow Mice

There is a children's story about the meadow mice who had to scurry around in the fall to prepare for winter because they played all summer. It is beginning to feel like that around here,except that we didn't play all summer instead of gathering food and supplies; we're just running out of summertime. In addition to the garden and baby, This Old House proves to have hidden challenges lurking in every corner that won't settle and every electrical box (or lack thereof). We have had lots of help from our families. Luckily Anna's dad spent all spring cutting his firewood so he is ready for winter at his house and can help us scurry around ours. And Vince's dad retired recently, making it possible to fly all the way out here twice in one summer to work without stopping, it seems.
We have been re-roofing, preserving vegetables, and preparing for insulation, among other wintertime necessities. Late summer is the time for preserving and we have been learning new recipes and strategies for stretching our summer produce into the winter months.
Vince and Drew making hot sauce and tomato sauce in the "outdoor cooking area."


We learned our lesson last year and this year will store onions and potatoes in a cool, dark place with no chance of freezing.

September 9, 2009

This Old House Part II: lowering a home and hydronic heating

The house lifters came back on August 3rd to lower the house. They lifted the house just enough to remove a couple blocks of wood and lowered the I-beam back onto the cribbing and repeated until the house sat onto the new foundation. In the process the owner pulled a muscle in his back and was unable to move all of the heavy wood and jacks. Wade and Dad helped move all of the material out from under the house.

We put plywood, roofing felt and stucco mesh on the lower level so that we can dress up the foundation in the future. The corners of the house do not rest on the foundation at this point. The wood has memory of when it sat on the posts and the middle of each wall must have sunk in a little. The house lifter warned us of this common occurrence and that most of our windows and doors will not close properly. I am going to give the house a chance to settle before straightening out door jambs and windows.

In the future the lower floor will be heated with radiant heat. We put down 4 inches of sand as a base, then a layer of plastic as a vapor barrier. Over the plastic we installed 2 inch rigid foam for insulation and welded wire mesh to tie the tubing to. The tubing will carry hot water to heat the floor that will be poured the next day.

The concrete showed up on time and by the end of the day we had a floor and dry space to store all of our stuff that doesn't fit in a small house. Now we have to make the house weather tight and insulated.

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Pieter was born Aug. 2nd. He has been wonderful and we are so thankful for his health and big personality. At five weeks old, he only dreams of eating veggies, but would like everyone else to! Although his arrival has hindered our ability to sell at the farmer's market, we are still harvesting late summer and fall vegetables. Vince has been busy grubbing potatoes, drying onions and gladiola bulbs and weeding the tomato, cucumber and pumpkin jungle. The hot weather made a big difference for the tomatoes and pumpkins this year and the strawberries are still producing. We have managed to can some green beans, mom has made many blackberry and strawberry pies, and we are anticipating tomato sauce and pickles, but haven't gotten that far yet.
We did make it to one more Mukilteo market when Pieter was two weeks old, thanks to the help of Mom, Laura, and Aunt Theresa.

September 7, 2009

This Old House Part I: a foundation under an existing building

The house lifters showed up the day before and dug out two pits under the house in order to set up the cribbing at the same height of the future basement floor. The next day they brought their equipment to set the beams under the house. This truck is as old as I am but the owner and his employee are efficient with the rigging and A-frame on this specialized truck.

The truck had an axillary motor and hydraulic pump. Four lines came from the pump to each jack that was set on each stack of cribbing. Each time they set the jacks, they fired up the pump and lifted the house about sixteen inches. After each stroke of the jack, they added cribbing, lowered the house to the additional cribbing and reset the jacks. They lifted the house about 5 feet.
The excavators were able to remove all of the soil from under the house. The dirt was easy to dig until the last foot or so. At that depth (about 6 feet) there is glacial till which is so hard that a pick used to dig by hand sometimes bounces right off with each swing.
Once the excavation was complete the foundation crew took over. In 1 day they framed up and poured the footer and then returned 2 days later to pour the walls. They were good at what they did; I think they spent more time waiting for an inspector than they spent actually framing and pouring the foundation. When we later framed walls on top of their work, I was impressed with how plumb, level and square their walls were. They did great work.

Chris and I are mapping out the location for the waste water drain and vents. This is difficult work; it takes a lot of planning. All of this work will be buried under the concrete floor and digging into the glacial till is a real backbreaking chore.
We finished the ground work and foundation just in time. My dad and brother Wade arrived and started to work right away. I came home from work and they had the sill plate on and were ready to frame. We spent a little over a day framing the walls up. We left a void in the top plate so the lifters could remove the steel I-beam but the rest was pretty standard wall framing.

That weekend we frustrated ourselves trying to replace rotten floor joists and adding additional joists to accommodate the span under the house. The house used to sit on two beams but now it will rest on one girder so we can have a larger open space on the bottom floor. We needed to get all of the floor structure in place, including the new beam, before the house was lowered. The lifters were scheduled to lower it that Monday.

It was Saturday evening and we were all ready for the house lifter to remove his wood and iron. We were getting a day without deadlines- what a relief. With perfect timing, Pieter was born on Sunday, August 2nd.