Wednesday, December 29, 2010

High Winds & High Tides


The weather has been very wet and the winds came up the other night. We could hear the surf pounding the shore all the way up Charlton to the cabin. The combination of high water levels from the rain, an exceptionally high tide and high winds made for a pretty scary time for those in low lying areas and waterfront properties. In Qualicum Bay (above) the surf threw debris up onto the Island Highway and slapped at the front of some of the beach-front homes - yeah, no thanks! The Nile Creek was also running very high, wild, roaring and unrecognizable from just days before. Nature sure is something to behold. Thankfully unbroken weeks of rain appear to be ending.
If the Weather Network is correct we are in for some sun - my fingers are crossed.

Season's Greetings



MERRY CHRISTMAS

&
A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Mudd and Mayhem

My 6 year old laptop is on its last leg and acting very buggy which is making it difficult to update this blog. I may be forced back to the library and the use of their computers (sigh..) but for now soldier on...

The pocket door frames are installed and floors papered in preparation for : Drywall Time! - the boards are delivered by two crane trucks, lifts marked for the rooms they go to. So far, so good - very organized and professional. The next day the drywallers arrive for what they call the "slam" which is a one day blitz of boarding. 5 guys board the whole house in one day. It looks like a bomb went off, bits and pieces of drywall, glue tubes, pop cans, drywall screws and white dust everywhere.

Touring around the outside I see something odd - what is that? then break up laughing - they boarded over a window with a pop can on the sill - it looks so funny!



When all that dust settles two guys come back and finish the trickier stuff at a more leisurely pace. But decision time again- Yikes! What kind of corners do I want? How are we handling window trim and what kind of doors are going in? What are we doing with the showers? and the finish around the fireplace?...and where the drywall ends at the ridge beam - what about that? Who knew that drywall could be so complicated?


The rooms in the house are starting to take shape and we can get a real feel for the space. The drywallers have been at it a couple of days when the accident happens; a drywall screw misses a stud and of course, doesn't miss the plumbing pipe - water everywhere. Thankfully these pipes are easily repaired and no real damage is done.


Next week: drywalling continues and septic system installation begins!

Monday, December 6, 2010

Progress

The last few weeks have flown by. We continue to make progress knowing that we still have a way to go before the house will be move-in ready. The electricians have finished pulling wire and placing boxes for outlets, fixtures, switches and electronics, R40 insulation has been placed in the ceilings and poly on the walls (the walls were already insulated as part of the Pacific Homes package) and the cedar board and batten siding is almost finished.





The fireplace and woodstove have been installed and the floors are being ground off in the main living area.


The finish on the floor is quite organic and varies from small specs of exposed aggregate to larger pieces in the colours of the rainbow on a dark field. In the sunligh the colours sparkle. The shots below are close-ups, the overall effect much more subdued. We're very happy with it.


Ahead: drywall, paint and kitchen cabinets on the inside and on the outside the septic system, before we can do plumbing. As I was saying, still a ways to go.....

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Home Away from Trailer


Above is the cabin so generously offered to us by our neighbors. It is heated by a wood stove which keeps it nice and warm and it has a kitchen, bathroom and a small loft bedroom - perfect!

The neighbors on Charlton have been amazing, Corky and Evelyn who have allowed us to camp on their vacant lot, Bryan and Joyce who have welcomed us and shared their garden produce, Robert and Rya who offered the use of their sauna and shower and Alec and Fiona the owners of the cabin: very kind, welcoming and generous people. We look forward to getting to know them all better and being able to welcome and entertain them in our new home some day soon.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Our Fireplaces Arrive


Our fireplace and wood stove were delivered late today. The wood stove goes into Roy's shop.
I can see him now with a group of friends, beers in hand, telling stories and laughing it up gathered around that stove.... can life get any better?
The wood-burning fireplace goes into our house. The unit is quite large and has to be brought in through a patio door opening. It will be a focal point in our open concept kitchen/living & dining room. In this cold - we can't get it fired up soon enough! Mmmmm, I can almost feel the warmth.

Abandoning ship..


