I took the week off from work to work on the house this week. I wanted to finish the clay plastering, but it's too cold in the house! I had to stop plastering today, and will work on some other tasks until the heat gets turned on Thursday morning (my fingers are crossed).
It's been an interesting week so far. Jeffrey nearly impaled his thigh with a piece of wood caught in the table saw. I'm telling you, construction equipment is dangerous! Luckily, all he has is a really bad bruise. I took a bad fall today, the fourth one since I broke my wrist in May. I was outside in a sea of mud (my yard is bare dirt, and it snowed four inches Monday). My boots were caked with mud and I stepped on a wet plastic tarp, and that did it. Construction sites are dangerous! I've tripped over power cords snaking all over the floor, over sawhorses, and construction material strewn all over everywhere. I have made it a habit to put on my heavy work boots as soon as I get to the construction site, even if I'm not planning on doing any work. Just walking around there is hazardous to my health. My chance of tripping over something is a lot less when I have on heavy boots.
Here's a picture of my new stepladder that Jeffrey picked out for me. He wasn't satisfied with any at Home Depot, so he went to a store that had a much larger selection, and got me this one.
Quite a step up from the one below, which sent me flying backwards onto the basement floor when the ladder collapsed.
Here's the gypcret bathroom floor, painted with sealer before the tile floor was put in.
The kitchen floor was painted with sealer, also. You can see the cabinets a little better.
Below is the bathroom floor, tiled, but not grouted yet.
Here's the kitchen floor (porcelan tile from the ReUse Center) ready for the grout. Porcelan tile is very hard and can be used outdoors. I have enough left over so I can tile my 3 season porch, when it every gets built.
Here's all the boxes of bamboo flooring, ready to be installed. You have to have it in the house for at least a week to acclimate. The installers are coming tomorrow morning.
Okay, this next picture is amazing. This little tiny thing is the boiler. It will heat the whole house (easily!) should the sun not shine for days on end and the temperature go way below zero. It's about the size of a carry-on suitcase. It's called a slant fin boiler.
The water heater is even smaller. It's an "on demand" heater, very efficient. It reminds me of the hot water heaters in Germany. Since it's "on demand", it doesn't keep 40 or more gallons of water hot, day and night. The hot water will be mostly heated from the solar panels. The water heater won't go on unless it's needed.
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