What else is new?
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Here's our bedroom. The 'before' is a bit of a shocker. The previous owners were heavy smokers, and there was honeycomb in the AC unit.
The deck. When we moved in, it wasn't really safe to walk on.
@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
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@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
@89th said in What else is new?:
@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
We had not one but two robin's nests under the deck this summer. I disposed of the first nest after the chicks fledged, and then they rebuilt it two weeks later and produced a second batch. The bigger dog was inches away from getting one of the chicks the day after it left the nest, but it discovered flight just in time. The noise the parents made during this episode was unbelievable.
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Here's our bedroom. The 'before' is a bit of a shocker. The previous owners were heavy smokers, and there was honeycomb in the AC unit.
The deck. When we moved in, it wasn't really safe to walk on.
@Doctor-Phibes said in What else is new?:
Looks like some kind of engineered wood or composite. What material is it?
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@89th said in What else is new?:
@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
We had not one but two robin's nests under the deck this summer. I disposed of the first nest after the chicks fledged, and then they rebuilt it two weeks later and produced a second batch. The bigger dog was inches away from getting one of the chicks the day after it left the nest, but it discovered flight just in time. The noise the parents made during this episode was unbelievable.
@Doctor-Phibes said in What else is new?:
@89th said in What else is new?:
@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
We had not one but two robin's nests under the deck this summer. I disposed of the first nest after the chicks fledged, and then they rebuilt it two weeks later and produced a second batch. The bigger dog was inches away from getting one of the chicks the day after it left the nest, but it discovered flight just in time. The noise the parents made during this episode was unbelievable.
I bet. Imagine you just built a home out of sticks using nothing but your fucking BEAK because you don't even have hands, then banged a chick, she gave birth to your kids in that home, then your kid falls out of the home and doesn't know how to use their wings to fly yet and you watch a creature the size of a dinosaur vs a cat approach your kid to eat it and you are trying to yell to your kid how to use their wings and instead of words all you can do is whistle out of your fucking BEAK. Man, what a nightmare.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in What else is new?:
Looks like some kind of engineered wood or composite. What material is it?
@Axtremus said in What else is new?:
Looks like some kind of engineered wood or composite. What material is it?
Yeah, it's composite - Trex, I think. We wanted something that wasn't going to need painting and all the rest of the crap that goes with wood. Pay now or pay later.
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@Axtremus said in What else is new?:
Looks like some kind of engineered wood or composite. What material is it?
Yeah, it's composite - Trex, I think. We wanted something that wasn't going to need painting and all the rest of the crap that goes with wood. Pay now or pay later.
Good choice. My deck is cedar. Only now, after 20 years, am I replacing any boards. No problem if it only a few boards per year- we plan to be out of this house within the next five or six years.
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We have Trex as well. Very happy overall, it's been 10 years since the previous owners installed it and it's holding up fine. I can even pressure wash it (using a 30 degree nozzle) in the spring to get the winter dust/pollen off of it, even though they say don't do that.
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The deck was actually our second choice after the guy who was supposed to do it disappeared without trace with some of our money. We ended up spending quite a bit more than we had planned, but got a nicer job done than the guy with the 10 gallon hat would have managed.
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Trex is good. I did trex with my most recent build, but I’ve a question for @Doctor-Phibes : Did you have to replace those joists under your deck? I ask because I want to rip up the unfinished cupped and split front porch boards on another house (built in 2023) and redo it with Trex.
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@brenda you've essentially "built" the house yourselves at this point, that is really remarkable. I'd like to do a fresh painting of the exterior (trim and garage doors), since we face east and a lot of it is sun baked at this point. When we moved in in 2021, we had painters repaint the big rooms but I painted most of the bedrooms and bathrooms. Felt good finishing the last room to be painted (the kids' bathroom), so that chapter is over. I don't particularly get pleasure from painting, so good riddance.
@Doctor-Phibes The previous owners also had "heavy" taste (really dark/heavy curtains, lights, etc) so we've slowly swapped those all out. It's funny what looks good to one owner, and not another...
For the interior, we wallpaper. We even paper the ceilings! Yes, designs and multiple papers on the ceiling! Hubby and I even do the ceilings together. And yet, we are still married. Many a divorce has come from papering ceilings together. LOLOL
I actually like wallpapering. Thank goodness I do. A 1900 house really calls for it.
You've done so much, too, 89th. I know I would love to see all the beautiful things in your yard, and then on the way back home I would want to stop at Gertens, Sargent's, Knechts, ...
And this is why God created credit cards.
