In the hot weather, the builders carried on demolishing the barn. With the temperatures reaching 30C, this was a horrible and dusty job.
Author: stephen (Page 41 of 61)
Although much of the day today was taken up with briefing a kitchen designer (I have high hopes!!), I did manage to spend a couple of hours on the dry stone wall along Hagg Wood today. The corner of the wall is not in the best of shapes. While I have managed to get away with just repairing the top 2-3 courses, this part of the wall needs to be rebuilt. While some of the wall has a bit of a “wiggle”, this part of the wall is just lost to the under growth.
I have tried to keep the amount of rebuilding to a minimum and concentrate more on “repairing”. But with the corner, I have no choice. Yesterday, I spent some time digging out this part of the wall. Today will be spent rebuilding a 4m section. This is in comparison to spending a day repairing a wall when I can do 10-15m in a day.
Much of the stone from the barn is going to be used to build the new extension, so it is being taken down very careful (well, as carefully as 200-year-old walls will allow). This is the start of Phase 2. We are going on with the demolition work and possibly the concrete floor base while the architects are finalising the design details.
With the temperature touching 30C, this is hot and dirty work. Which is why I am building the dry stone wall in the bottom field!
We started planting out in the polytunnel at the end of May and now things are starting to spring into life.
In the current weather, I leave both of the end doors open during the day. If nothing else, it lets the bees in to pollinate the flowers. However, the heat in there is pretty unbearable. I tend to water it twice a day.
I have been working on the wall that lines Hagg Wood today. Down in the bottom corner by the gate. Unfortunately, this wall is in pretty bad shape and the small wall that backs onto the road is pretty precarious.
It took me a while to trim back all of the holly just to be able to get to the road. The soil is much higher here, but a bit of investigation with a pick axe revealed that it was a pile of stones – presumably fallen off the wall – rather than soil. You can see from the picture below that there was a lot of stone hidden under the grass. Clearing the holly and finding the stones took most of the day. The heat (around 30C) was pretty intense and even in the shade it was hard work.
I spent an hour or so at the end of the day and rebuilt the top section on the smaller wall that runs along the road. Although it still bows a bit, it is a lot more solid than before. I did look back through my archive photos and managed to find a picture of the wall before I “fiddled” with it!
There is a little more to dig out tomorrow and then hopefully I can finish this bottom section of wall and move up to the other end of the bottom field.
After pointing the chimneys last week, we haven’t been able to do any more pointing. We have been hampered by the fine weather – if the weather is too hot, the pointing dries out too quickly, cracks and falls off. Not exactly what you want!
The front of the building is in the shade much of the day, so today we have made a start here. The rear of the building which is South facing is in direct sunlight for most of the day. We had been waiting for the current hot spell to come to an end but I suspect that we are going to have to put up some tarpaulins on the scaffold to get some shade.
After doing a couple of test panels we have decided to repoint the property using a traditional lime mortar rather than a cement based mortar.
Re-poininting the stone work makes a huge difference to the external appearance.
Although there are no stairs, the upstairs floor has been installed and it is possible to have a wander around this space. It is amazing how different the building now feels with the floor put back in. The upstairs for some reason feels a whole lot bigger. It is certainly starting to look more like a house you could live in.
The dry stone wall in the orchard is all but finished and with the fine weather I have been looking out for a spot to work in out of the sun. The dry stone that runs along the edge of Hagg Wood is a perfect spot. It is also the other end of the property from where the builders are working. So it is pretty quiet and dust free.
I had forgotten how much quicker it is to repair rather than rebuild a dry stone wall. It only took me a couple of hours to get this 7m section of wall back into decent shape. The trick here is not to let the wall deteriorate to a point where it has to be rebuilt.
Most of the stone had simply fallen off the wall, so it was just lurking in the long grass and nettles. I did have to use a little bit of extra stone, but stone is not something that we are short of at the moment! You can see it in the photos as the slightly lighter colour due to the amount of dust clinging to the stone. It will soon blend in.
One of the things that we haven’t thought very much about yet is home autmation. Ironic really given my work background.
As always the starting point with this sort of project is a set of requirements. Let’s see if this list makes sense……
Lighting
- Control of indoor and outdoor lighting including dimming
- Timed e.g. outside lights might come on at dusk for 4 hours and then turn off
- Preset “scenes” that might control multiple lights e.g. “Welcome” turns on the outside lights at the front, the porch lights and the hall lights, “Good night” that turns off all the internal lights
- An “away” mode that simulates normal patterns of usage while on holidays or working away
Remote control
- Ideally via a browser that would allow remote access
- Web pages that could be integrated into other sites
Door bell
- Programmable intercom that connects to mobile phone when in “away” mode
Gate control
- Programmable intercom that connects to mobile phone when in “away” mode
- Remote opening and closing of the gate via SMS
Remote viewing
- Web access to remote camera
Heating/Hot water
- Programming via browser
- Zoned (temperature control and timed)
- Remote control
Music
- Zoned music
- Moisture proof speakers in bathrooms
User programmable
- Relatively easy to program
- Does not require supplier to program the system
Networked
- Cat 6 to be used throughout the build
- No real requirement for a media server, although “connected devices” will be used
- Private and guest wifi
This is turning out to be a lot slower than anyone thought. This is largely due to every stone having to be cut to make sure that the depth of the stone allows for a cavity in the wall. There is blockwork on the inside, 100mm of insulation, an air cavity and then stonework on the outside. Each of the stones that makes up the external face of the extension has been cut using a Stihl saw – noisy and dusty work.
Today, the stone ashlar surround was installed. There are only a few courses left on two sides then the walls are completed. The rafters are installed. There is a large green oak beam to be installed (roughly where a thin batten has been fixed) and the holes need to be cut for the two rooflights. Then we are ready for the roofers to return.




























