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- Alaska 2009 preTrip (6)
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- HJ-75 Restoration (12)
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- Weather (5)
- November 2 2011: Winter Cometh Yet Again
- April 23 2011: The Answer (to Life, the Universe, & Everything)...
- January 15 2011: On Liberty, Safety, and Tyranny
- November 12 2010: Bye-Bye Blue and Green, Hello Brown and White
- November 10 2010: Last Night Here
- November 8 2010: Wanna see lava? GO AWAY!
- November 7 2010: Killin' Time, Waipi'o, Birdwatching
- November 6 2010: Bored in the Rainforest, Part 2
- November 5 2010: Bored in the Rainforest, Part 1
- October 25 2010: The Long-Awaited Shop Pad
The Long-Awaited Shop Pad
I built the workshop back in 1999/2000. At the time, I didn’t think I’d need a slab out front. (Five years prior, I didn’t think I’d need a shop, so go figure.) Over the first few years, it became obvious that my initial logic was flawed, with my feet always muddy from trips to and fro. I also spent countless hours building little railroad-style tracks for heavy projects to roll outside on, after meticulously shimming them in the dirt out front, on pieces of lumber and steel. Here’s an old shot of what the site looked like previously…
It was just Mulie season here. Gary, a friend and annual deer hunter from Wisconsin, was debating whether or not to come out this year. He makes his living in construction back there, so I suggested he consider pouring this slab for me if he came out. He got here hoping to go hunting, but the season was shorter than normal and the weather was not in his favor. He rearranged his plans and we did some preliminary work Tuesday, he and a hand from South Dakota excavated and set up Wednesday, and they poured Thursday and Friday to just beat some impending unexpected rain (and now snow).
Things could have been smoother, but Murphy’s always around to mess with you. Tuesday night, we tried to bust out some “extra” concrete that had been placed in front of my walk door years ago. It was poured solid around a frost-free hydrant, and wasn’t the 4″ expected, but a whopping 13″. Too make a long story short, the hydrant broke and I had to replace it - 5′ down, 24″ hole, and virtually impossible to work in there to repair it…
Thursday, the first load of mud came - 4000 psi with fibermesh, to be poured 6″ thick…
By Friday, it was all in place…
And that damned hydrant? Here’s the new one installed, properly protected from moving with the slab. Notice that the concrete is scored in a 3′ square, and ready to break out with a hammer if needed. It’s 4″ thick there, instead of 6″, and should come out okay IF I need to dig it up again.
Monday morning now, Gary’s heading home and he just made it out of here. I guess our long-lasting summer has finally come to an end…
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