Another rainy night

Last night was another rainy sleepless rainy and sleepless night. Going to bed at 10p I joked to Toby that maybe we wouldn’t be able to hear the rain because the tarps were now raised up. At 11:30p I woke up to a thunderous drumbeat. Toby felt me wake up and said, “Can you hear the rain?”. I got up and checked the 2nd floor. It looked pretty dry and I saw only one area of tarps that I thought might be problematic, and that area was completely over new construction, so I wasn’t worried. The cloudburst passed quickly and I went back to bed. At 2:45a I woke up to deafening rain. I got up and trudged back upstairs. This time I saw many depressions in the tarps where water was not running off. I poked them with the end of a 2×4 and instead of the water running off the roof, it ran backwards and fell onto me. I got Toby up onto the second floor and she used the pushbroom to keep the water from rolling backwards while I used 2 2x4s to direct the water off the roof. We got back into bed at 4am. Rain is forecast again for tomorrow morning.

My First Note

Max has drawn us lots (LOTS) of pictures, but today he wrote me my first note. I opened my door this morning to find a paper airplane made out of a piece of play money, with a note that said: MOM I MADE OOU PEREPAM I was so excited that he spelled ‘made’ right! We’ve been learning about silent e’s. It’s one thing to be able to read them and a lot harder to write them. Good job, son! 🙂

What do I hate more, wind or rain?

Sunday, 25 February 2007 Saturday night was a sleepless night. Having the tarps 10 feet (at the ridge height) off the ground means that they catch a lot of wind. There was not that much wind that night (about 3 – 6 mph according to weather.com) but it was enough to stress me out and keep me from sleeping. When we got home from church at 10:45a, this is what I saw.

A big balloon

Too windy

Compare the above photo to the one below that was taken a couple of weeks ago at Pop’s 60th birthday.

Another big balloon

Another big balloon

Was I worried? You bet. Weather.com said that the wind was about 15 mph at that time. I finished tying down the other tarps. The big canvas ones were doing ok, but some other plastic ones were flapping around. By 1 pm, I could see that the truss holding white tarp down was being lifted and buffetted and straining at the joints. The last thing I wanted was for the truss to come apart and go through my neighbor’s roof or hit a person walking by or land on a car. Also, when the tarp ballooned up it was being pressed against the chimney and was melting to the chimney. So I ended up cutting down the tarp. I wasn’t going to risk climbing up on the trusses to undo the tarp and have it catch wind and knock me off the roof. All in all, it was a long work day for me as I finished up the work at about 6:45 pm. Long weekend. What is the answer to the question in the title of this post? As of now, it is still rain, but wind is a very close second.

The Strength of a Dozen Men

Saturday, 24 Feb 2007 The west wall on the second floor of the new addition is about 45 feet long. It has a couple of sections that are shear walls, so there is extra wood. This wall is very heavy. We had built the wall, but we had not the strength to raise it up. Providentially (there are no coincidences), 2 weeks earlier Kevin Callaway and Mark McCormick had inquired if there would be a good weekend to have some guys from our Bible study come and do a ‘barn raising’. We were able to coordinate for this weekend. We got 3 or 4 smaller walls raised, as practice before it was time for ‘Big Bertha’

A wall well raised

A wall well raised

Mark and Kevin adding support

Mark and Kevin adding support

It had got to be just right

It had got to be just right

It had been estimated that we would need 10-12 guys to lift the wall into place. We had 7 there for the raising. Toby was pressed into service as well. Kevin, Mark, Doug Ribbens, Uncle Mark, Greg, Pop, Me and Toby all gave a giant ‘Heave Ho!’ and the wall was set in place. Who needs a dozen guys when we have the Carp homegroup guys around?

After lunch, Jeff Weinbender and Wayne Cassriel lent their muscles to the project. We spent the remainder of the day putting up the trusses on top of the new wall to support the tarps (it is the rainy season, after all) and spreading out the new tarps over those trusses. (Sorry, no pictures. The official project photographer was too busy playing with Christopher Cassriel.)We worked very long that day and got a lot done. Thank you everyone who helped make this weekend especially productive.

Barn Raising Prep work

Friday, 23 Feb 2007 Granpa Seal came to help out today and we got a lot of work done in preparation for the extra help we would have on Saturday. We cleared the tarps, moved the trusses, finished up the walls that had already been laid out and set up scaffolding. You can see the long wall laying down under the scaffolding.

Getting the second floor ready

Getting the second floor ready

These rolled up tarps weigh about 175 pounds a piece.

Great balls of tarp

Great balls of tarp

The walls will be up soon.

Pop is excited

Pop is excited