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Okay, so a few weeks ago, a bunch of our fantabulous friends and family showed up and we sanded, spackled, primed and painted…

Priming

Ceiling Spackle

And the guys finished installing the last of the rodge caps on the roof!

Sean and Jeremy on Roof

Living Room Paint

The weather was beautiful and the kids played outside.  With sticks.  And as the saying goes, it’s all fun and games until someone loses an eye…

Have you ever experienced watching your son being carried into the house with blood gushing from his eye?

I have.

I’ll cut to the good news, which is that little J.’s eye is fine, though it took almost two weeks to get the “all clear” from the doc.  He suffered a hyphema, which is internal bleeding between the cornea and iris. 

It is quite serious and a real threat to vision if pressure builds up during healing, which can permanently damage the optic nerve.  Up until pretty recently, a kid with this injury would have been hospitalized for five days.

All we had to do was keep him on the couch and administer eye drops and ointment twice a day.    Ever tried to keep a four year old boy from running and jumping and doing everything that a normal kid does?  Or given him eye drops?

I have to give Sean the glory on this one.  He came up with the wonderful idea of bribery with transformers.  All J. had to do was cooperate to get drops for a couple of doses let the eye doctor get a good follow up exam and we would drive directly to Target to buy a new transformer.

The best eleven bucks we ever spent.  

J. instantly became the bravest little man on the face of the planet.  Here he is with his metal eye patch after that first follow up eye doctor visit.  (The new transformer is in his lap.): 

J's Patch

I seriously have never felt so proud of him before.  My heart was just bursting with love for my little boy who was being so grown up. The staff at the eye clinic couldn’t say enough great things about well he did. 

Identify some pictures?  Sure! 

Drops to numb the eye? No problem.

Pressure test with a little pen-like stick?  Bring it on.

Shine a light into the eye? Sure, do that too.

It was awesome.  He’s been back for a couple more appointments and has earned two more toys.  The pressure was up at the second visit, but we continued the drops and at his last appointment, they declared him good as new.

And as we nursed J.’s eye, the worked continued…

Green Wall

J and C Paint

Our friend Mark braved the cold and ladders to seal the windows, and then he and I cased the interior of several windows.

How much do you love the bright apple green and electric blue in C. and J.’s room?!  I am more excited about the colors in this room than I am about any room in the house–and I didn’t even pick the colors.  The kids did!

Tina painted and painted.  Noel installed an outlet for the microwave and hooked up the electricity in the garage (hooray for not having to run a cord out to the table saw!).  Jeremy and Sean installed basement windows. 

While we worked, our sweet friend Linda took care of everyone’s children!  I think she gets the hero award for the weekend!

This past week, Sean finished sanding the floors, the older girls painted their room, and I applied three coats of floor varnish…

I’ve recently given the camera a break from the dust, but I promise I’ll take some photos of the floor to amaze and astound you.

With any luck, we’ll get the carpet in this week and move in over MEA weekend.  As for me, I can’t wait to be done living in two places and ignoring the kids for the sake of floors and walls. 

For now, we’re neither here nor there.

Watching.

Laboring. 

Waiting. 

Working. 

Deepening waves

leading to this:

 

Push.  

 

Stretching.

Tearing.

Blood vessels

popping.

 

Prized insight:

The prize is in sight.

 

Still.

It’s messy.

 

Push.

 

Anticipating,

fearing

pain.

Squeezing through.

Knowing.

Wanting.

Feeling

it’s close to being over. 

 

Push.

We’re getting so close.  This past weekend Sean and I hung the cabinets This Old House style and thanks to our neighbor Al, the counters are also installed in the kitchen.  Everything is farm house straight:

Kitchen cabinets up

We also spent a day attending to the yard and putting away materials in preparation for some more excavating work.  We are extending our driveway along the house and adding gravel as well as preparing the site for our garage to be built next year.  As it turns out, we are also having our septic repaired. (Sigh.)  

The project list is shrinking, and we’re feeling the pressure to get the rest of it done… yesterday.

We need some help. 

I didn’t have the walls ready to paint this past weekend because I’ve damaged my wrist (at least temporarily) from mudding and sanding.  I’m going to keep it wrapped and pop lots of ibuprofen this week and do my best to finish the last coats of mudding in the living room, stairway, and one more bedroom so that all remaining rooms are ready for sanding and paint by Saturday. 