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Two other smaller projects, thanks for letting me share in your thread @brenda !
The two large arbor vitae near our gate, they grow about 8-10" each year, so I've been pruning it so that it's creating an archway, kind of fun. The first pic is what we saw in 2021, healthy but couldn't access gate without getting brushed by both, and the last pic I have is from 2 years ago, I'll have to take another one after I prune it this month as the archway is fully connected from the height 7 feet to about 13 feet above.
The other project is removing daylilies and replacing them with black eyed susans. Love that plant (HATE the bunnies that eat the stems, though!!). Even put the kids to work.
And yes, this is what saturday's look like these days...long gone are the golfing mornings... dunkin and tall ornamental grass from the hardware store
@89th
I LOVE YOUR ARBORVITAE ARBOR!! That is too cool.You have done a remarkable job in refreshing your landscape and renovating it. Well done!!
Love it, too, that the kiddos are involved. It's a great family project, and the kids really can help. They can be proud of what they contributed to the project. Take pics of the kiddos by the fruits of their labor, and put them out where everyone can see them. It will let them experience that positive feeling of getting something done, and being recognized for it.
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@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in What else is new?:
@89th said in What else is new?:
@Doctor-Phibes Wow what a difference, bet it feels great walking on the deck now. I like the hardscaping beneath too.. not only looks great, but also removes some PITA yard/weed areas on the far left and under the deck.
We had not one but two robin's nests under the deck this summer. I disposed of the first nest after the chicks fledged, and then they rebuilt it two weeks later and produced a second batch. The bigger dog was inches away from getting one of the chicks the day after it left the nest, but it discovered flight just in time. The noise the parents made during this episode was unbelievable.
I bet. Imagine you just built a home out of sticks using nothing but your fucking BEAK because you don't even have hands, then banged a chick, she gave birth to your kids in that home, then your kid falls out of the home and doesn't know how to use their wings to fly yet and you watch a creature the size of a dinosaur vs a cat approach your kid to eat it and you are trying to yell to your kid how to use their wings and instead of words all you can do is whistle out of your fucking BEAK. Man, what a nightmare.
This is absolutely accurate.
We've had multiple nestings of robins. They are very serious about their parenting. The females are all Karens about protecting the kiddos, and the males are very involved dads, unlike many other types of birds.
They're fun to watch, and they will leave a big mess when they are done.
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I love it, blondie! The only things that slows me down now is the smoke from the fires in Canada, and the job responsibilities I have.
Today is a smoky day, so here I am online. I love all of you folks, but if it wasn't smoky, I'd be outside all day long.
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Trex is good. I did trex with my most recent build, but I’ve a question for @Doctor-Phibes : Did you have to replace those joists under your deck? I ask because I want to rip up the unfinished cupped and split front porch boards on another house (built in 2023) and redo it with Trex.
@blondie said in What else is new?:
Trex is good. I did trex with my most recent build, but I’ve a question for @Doctor-Phibes : Did you have to replace those joists under your deck? I ask because I want to rip up the unfinished cupped and split front porch boards on another house (built in 2023) and redo it with Trex.
You should not have to replace the porch or deck joists on a two year old house. I would open everything up and lay down flattened aluminium drywall corners over the top of eachjoist to act as a drip edge to keep water away from the spruce joist. Spray paint the metal edge flat black and fasten down the Trex over top. It was a carpenter who told me about that when I did my deck 20 years ago. My deck joists are as sound and unweathered today as they were then when I put them down.
It would save you a pile of money too. Those aluminium corner strips are fairly cheap.
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Trex is good. I did trex with my most recent build, but I’ve a question for @Doctor-Phibes : Did you have to replace those joists under your deck? I ask because I want to rip up the unfinished cupped and split front porch boards on another house (built in 2023) and redo it with Trex.
@blondie said in What else is new?:
Trex is good. I did trex with my most recent build, but I’ve a question for @Doctor-Phibes : Did you have to replace those joists under your deck? I ask because I want to rip up the unfinished cupped and split front porch boards on another house (built in 2023) and redo it with Trex.
The whole thing was new. It was probably a 30-40 year old deck, and all the stone was also new, so we had to put new concrete in as well as new joists as they removed everything to put the patio and steps in. I wouldn't have thought you'd need to with a 2023 house, totally different job.
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Brenda - what’s new with your daughter? Where is she these days?
My son’s latest tricks are driving a car and playing multiple instruments (guitar, bass, drums, piano). He played Hey Jude on the piano at my latest piano party (last month). He’ll be a junior this year.