What’s been happening lately?

Lots going on but not a lot of finished projects yet.  Some hints below:

That spider is big enough to pull a cart.  I’m going to have to start charging him rent.

Scrap Wood Project: Planter Box

Scrap WoodEvery woodworker has a surplus of scrap wood.  It just piles up, faster than you know.  I purged a lot of my scrap wood on the move out here but I did keep a few choice pieces.  But after the garage was built, I inherited a small pile of lumber, mostly construction grade stuff.  Lots of 2×6’s and a few nice 2×12’s, and quite a few pieces of cedar trim.

When you live on this island, you don’t let a lot of things go to waste.  I get that, and I’m totally down with that concept, but at the same time I don’t want to be a hoarder.  Not only do I not have the storage space, but the tenets of my religion forbid it.  Thou shalt not be a freaking hoarder.  Don’t own stuff you don’t need, don’t keep stuff you won’t use.

WoodAnyway, that’s a long way of explaining why I feel compelled to periodically make a woodworking project entirely out of scrap wood.  In my case, I have a crapton of 2×6’s, most of which are marked to make a deck or a shed or something but I can spare a few.

BambooThe back door of the house is a double door with these big glass panes that let the light through.  They’re lovely.  And they afford the entire living room a direct view of the ugliest shed in the San Juans (click here if you think I’m joking).  So we figured we’d get some bamboo for screening and put it in a big planter box so we can look at the bamboo and not the shed.  We’re pretty smart, huh?

Carpenter AntThe wood, I discovered, was being guarded by a small army of carpenter ants.  I’d ask them to work for me since I have a myriad of carpentry jobs to get done but they’re union and I’d have to pay out the wazoo.  Well, the rule of ants is that where there’s one, there’s a million, so I had to make sure the wood I took from the wood pile was ant free.

More woodThe planter box would be pretty simple, I hoped.  I’d just cut notches in the ends of each piece and stack them all together.  I’d like to thank my mother for buying me Lincoln Logs for Christmas in 1972.  They taught me a lot about how to build things.

Lincoln LogsI was actually hoping to not have to use fasteners or nails of any sort but I decided to toe it together with some tenpenny nails just to make sure it didn’t fall apart.  Since I don’t own a nail gun, that involved me hammering nails at an angle into corners and hard to reach places.  Yeah, there was a lot of colorful language coming out of the garage in that particular hour.

Eagle2The bottom was a piece of scrap plywood that had been sitting outside in the rain for about eight months so I figure it’s already acclimated to being moist and moldy.  I did line the inside with some thick plastic, just to help the thing live longer.  This planter box should age well.  I expect within a year it will be gray and pitted and have moss growing on it, which is the intended look I’m going for.  A bald eagle stopped by and gave my planter a little nod of approval, and I took that to be a sign of good fortune.

Planter

So there you have it.  Nothing but a few 2×6 beams and a sheet of plywood screwed to the bottom with like twenty decking screws just to make sure it stays affixed for as long as possible.  I didn’t even treat the wood with anything, I’m just leaving it outside to rot.  In a good way.  It should weather well out here, and should look great for many years.  When it’s finally ready to be put out to pasture, literally, it can be simply taken and set in a field where the planter and whatever’s growing in it can just become part of the earth.  It happens faster than you think out here.

Better View

It sure beats staring at that ticking time bomb boiler in the crappy shed.

I fully expect that bamboo to take off like a weed on steroids.  There’s actually two species of bamboo in the planter, both known for their aggressive growth and screening properties.  If the whole thing gets overtaken by bamboo growing out the sides and bottom, I’ll be happy.

 

Cat

 

Hardwood Floor, Part 1

Got most of the flooring installed this weekend.  It’s really nice.  It’s a lot better than living on particle board subfloor stained with the remains of squashed ants, dog pee and whatever else spilled on it in the past.

The install went well.  I’m in good physical shape but after three solid days of crouching, kneeling, installing, hammering, sawing, lifting and pressing, I am beat.  Everything hurts.  And it’s not done yet but I won’t get to the rest of it until this weekend.

We put a good vapor barrier down underneath the flooring to help with the expansion and humidity.  The pneumatic nailer was an expensive rental but well worth it as it saved so much time.  I’ve installed flooring by hand, just small jobs, and it’s completely do-able but it takes a lot longer.  This is 500 square feet of floor and I’d hate to have to pin every plank into place with a hammer and tenpenny nails.  Ugh.

Those logs in the corner made for some interesting cuts.  I’d like to take this time to thank Festool for making such nice precision tools to get jobs like this done.  Couldn’t have gotten the job done without them.

I initially wanted to put a solid band around the tile at the entry and at the back patio but the planks didn’t come in very long lengths.  I think 32″ was the longest one.  So they split up a bit around the perimeter of the tile.  Still, I’m happy with the way it turned out.  The color is fantastic; though again, like the tile, it makes the wood paneling look even crappier in contrast.

Inky was completely and thoroughly terrified throughout the entire experience.  Spent most of the time under the bed.  She did NOT like the pneumatic (traumatic?) nailer at all and could not be consoled when I was hammering away with it.

In the end, it’s one of those things that makes our house look like a home.  We’re very happy with it.  I have just a bit of finish work to do in the living room, need to finish the bedroom and put a bit of flooring in the closet, and install some trim pieces.  The trim will come much later, as I want to wait for the garage to be finished entirely and have all my tools available to custom make it.

It’s getting there.  It’s finally starting to feel like a place where people live.