These two photos were taken about half an hour before quitting time. The framers should finish up today with those pesky flared eaves on all sides of the house.
The front dormer is partly framed. The side dormer remains for tomorrow.
Watching a bewildering world from the middle of nowhere
A certain personality is starting to emerge. It has a bit of a French accent, doesn’t it?
Today the framers finished the tricky curves where the flared eaves meet the rounded rafters of the side porch.
This is the room where I’ll probably spend most of my time. I call it the radio room. It’ll be an office, the place where I keep my computers, books, and ham radios. It’s a balcony and will have a rail overlooking the living room.
The siding arrived today, neatly stacked on a trailer so that air can circulate around each piece of siding. It probably will be three weeks or so before the siding is put on, but meanwhile it can continue to cure in the September air. The siding is rough-sawn white pine, rustic and local.
A cicada perched on a limb of the poplar tree above my trailer
There seems to be a healthy balance of insect life on my newly cleared acre. Several types of bees including honey bees work the wildflowers, of which there are surprisingly many for the first season after clearing. I see lots of lady bugs, grasshoppers, and butterflies. To my surprise, I’ve not been bitten by a mosquito all year. Gnats can be bothersome when the humidity is high, but they don’t bite. On up the food chain, the critters that prey on insects also are in good supply. Each evening at dusk the bats come out. There are lots of spiders, including a black widow near the wood pile. And of course there are lots of birds.
One of the many reasons I want meadow rather than lawn is to support the insect life, and, along with the insects, the higher-order critters that depend on them for food. So far, Lily, my four-month-old kitten, has been content to torment the bugs and leave the birds alone.
Lily, photographed through the screen door, a blur as usual. She never stops. I got the slingshot to try to pop the butts of the deer that were stealing my tomatoes. The deer are sneaky, and I never got a shot at them.
Weather Underground (www.wunderground.com)
Work continued on the roof today, including getting felt on top of the sheathing. Some inside framing work also got done. None of that makes for very interesting photographs, so no pictures today. The framing crew stopped work a little early today because light rain has started falling as tropical storm Hanna approaches the Carolina coast. Some of the counties to the southeast are under a flash-flood watch. However, Stokes County is not under any weather watches at present.
We’re expecting a rainy weekend from tropical storm Hanna.
All the rafters are in, and the framers are getting ready to apply the roof sheathing. Because of the flared eaves and the curved roofline over the side porch, some extra work is needed. The curved piece he’s holding above supports the sheathing over the side porch.
Fitting this piece required some tricky measuring.
The lower end of each rafter has this piece added to flare the eaves.
It’s impressive how, abused as my spot of land is from the removal of the pine trees and the stumps, it’s struggling to produce. In early September, a whole new wildflower season begins. I call it the yellow flower time of year. Unfortunately I’m low on yellow flowers. I have only one small stand of black-eyed susans. But I certainly will attend to that in future years. Above: a morning glory
I planted the cosmos. Everything else volunteered.
Today’s work was pretty dramatic. At last some of the rafters are in, and the height of the house is visible. First, some framing went up for the front and side dormers.
Viewed from the front, here are the rafters for the right wing.
The right wing viewed from up the hill
Installing part of the ridge for the left wing. Seen from up close, the height of this house is pretty imposing. But if you get back a hundred feet or so, it shrinks to cottage size and snuggles into its setting between the hillside and the woods. By the way, the rafters are sitting on what the contractors called a knee wall. The knee wall rises about two feet above the level of the second floor’s floor, and the ends of the rafters are notched into the knee wall. Come to think of it, that may be the complete ridge for the left wing, since it’s a hip roof. I’m terrible at working with three dimensions in my head.
Another view of the left-wing ridge going in
The right wing seen from the back of the house
The front and right side of the house seen from up the hill a bit. This picture was taken before all the right-wing rafters were in.
The house sits up against the woods, as is fittin’ for a cottage.
The farmer’s markets around here are small but very good. I’ve not been going to the big farmer’s markets like the ones in Winston-Salem or Sandy Ridge. The King and Danbury farmer’s markets, both of which are in Stokes County, have had everything I need. I’m also getting to know some of the local farmers, who are always happy to take the time to tell you where their farm is and how they farm. Above are free-range eggs from Pinnacle, tomatoes and pimento peppers from Francisco, and apples from north Stokes. Pimento peppers are rarely grown around here for some reason, but they’re my favorite, eaten raw and fresh, or whomped into what I call Carolina Church Supper Potato Salad. I also got some Stokes County honey, which they said was blackberry honey. I’ve never had blackberry honey before. It’s really good.