Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Relocated!
I've decided to try resurrecting it over at wordpress. I have another blog there and find it a bit easier to use.
(Feb. 4: fixed link!)
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Demise of the ancient Edison Water Heater
Garden Plans, Part I
Vegetables: there's enough space for a relatively huge vegetable garden on the south side. I hope to plant two kinds of tomatoes, peppers (sweet and hot), onions, garlic, chives, pumpkins, lettuce, and some herbs. Mostly it'll save a little money at the grocery store, and hopefully allow us to make salsa whenever we feel like it. As long as the vegetables show up.
In another area, I want to plant asparagus. And in another, raspberries (they are pricey at the store, but the plants are cheap).
The front of the house has to be redone -- there's almost nothing growing in front of it. I was thinking azaleas or rhododendrons, and maybe a magnolia tree somewhere.
The big backyard is fairly empty, but planning is complicated by the presence of several very large trees that create quite a bit of shade. In one corner I thought about the raspberries, and in the other, a prairie-type planted area to attract butterflies and moths. We've always wanted to see a Luna Moth in person, so maybe our prairie area would attract some if they still exist in our area. We already have a persimmon tree nearby, so that's a start.
I'll be starting most of the plants from seed in order to save some money. Never had much luck with seedlings, but maybe this time will be different.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Electrical Progress. And curtains (again).
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Garden Planning
For the vegetable garden, we're planning on: tomatoes, red/green peppers, hot peppers, onions, pumpkin, garlic, and maybe some herbs. Possibly some asparagus too. I think we'll end up using a space of about 20 x 10 or 15 feet maximum. Searching on the internet has led me to some unusual vegetable varieties that I've never seen in stores, so maybe we'll try a few of those for kicks.
At the edge of the back yard, I'd like to plant a few raspberry bushes.
As for the rest of the yard, we have to cut down a diseased pine before it infects another larger pine close by. There's also a not-too-big persimmon tree threatening our incoming power line that we should probably take care of while we're cutting. Deciding on trees to plant has been difficult. I do know we want an apple tree, but I keep reading that to get apples, two trees are required. I'd like a weeping willow, and a ginkgo, for some variety.
Last fall I hacked away some invasive mulberry bushes (growing inside other bushes). I've got a feeling they'll be coming back from the stumps, so I suppose I should dig them out before they start growing again.
We haven't thought about flowers at all since it's not a priority right now. Although I'd like a lilac bush or two. One side of the house is lines with white hydrangeas, and my neighbor says they've been there for at least 40 years. Maybe white lilacs on the other side would be a nice complement to those. But they probably wouldn't bloom at the same time of year.
Under the huge maple in the backyard, there isn't much grass. OK, no grass. We were thinking about planting some ivy as ground cover for that bare patch.
That's enough for my escape from winter. I have to drill some holes and do some more prep work for the electrician today. Hopefully by the end of the weekend, the living room and dining room will be rewired to completion! More than 2 outlets in the living room sure will be nice.
Saturday, February 9, 2008
Fun Water Projects
We didn't get much water in the basement though; just the tiniest bit of seepage from a corner that already had some cracks. So, project one will be to seal the cracks, and apply some waterstop paint to the concrete walls in the basement to reduce the humidity down there.
Project two was a joy -- cleaning out the gutters. I don't know the last time they were cleaned. We meant to do this in the fall, but got carried away in other things instead. Anyway. A spaghetti spoon did the trick to scoop out the muck. And the "gutter slop" smelled exactly like the small from our basement floor drains when we didn't have them covered up. So I'm assuming they're all going to the same place, wherever that might be.
Project three is tuckpointing brick. While I was cleaning the gutters I noticed some of the brick foundation was missing mortar, almost completely in some spots. Sounds like more fun to me.
No exciting pictures to post.
Other than that, the rewiring is still in progress. We have a brighter floodlight at the back entrance now. We're thinking about how the bathroom's going to be redone sometime. At the moment we're planning on a tin ceiling. The only issue will be whether it will be silver/chrome/nickel in color or white. I'd go for silver, but it seems new bathroom ventilation fans only come in white, and a white fan sticking out of a silver ceiling might look strange. We're planning to keep the silver schoolhouse light fixture in the ceiling. We'll see!