If I can hang on and push one more week out of my arm,  maybe our sweet little C. will not have to finish the rest of it up for me:

C. is a helper

I’m feeling the burn to get this done.  Can you help us!?  For an hour?  Or four?

Needed this Saturday September 26th

  • Sanders (first thing Saturday morning!) and Dust Wipers
  • Wall Painters (I know you’re all out there!  About ninety-eight thousand people have approached me about helping with this in the past six months.  The time has finally come.)
  • Pressure-Washer Operator (for porch and window trim)
  • Cleaning Helpers (to bravely take on The Dust.  Vacuuming floors, walls, window sills; wiping cupboards, ceiling fans and light fixtures; washing  windows and screens, steam cleaning the couch… everything is filthy.  It just has to end.)
  • Child Care!  Okay A. and L. are too old to need this, but they are usually game for tagging along if you want to take the whole crew.  Especially if it means getting out of doing yard work or other manual labor on the house.  Or babysitting.
  • Meal Preparation and Cleanup.  Cook and serve food to our hardworking friends so that we don’t have to stop working except to stuff our faces! 
  • Roofer to finish installing ridge caps, top the chimney pipe and trim the valley shingle edges

Sean and I need to be able to finish installing floor transitions in two doorways and the wood treads and landings on the steps.  The idea is to be ready for floor finishing during the week of Sept. 28 – Oct. 2, and to forge ahead full steam…

Next Saturday, October 3

  • Exterior painters for porch and window trim
  • Interior trim installers
  • Gardeners/Grass planters
  • Closet organizer installer
  • Window insulator/sill-board installer/caulker
  • Child care helpers
  • Meal preparation and cleanup
  • BONFIRE ATTENDEES!  Yes, it’s time for a party.  We plan to burn a huge pile of brush and junk wood.  (And make merry drinking beer and pop and eating snacks. )  Fire starting around 7-8 PM.  Bring your own chair and a song in your heart.  Be sure to call us to let us know that you’re coming so that we can talk you into helping us at some point throughout the day too. 

If arrangements work out, carpet will be installed upstairs between Oct 5 and 9… and we’ll be ready for the last wave of help by…

October 10

  • LARGE ITEM MOVERS! The massively heavy couch (two recliners) is already moved, our giant living room armoire is sold and we are hiring out to move the piano…  (“You’re welcome,” to everyone who has ever helped us move!)   The bulk of what’s left will be managed in small bites as we go but we’ll need help with a few large items:  stove, washer, freezer, desk, dressers…

If you can help with any or all of it, I can’t even begin to tell you how deeply appreciated it would be!  We are SO aware that we can’t do it all alone.

 

Walls in stairway up

Windows in master bedroom installed

Walls up and mudded in C. and J.'s room

Over-john Cabinet Hung

Fridge in the Bathroom

If we were sane, we might have listened to the advice of our friends, who at several stages of the tear off said things like, “What I would do, is maybe look into some tile to cover this up.”  It was excellent advice.  I especially thought that as I nursed blisters on both hands from pulling staples. 

When we discovered a few months ago that there was hardwood floor underneath layers of linoleum and plywood, we were determined to scrape everything off of it and restore it, to honor the home and its history.

Well, that and we have no money allocated for tiling another 300 square feet in the house.

So we tore it all out to get back to the original hardwood floor.  It was there, hiding beneath layers of linoleum, thin plywood (complete with no less than 800,000 of the longest, most fragile staples ever installed), peel-and-stick linoleum tiles, and a quarter-inch thick layer of black, tar-like adhesive.

Kitchen floor peel-and-stick

Kitchen floor pieces

Adhesive remover

Adhesive remover part two

The best we could get it to look after scraping off the adhesive remover:

Scraping round one

800,000 Staples Removed

See the staple in the photo above?  I saw a hundred of them every time I closed my eyes for days.  Every time we thought we had finished pulling every single one out of an area, we would go back over the same area and find three more.

Scraping tar adhesive off the floor

Sanding round one

Sanding round eight

No fewer than five rounds of sanding.  We gummed up countless drum sander belts. 

