Progress report: the demolition of our house's roof is complete. This morning the roofers will return to “dry in” the rest of the roof (making it waterproof), and next week they'll start putting the steel on. We had an accident here yesterday – one of the roofers fell off his ladder, landing on his feet on our concrete apron. He suffered a small fracture in his ankle as a result, and he'll be out of action for several weeks. We also discovered another small problem. The old roof (of fiberglass shingles) was laid over top of the edges of the flooring material on our small second-floor balcony. The installers glued those shingles down with some very effective glue, possibly an epoxy of some kind. There was no way to get the old shingles off without tearing that balcony flooring material, and that means we have to replace it. We're working on finding a contractor who can do that. It's always something...
Meanwhile, nothing has happened on the barn this week, though that should change this morning. The lumberyard is due to deliver all the interior sheathing this morning, and the builder's crew should arrive to start installing it. We expected the plumber and electrician to do their thing this week, but so far all that's happened is that the electrician has installed the meter box.
I've been working with the local power company (Rocky Mountain Power) to figure out how to get electricity to the barn. We've got a plan, permits are in place, and I've started working on it. Much of the actual work is trenching, as this service will be underground. I'm partway through digging a 375' long trench from the pole where our power comes onto our property over to near the barn. About 10' from the barn we will have a transformer, mounted on a pad in the ground. That also needs a large hole dug under it to provide a foundation. My neighbor (Tim D.) is helping me with this, and I'll try to get some photos today. He's done a lot of this before, and he's given me some really good direction and advice on exactly how to do it. I'm operating my backhoe to do the major digging, while he stands in the completed trench just back from where I'm working. He checks my depth (with a section of plastic pipe I've marked up with the target depth) and smooths the bottom of the trench with a shovel. With the two of us working together like this, I never have to jump on and off the tractor, and the work goes much faster than I could do myself.
Having good neighbors is a wonderful thing...
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