Friday, December 28, 2007
Things to do next year
1. Fence the back yard, so we don't have to worry about the dogs escaping.
2. Have the plumbing checked out, and at least have the worst pipes replaced, if not all of them.
3. Finish the electric rewiring, including the garage and outdoors.
4. Replace broken garage siding and repaint all of it.
5. Put an entry door on the side of the garage.
6. Landscaping - cut down a dead tree, plant some new trees, put in some brick walkways.
7. Finish at least part of the basement - new bathroom and bedroom/office/playroom.
8. Work on the kitchen - this one probably won't get started let alone finished next year.
9. Get some new furniture -- things that match!
10. Install at least a plywood floor in the attic; check out venting the attic.
11. Restore the windows.
12. Scrape and repaint the roof overhangs.
13. New toilet, tile, and fan in the existing bathroom.
14. Crown, picture, and/or chair moulding in the rooms without it.
There. That comes out to a bit more than one project a month. I'm sure we'll think of more to do -- or we'll have emergencies to deal with as they happen. I didn't even bother writing down "check into installing central A/C" since I'm pretty sure that won't fit into our budget at all next year.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Nook Gets a Curtain
Saturday, December 22, 2007
The Happy Room!
The curtain was there when we moved in, and will be replaced eventually. I'd like to put up a shelf to hold our gazillion cookbooks and some coffee items. Either a chrome shelf, or a wooden one painted white or red. Or both white and red. Awhile back, I saw a nice dinette set, red table and red chairs. It was a bit too expensive at the time. I think it'd look great in the room, but what we have in there now does work. And who else has a scalloped octagon-shaped faux marble table in a lovely shade of tan?
On another front, the dining room has been re-electrified. Last week I prepped it for the electrician by removing the old outlets (all 2 of them) and the light switch, making holes for 4 new outlets, and running all the wire to each and to the breaker box. All he had to do was install the receptacles and hook it up to the breaker box. I even adventured into the attic to remove some of the old knob-and-tube wiring running to the light fixture. Snip snip. It only took the guy not even 3 hours to finish off the dining room (if he had had to do all the work, I bet it would have taken him at least 25 hours to do, judging by his progress before. And, it wouldn't have been done anytime soon, since he won't be back until sometime in January).
P.S. The paint color is "Polished Turquoise" by Kilz (found at Wal-Mart); but I had Menard's match it with Dutch Boy paint. I stumbled onto this website, which apparently gives you the color codes for many brands of paint. So if you see someone's house site and like what they've done, but cannot obtain their paint locally, perhaps you could match it using this information.
Demolition of the Creepy Basement Room
Then there was a plain box with a Montgomery Ward shipping label still attached. I wonder if the house isn't a Ward's house. There was this unpleasant surprise on one of the room's sagging shelves. Who knows how long it had been there. This chandelier was in the room. A few parts of it are broken, and all it says is 'made in Spain.' I wonder which room it had been in, if any at all.
Almost done:
All that was left to do was get rid of the wall studs. I picked up the saw to make it easier, instead of hammering them out. The wood floor-plate was held in place by metal rods which easily came out.
I left the existing shelves up, for now. They'll be easy to take down later.
This is where I started to get tired of the project. I tend to start things and not finish them. I had no interest in cleaning up all the debris. I didn't realize there'd be so much of it. But, I took the nails out of the wood, so I could throw the wood in the burn pile. (Living in a rural area does have its benefits, like being able to burn whenever you want).
Finished! (Almost). Cleared up about 25-30 square feet, turning creepy into not too bad. It will also make rewiring the living room much easier.
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Slow but steady electrical progress
Pictured: my beloved Bosch drill, holding the super bit that works. On the left is a thin, foot-long bit I used to drill downwards from inside the outlet holes so I could locate where exactly in the basement to drill upwards to run the wire. Second from left is the typical wood-boring bit. Second from the right is the Speedbore Max' bit.
In my aggravation while doing all this (grumbling "It's not my job!" most of the time -- this is why we hired an electrician in the first place) I ripped out the old knobs and tubes that were just sitting there empty in the basement. It looks like they even had special double-headed nails to hold the suckers in.
Saturday, December 8, 2007
Christmas Tree Up
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Interior paint color advice?
