Wednesday, November 28, 2007

The Floor! The Floor!



You can see from the photo that Mark has created a new wardrobe for home maintenance - his underwear - as he tears down a piece of nonessential wall (more on this room divider project later). And, he is then celebrating the laying of the final flooring (still some thresholds coming, but that is minor compared with the rest). You can see his handywork with the re-walled, windowed, and painted room.

He's looking forward to a quiet weekend while I'm looking forward to moving the rest of our furniture into the house from the garage.

Then, the adventure with the tankless waterheater will begin. Will include installation of LP tank, tankless heater, electrical and plumbing, our new stove installation, and...hopefully at the end of all this... a gas cooktop and 'instant' hot water.

Never a dull moment!

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Lots of Thanking....and Eating









Thanksgiving 2007 proved to be quite a gathering, complete with family, friends and enough food to feed Dunedin! We gathered at Sean's house on Thanksgiving to prep for the main dinner, to happen apres Thanksgiving.

There were turkeys everywhere..some on short legs, some on long hairy legs, one with 2 necks and one that spoke Turkey! Can you imagine coming from a country named for a goofy bird?

We ate, we laughed, we drank, and we were thankful for each other and our blessings.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Space...the Final Frontier



Well, space is our final frontier. Mark has been busy on the office, and now all we need, can you guess? A floor!! The wood...er, grass...is now here from China and we are bribing the floor guys to put it in. I may even stoop to... baking. Mark is thinking more along the lines of beer. Anyway, one of these angles should work.

Meanwhile, mom and dad joined us for the BIG event in Dunedin (keep your perspective here..we are talking about Dunedin!). Wine and Blues. It is a street festival, at night, with pretty good bands ranging from Janis Joplin blues to Frank Sinatra blues. And, a selection of wines that wasnt too bad...tho we realized soon enough that each glass of wine cost more than Dad regularly pays for a bottle! We had a great time wandering, drinking, eating, and listening. Then, walked over to the Dunedin Brewery for a taste of brew to finish off the evening. Nice that its only a mile away.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Mark Takes on a Whole Room







As mentioned earlier, Mark decided to rebuild the office. The reason? The exterior wall was 3" thick while the exterior door we needed to install was 4" thick. He's been getting very sweaty and dusty every day while there seems to be new layers of wall being added. Methinks he has something to do with this.

Today he got to mudding the sheetrock! He poured cement to the new height of the floor, no longer at ground level. Now the aligators have to jump a bit AND knock on the door to enter. No more just sauntering in.

What have I been doing? Besides supervising of course... unpacking boxes, cleaning the floors (thankful that we have them), and arranging the furniture. Mark's Home Depot Turkish friend Arif (who I call Ataturk - look it up)kindly showed up this week to help move the furniture into the house from the garage. Of course, I have been rearranging it since.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

Mark Tackles the Office






Excited to work on the one part of the house that is made of wood - my office - Mark lept (leeped?) to the opportunity to thicken the walls to hold a real door. Note earlier entry about aligators coming through the door.
He's torn out old drywall to discover the aluminum supported walls from the original screened porch, insulated with styrofoam. Industrious Mark has used 2x4s (which are no longer 2"x4" in case you didnt know) on the inside walls to add depth. He has replace 4 of the 5 windows with smaller, 140 mph wind resistant windows (we will fear no stinkin' winds!) and a real exterior door (aligator proof). He boarded up one window as this was was too many for the space. The back door now sits 6" up from the ground unlike the aligator door that was level with the dirt so those critters could just wander in...along with snakes...and zebras.
Insulation is coming along, and...before you know it...drywall!