Worth it

I love the discolored, damaged look to the wood. Staple holes, minor water damage, even a few holes patched with tin cans.  People pay big money for that “distressed” or “antiqued” finish. 

We just had to sweat and bleed a little.

We debated about whether or not to tear out the kitchen.  We’d probably be moved in if we hadn’t torn it out.

I can’t help but think we made the right choice, even though this is arguably the most work we’ve done in one room yet.

Behold, the wall transformation:

Kitchen, just before the big tear out

Burn damage

That’s brick-patterned wallpaper.  Complete with soot from some past toaster fire or something.

Cabinets out, one last look at the weird cubby hole in the wall

Mid-tear out photo op

Late Night Demolition

Kitchen new insulation and elecrtical

Wall "window shelf" getting covered up

Outside "window shelf" perspective

New walls in the kitchen

I’m loving the red walls, complemented by a tasty brown.

This kitchen is going to be awesome.

Anyone remember where we left off in the bathroom?  Filled with ladders and buckets of joint compound, that’s where.  It’s now painted a lilac purple, and all plumbing and light fixtures are installed and operational.

Bathroom shower ceiling

Bathroom Ladders

Bathroom vanity installed

Bathroom Together

I should have snapped a quick shot tonight before we left… but I forgot the camera today. We’ve now installed an over-john cabinet, toilet paper holder,  towel bars, and shower curtain.

Of course, the fridge is now in the bathroom, too, filling in the footprint where the stacked washer/dryer will go… it will stay there until the wood floors are finished.  The linen cabinet works well for food and plates while all the cabinets are AWOL from the kitchen.

We stayed overnight last night (Saturday) and I even got to be the first one to shower in the new tub!   What a treat, truly.

Well, I realize I’ve disappeared from the blog world for awhile.

[Insert unnecessary apology here]

The progress on the house continues, although we are still living at our Spring Lake house.  (Otherwise known as the “Spring Lake Estate” …and when you say it, you must do your best impression of Thurston Howell III.)

When asked, “When will you be moving?”  our automatic response is: “Two weeks.”  We wanted to move before school started, but the first day of school photos took place on the front stoop here for the last time.

I’m going to cover updates a room or two at a time.  We’ve made so much progress!  Here’s C and J’s room, walls and insulation torn out:

C&J Room Walls Torn Out

Somehow, I haven’t snapped a photo of the completed sheetrock in the room.  Seams are even coated twice.  A quick touch up coat and some sanding, and it will be ready for paint and carpet.

The next shot is from the last day of roof replacement.  Going up the stairs, I could see right out the roof…

Pipes, open roof

Making pictures of our house is going to be decidedly more boring when all the walls are up.

Stairs, walls out in C&J's room

We’ve struggled with what to call it.  It’s an old house, much older than the house we currently occupy.  So I’ve squirmed a bit about calling it the new house.

But it’s starting to look new.

And we’ve officially hosted a small family gathering, complete with take-out supper because we have no stove yet.  It felt good–and right–to have my folks and my sister’s fam out for some relaxation.  (Okay I guess we did finish installing one window while they were here.)

Fam gathers in the front yard

Central air and windows

Yes, that’s a central air unit.  It’s hooked up and it WORKS!  It will be the first time Sean or I have ever lived in a house with such a luxury as central air.

Window work

Lots of old-house-style modification to get the windows to fit…

Kitchen window

West windows in the livingroom

Sean and C. on the tractor

Still cleaning up roofing materials in the yard…

East window in the livingroom

Last weekend, the two Marks descended upon us.  And just like that.  A closet under the stairs (and another torn out room!)

Closet under the stairs

I’m a couple weeks behind posting photos.  It’s a good indication that I’ve been too busy working to work on blog posts!

Roof work with tractor

Brave guys on the old roof boards

Front main roof done

West side roof done

Mold abated, insulated stair hall

Gutted bedroom

Kitchen sheetrock

More to come from this past weekend!  Windows are going in…

Sarah Cady

Artist,

lover,

musician,

mother.

Flexible,

liberal,

passionate,

spiritual.

Writer,

thinker,

friend.

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All text and images copyright Sarah Cady, 2007

 

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