Watching a house being built
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wrote on 2 Dec 2022, 16:03 last edited by
@George-K said in Watching a house being built:
Set up a time-lapse camera.
In this time lapse, we can see 8 workers appear.
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wrote on 2 Dec 2022, 18:29 last edited by Copper 12 Feb 2022, 18:29
That Texas dust on the windows will remove the color from that view.
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wrote on 2 Dec 2022, 18:42 last edited by
@Copper said in Watching a house being built:
That Texas dust on the windows will remove the color from that view.
Luckily it rains all the time. Otherwise the windows would never get washed.
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wrote on 2 Dec 2022, 18:48 last edited by
That dust can be relentless, I noticed it on that construction site.
I remember dust storms in Dallas, I think Houston can get them too, I'm not sure.
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wrote on 2 Dec 2022, 18:55 last edited by
Growing up in a neighborhood under construction was very cool. We never vandalized anything, but a few 2x4s and plywood sheets may have disappeared to be reincarnated as bike ramps.
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wrote on 3 Dec 2022, 15:25 last edited by
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wrote on 3 Dec 2022, 15:40 last edited by
Well, once you start framing, you need to get it in the dry as soon as you can.
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wrote on 4 Dec 2022, 23:40 last edited by
People are moving in to the house next to that one. They don't have a water view on that side of the street. Sad. I'm thinking of getting a house warming gift for them. What gift says "I'm sorry your house is inferior to mine, but I hope our neighborly friendship can survive your inevitable jealousy"?
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People are moving in to the house next to that one. They don't have a water view on that side of the street. Sad. I'm thinking of getting a house warming gift for them. What gift says "I'm sorry your house is inferior to mine, but I hope our neighborly friendship can survive your inevitable jealousy"?
wrote on 4 Dec 2022, 23:46 last edited by@Horace said in Watching a house being built:
What gift says "I'm sorry your house is inferior to mine, but I hope our neighborly friendship can survive your inevitable jealousy"?
Your sparkling personality is gift enough. They'll realize it.
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People are moving in to the house next to that one. They don't have a water view on that side of the street. Sad. I'm thinking of getting a house warming gift for them. What gift says "I'm sorry your house is inferior to mine, but I hope our neighborly friendship can survive your inevitable jealousy"?
wrote on 4 Dec 2022, 23:53 last edited by@Horace said in Watching a house being built:
They don't have a water view
Just wait until they ask the HOA to remove your trees so they can see the water.
A lady actually wanted to do that here a couple months ago.
I don't think she got very far with it, but be alert.
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@Horace said in Watching a house being built:
They don't have a water view
Just wait until they ask the HOA to remove your trees so they can see the water.
A lady actually wanted to do that here a couple months ago.
I don't think she got very far with it, but be alert.
wrote on 4 Dec 2022, 23:57 last edited by@Copper said in Watching a house being built:
@Horace said in Watching a house being built:
They don't have a water view
Just wait until they ask the HOA to remove your trees so they can see the water.
A lady actually wanted to do that here a couple months ago.
I don't think she got very far with it, but be alert.
We've been waiting three weeks for permission to put some fruit trees in our backyard. In theory, they could block sight lines from across the street. Maybe some figs for the neighbors will help smooth things over.
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wrote on 5 Dec 2022, 03:22 last edited by Mik 12 May 2022, 03:23
Get her a nice big framed picture of your lake view. That should make them very happy.
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wrote on 5 Dec 2022, 03:33 last edited by
Especially if the water is brown.
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wrote on 5 Dec 2022, 04:14 last edited by Horace 12 May 2022, 04:14
@jon-nyc said in Watching a house being built:
Especially if the water is brown.
It’s Mediterranean Ochre, common in South African heraldry.
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wrote on 5 Dec 2022, 17:26 last edited by
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wrote on 18 Dec 2022, 16:04 last edited by
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wrote on 18 Dec 2022, 16:07 last edited by
I've been wondering how big that live oak in my front yard will get. I actually have four of them, two in front and two in back, in accordance with HOA rules. I worry about the shade and how I'll grow my fruit trees in back, if they get huge. I guess I can prune if necessary. They are majestic, but I don't think they'll play nice with other smaller trees in their shadow.
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wrote on 18 Dec 2022, 16:28 last edited by
Live oaks get pretty big, but you may be dead and gone before they get to that point.
They can make some pretty lumber, but I wouldn't want to be the poor guy working with it...stuff is hard as a brickbat and tough on tools. And firewood? If you don't have a splitter, I'd just as soon handwork hickory. Nah, I think I'd rather try to split hickory, the grain is usually straighter.
BTW, where you're at, don't be surprised if they start growing some spanish moss.
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wrote on 18 Dec 2022, 18:48 last edited by
They grow into gorgeous trees, but slowly. Do you have to have them?
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Live oaks get pretty big, but you may be dead and gone before they get to that point.
They can make some pretty lumber, but I wouldn't want to be the poor guy working with it...stuff is hard as a brickbat and tough on tools. And firewood? If you don't have a splitter, I'd just as soon handwork hickory. Nah, I think I'd rather try to split hickory, the grain is usually straighter.
BTW, where you're at, don't be surprised if they start growing some spanish moss.
wrote on 18 Dec 2022, 20:01 last edited by@Jolly said in Watching a house being built:
BTW, where you're at, don't be surprised if they start growing some spanish moss.
That would be interesting. Might be pretty.