Results of last night's village meeting
The meeting was strange in some ways. Apparently our town leaders don't know if we have a book of ordinances somewhere, or what the ordinances even are. I don't understand how they can enforce rules, if they don't know where they are, let alone no one in town has access to them either. I also heard that our water department may be in some hot water with the EPA for some unknown violations, but I have no specifics. I can say they're woefully inefficient at announcing and ceasing boil orders.
All in all, apart from not getting the position I wanted, it was a nice opportunity to meet some more people in town. (There's only 350 or so people here, so I met about 2% of the town last night).
Oil tanks finally gone!
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Rural Illinois Broadband Internet Access
Anyway we've suffered along with dial-up internet. We're on our second provider since the first one didn't provide a stable or quick connection, even by dial-up standards.
We researched the high-speed options in our area. Either we could spring for satellite-based internet (like satellite TV), costing about $60-70 a month plus a hefty installation fee and a multi-year contract, or a wireless internet company that also charges a hefty installation fee and about $60 a month for service and requires a multi-year contract. Not going to happen.
I had to switch our cell phones to another company -- don't believe the AT&T commercials stating triumphantly "more bars in more places" -- not a single bar here! I went with Verizon, since they have a signal in our area. However, Verizon also has wireless internet options that I didn't know about before. The cost is the same as most other high-speed providers, $60/month, but there are no installation fees, and we can try it out for 30 days to make sure it works before being in a contract. And they have discounts if you work for certain employers, so the wireless modem was free, and no activation fees either. So I went with that for internet, and it's worked a lot better than dial-up. They have two signals available, one for really fast internet, and one for slower internet. Our connection hovers between the two, presumably since we're in a borderline area. So we're trying it out for the next month. But it sure is nice not to tie up the phone line trying to check email, etc. I thought I'd post this in case it might help someone else out.
And, last week I read about an opening in our village's council. I'm going to go to tonight's meeting to express my interest in the opening, although I know someone else has already expressed interest. I doubt I'll get the position, since I'm new in town and not well-known, but I figure it's worth a shot. I'm not sure what the trustee meetings involve, which I think is a problem since there doesn't seem to be any way to access information about our village government activities. I've got plenty of ideas, so we'll see what happens tonight!
Revamping light fixtures
The one on the left is pretty much a before picture. I found a blog suggesting boiling the fixture in water (with some baking soda thrown in). I tried that, letting the water boil with the baking soda, then throwing in the fixture. The pot then boiled right over, all over the stove, like one of those "volcano" things you make with vinegar and baking soda. I gave up on boiling the fixture to get the paint off.
The fixture on the right is somewhat of an after pic. It's after I used conventional (nasty) paint stripper and a scraper to remove the paint. Not just one layer of paint either. First, the chunky, thick and drippy white layer. Followed by an easy layer of harvest gold. Finally, an extremely stubborn layer of avocado green paint. Not all the paint came off.
I then tried scraping off the paint on the somewhat-boiled fixture, since the paint on that one did seem not as tightly adhered. A lot did come off, but enough remained to make the effort seem not worth it.
What to do next? Go to the hardware store and spend some money! I got a spray can of Citri-Strip, some assorted grades of steel wool, and some wire brushes. I soaked the fixtures overnight in the pleasantly-scented stripper. Then I wiped off a lot of the residue, and treated the stubborn spots to some course steel wool. I wasn't worried about scratches since I was looking for a brushed steel finish anwyay. The wire brushes helped get in the crevices. Once the paint was finally gone, I cleaned the fixtures, and sprayed them with glossy clear enamel to prevent rusting. I should have gone outside or in the garage to do that though, since I really stunk up the place with that spray paint.
Here's the result. Only two more to do, after these!
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
At last, a shower
Monday, November 19, 2007
New baby!
Electricity Updates
The bad blogger that I am
Moving into the new place was more work than I thought.
I had to rid the basement of spiders and cobwebs. It was overrun. That took many hours with my new best friend, the Shop-Vac.
Once we moved in, we had to figure out how to get on the internet (since we're in the middle of nowhere). No more fast cable modem for us. At the moment we're on terribly slow dial-up, but hope to upgrade to some kind of satellite or wireless service if funds allow.
Working full-time (over the already mentioned, frustratingly slow dial-up) and trying to keep up with the repairs, and getting ready for an addition to the family didn't leave much time for writing. I'm sure other people could balance it all better, but I like to sleep!