November 23 2010
The forecast was for cold temperatures overnight last night, so we left the heat on in the trailer and spent the night at Dad's in Courtenay. Unfortunately. the water lines froze up anyway, so this morning when we returned it was to no pump/no water/no toilet. It is late November and thinking we might have made it through to when the house was ready was probably unrealistic.
Luckily for us, we have been blessed with wonderful neighbors. A couple living 3 houses down offered us the use of their guest cabin for as long as we needed it...hopefully no later than early January. We have gratefully accepted and moved a few meagre belongings in tonight.
It's a wonderful log cabin with a wood stove and it is warm and cozy. I feel like I'm dreaming and some evil gnome is yet to come along and pinch me...
More on the cabin and the wonderful people living on Charlton Drive later.
We will do our best to shut down the trailer - it's been fun.
Bye-Bye for now.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Where in the World...

November 22, 2010
Where in the world were these photos taken?
Northern Ontario? The Yukon? Siberia?



Answer: East Coast of Vancouver Island
Yes, my friends we got walloped again today. A front came in from the east with high winds whipping the snow into total white-out conditions. I know. I attempted the drive to Courtenay and was forced to turn back when I couldn't see past the hood of my car.
Later when things settled down and with Roy at the wheel we were able to make the trip.
They tell me this is highly unusual weather - earlier snowfall and colder temperatures...
I'm starting to get a complex.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

A Tour for Pat

My sister has told me that it's really hard to figure out what the house is about from the pictures I've posted so lets take a tour...


Approaching from the street the furthest door to the left is the entry to the mudroom, laundry, mechanicals and a washroom handy to Roy's workshop. Guests would enter by the door in the center of the shot which brings you into the sun room, behind that wall of windows. From inside the front door I'm looking back and out at Roy, the workshop and carport.


Top left: From the sun room I'm looking to the back of the house where we have 3 patio doors onto the woods and creek. To the left is the kitchen and pantry, to the right the fireplace and sleeping quarters. Top Right: from in front of the fireplace I'm looking at the kitchen and pantry and beyond that to the mudroom door. Through the window: Roy's workshop.


Above Left: Now I'm standing in the kitchen looking toward the bedrooms. The missing rake window is where the wood-burning fireplace will go. Above Right: A half turn and I'm looking back toward the street and the sun room windows. You may have noticed that we have power and lights now, courtesy of our team of hard-working electricians. Light is good, heat will be even better. Tsk, tsk, some people are never satisfied...



Above right: view of the house from the woods (I'm behind the workshop) - at the mudroom, kitchen window and patio doors. Above right: a view down the bedroom side, the woods and Roy's wood pile in the background. The "jut out" is the ensuite bathroom.
The yellow power cords runs to the boundary of our lot, over the fence of our neighbors (Corky and Evelyn) and across their lot to the neighboring lot (also Corky's) where we reside in our trailer. Power is a little limited - we can run the heater OR the kettle Or the toaster, but ONLY one at a time. Keeps things interesting...


Above left: our home for the last 6 months, looking a little desolate and scary in the snow. Above right: completing the tour I'm standing on the road in front of Corky's hedge and looking at our lot, and the cars, trucks and trailers of the tradespeople working on our house. In this small community we are an employer of means, by no means. Pat, I hope the tour helps .

Friday, November 20

I rented a movie for Roy and I to watch - it's Friday night after all. We watch movies on our 15" computer monitor as we don't have TV in the trailer. So we're watching the movie, it's pitch dark out (and I mean pitch dark - no street lights out here in the country) and we notice this ethereal glow coming through the window... what could it be? SNOW, falling lightly but steadily down, and settling on the ferns and cedars....and staying. Hmmmm, that's not supposed to happen here.


End of our driveway, view down Charlton Drive and detail shots that make me shiver.

It's not an "eastern-style deep freeze" on Saturday morning and only a few inches have accumulated, but folks here get a little "freaked" when dealing with the white stuff, so the guy that was coming to grind our floors cancels and suddenly we're free for the day. We take a run up to Courtenay and I'm back to shooting through the windshield again.


The road at Deep Bay, mountains in the background and pit stop at Buckley Bay for gas.


We have heard that the Weather Forecasters are predicting that this will be the longest and coldest winter in the last 57 years. Where do they get this stuff? Roy and I have even been accused of bringing the cold weather with us from Ontario. All in good fun right?... Right?


The Estuary in Courtenay, the Puntledge River and the mountains of the Comox Valley.