Preface, by the Rambling (but no longer parched) Rover: Folks, thanks for your good thoughts and wishes, in reaction to our plea for water two days ago! Our well struck water today, and while it's not quite as plentiful as Snoqualmie Falls, it's not as barren as the deserts of Eastern Washington, either! Preliminary analysis suggests a quarter to half a gallon per minute. While this is just barely "good enough" by typical standards, the throughput is 60 times better than when Katrina first heard this number, and thought that this number was not per minute, but per hour! For comparison, the average American household uses 400 gallons per day... so this morning, while I took a 15-minute shower in our rented city-water house, I couldn't help thinking, "seize the day, you won't be able to do that in a half a year's time!". Now, having adjusted my mentality to needing to conserve water, and then suddenly discovering that I have 60 times more water at my disposal, I feel like we're rolling in H2O!
And now, with no further ado, Katrina's post.
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These past
few weeks, I have discovered the joy of working 16-hour days J While
building our own house is certainly a dream come true, staying on top of
everything and constantly making decision after decision is not for the faint
of heart! J (And neither are these upcoming blog posts – I’m
two weeks behind, so be prepared for a lot of catch-up!)
You might
wonder: how am I spending 16 hours working in a day, when we’re paying
excavators with big machinery to actually do the clearing and the digging?
Well, here’s your answer:
It might not
seem like I’m doing much, but I sure am talking and walking and pointing a lot.
J And as one of our excavators said, “you're gonna wear
out your head thinkin’ so much”! (If you’re wondering what we actually were
doing: we were preparing the area around where the well was going to be
dug, ensuring that the big well machines would be able to get in and out, and so the
drilling rig could sit on level ground.)
Highlights of Weeks 2 & 3:
A sample of
how clearing happened, cutting down our big maple tree and digging out its
root:
Our tree-cutters/excavators were great:
I even got to help cut down one of the big trees on our neighbor’s lot (who was
clearing a spot to put a future barn):
(Granted, “help” was a relative term in
this case, as I realized how some things always look so much easier than they
actually are – especially when done by people who have some 50 years of experience!
I essentially just held the chainsaw in place while it was cutting absolutely
nothing!)
Our
access road – the one we worked so hard getting permission to use from all our
six neighbors – is much better than our own super-steep would have been, but is still quite steep (reaching 30-35% grade in one place). The dump truck that
was used to haul away our 13 loads of brush couldn’t even get up the hill
without some extra help from a “skidder”, which pushed it up the
hill every time it came up:
Can’t we all occasionally use that extra little
push on the backside to make it up a hill?! :-)
As the last
of the big trees came down, the clearing on our property began to take shape,
and we could gradually see the shape of the curving road with the loop on the
end, and our house site and yard area branching off. It’s quite something, to
have a vision that you’ve only visualized in your head and on a computer screen
for over a year, finally take shape in real-life dimensions before your eyes!
See site map, with house site and driveway branching northeastward off the loop of our
curving access road:
(We might be building in essentially the middle of nowhere
– at least according to the Seattlites – but we do have our very own cul-de-sac!)
And now see
the real-life walk-through at the end of 13 days of trackhoe clearing!
Our
not-so-little stack of firewood, just waiting to be chainsawed into
burnable-sized chunks:
And finally: loading our
very own logs onto a log truck, for sale to a sawmill!
3 comments:
Cool, thins are definitely coming along. It is always nice to see tangible results when working construction. One of the videos (toward the end) did not work and said it was private. I like seeing the pictures. They are quite good. Thanks for keeping us up-to-date.
Thanks, Erik! I fixed the link of the walkthrough video.
I'm so GLAD you found water!! And now to have the foundation started, things are really coming along. Will you get enough money from selling the logs to pay for the extra well depth??
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