Gazebo moving along

The grain bin gazebo is starting to come together. I as usual did not watch any videos, ask anyone and spent 10 minutes looking at pictures on the internet as a precursor to building said gazebo. The guy I purchased the parts from told me it was the bottom 10 feet of a 20 foot grain bin, he gave me two tubs of bolts and nuts, four floor anchors, a pile of roof anchors, a door, the roof parts and central roof ring. Supposedly the only thing missing was the vent cap for the roof. This was promptly unloaded and ignored for two years.

Well, let me say that it is definitely the bottom half due to how heavy the pieces are. We did not get enough pieces to go to ten feet, only eight feet and if we put up a full ring for the roof then you would have hit your head every time you went in and out of the gazebo. We could have cut one of the upper panels but then I was afraid it would weaken the roof. The bottom line was after talking with the boss, wife, we opened up enough of the gazebo to have a full six pieces to go around the entire top and to get the gazebo sides over ten feet into the air. It’s actually about ten feet six inches high now at the walls with the roof I think it will be another 4-5 feet higher.

This morning I decided to do a little research on how to put the roof together. Yeah, I was better off not knowing. They used a crane, built the roof and then stood on the ground and proceeded to add a row of panels and lift up the entire grain bin as they built it. No ladders needed! The only drawback for me is that I don’t own a crane. Instead we used the trusty Kubota with the forks on it, a chain and some Vice-grips to hold the chain at the far end of the forks. This worked to get the third and fourth row in place. The fourth row was the worst. We ended up having to drill out three holes that we just could not get lined up, they were off by about 1/8” and the entire rest of the panel was already bolted together.

Mr Rainman came over Friday morning and we got the three panels up on the high back wall. It was a battle to get them bent into shape, another problem with not putting them back on in the exact order they were removed. I put up the last three rings myself with the Kubota being my trusty partner. At no point did I fall. I did tear my finger away from one of my fingernails enough to make it bleed and discovered a metal sliver in my finger this morning. The bolts had to be put on between the panel and the wooden support posts and this was an incredibly tight fit. Putting the posts 1/2” from the metal and then adding bolts meant some of the bolts are touching the posts. This is a good thing when I screwed in the lag bolt anchors.

The trusty Kubota is not going to be able to lift the center ring for the roof. It will only lift something about eight feet into the air. I am going to bolt two ten foot 6×6 posts to the upright frame of the forks resting each one on a fork. But first I am going to get a stout wooden pallet. This will let me put a diagonal support out to the front of the forks. I will then build a small open box with 45 degree supports at the top for the posts. This is where the roof ring will sit. I can then lift it up and get it centered with the tractor and then assemble the roof. I think this will work. No, I am confident this will work!

I just have to figure out how the roof support pieces go onto the sides…

Gazebo posts almost in

When they asked me at the lumber store if I wanted grade #1 or #2 6×6” posts I opted for grade #2 as they were going to be outside and I was being cheap. After having spent almost an hour per post sanding to get the knots flattened out and the paint off of the board I should have gone with grade #1! I managed to get four of the six posts installed today. They are anchored at the bottom in the Simpson steel ties buried in concrete. We have about 250# of concrete in each of the six holes. Between the concrete and the weight of the grain bin panels I don’t expect the gazebo to leave the ground. Once we get the gazebo together we will toss six inch plus rocks all around the base of the gravel pad to hold the pad in place. This will add to the stability of the entire structure. For that to happen I need Little Dumper (one ton dump bed pickup) functional. It has been at the brake shop for two weeks and they have not contacted me yet. I will need to call them next week. When I dropped it off I asked them to not take as long as it did to fix the tires. I was assured it would not take that long.

The grain bin panels are also attached to the wooden posts by 4” structural screw in anchors. Each panel is held with 8 anchors. This will keep the post and metal sides from shifting.

I spent about an hour trying to figure out how to lift one of the panels with the tractor. I cut a couple of pieces of chain then looked at all my different connectors. I found one that I could put through a hole on the panel. I slid the two forks on the tractor together and then wrapped a chain around them with the lifting part of the chain between both forks. I took four vise grips and clamped them on either side of the chain to keep it from sliding. This will let me angle the forks and get another three feet of lift I am thinking. It will just take some manipulation of the forks to get it in the correct spot so one person can bolt it in place. That is the theory at least, a real world test will be necessary to see if that is correct.

Annmarie went out to work the bees today and they are no more. She was right a few weeks ago when she thought the queen had died. It took the drones a while to catch on to reality. The surprising thing is we saw honey bees flying around so there must be a wild hive somewhere else on the property, we are just not sure where. The honeybees have been drinking the milk my mother-in-law is leaving out for her kittens. We can officially now say that they are not our bees! We were able to salvage some of the comb. I will be melting down the last of our wax and pelletizing it so we can have wax if we need it for anything.

The alpaca are really getting used to coming in the front yard. Snoop, our oldest black alpaca, always goes off by himself. Every single one of the other alpaca is on the right side of the walkway and he is the only one on the left side. They are finally starting to make an enough of a dent in the green material that you can see the difference.

We are getting a contractor out next weekend to see about installing solar panels on the barn roof for our house. We are tired of the power going out all of the time.

There were no new lambs today.

Gazebo is Going to Happen

Mr Rainman came out two days this week and filled the six holes with concrete and a steel 6×6 post anchor. We spent a couple of hours on Friday getting the next three panels up on the gazebo. Annmarie and I have had ten plus discussions on how the gazebo should be assembled. Every time I think I have the design down I am learning that that is incorrect. We “discussed” it again yesterday and I have seen the vision. So this weekend I will be working on getting the posts installed so that the next row can be installed. I am sure I understand now, I will let you know in a couple of weeks. I need to swing by the scrap metal yard next week to have them keep an eye out for a new roof cap. I am missing the vent cap for the gazebo.

We were supposed to work on the gazebo all morning but I needed to empty out part of the old lamb shed so that panels could be installed so the mommas/babies had a place to get out of the weather/sun. We had to move a bunch of round and square bales out of the way first. The square bales kept trying to fall apart. Once we had the area cleaned out we installed some temporary horse panels. I was able to get one of the old wooden jugs cleaned out and ready in case we need it. There is a metal gate in front of the entrance because I had hit the overhead rail with the tractor roll bar a couple of years ago denting it so that the gate could not be closed. In a moment of brilliance I thought we could just get the gate working in a fifteen minutes. Two hours later we had managed to take down the entire rail system and door in pieces. It did not want to come down easily. Once we had it down it amounts to a lot more work to get it back up and operational. The header board needs replaced outside, and a second board installed inside so that real bolts can be used instead of large wood lag bolts. I need to buy two different sizes of bolts as they used two different hole sized holders. Plus, I need new rollers, these are so shot that they are bouncing around the inside of each wheel and can move around an inch. Which is why it’s so hard to shut the door. This is going to have to be a later project.

We have been watching “Baa Baa” the ewe we took back as her family is moving away. We left her collar on so she is easy to spot in the herd. She is still overweight but is looking better after a few months grazing on sparse feed and running all over the farm. She is still very friendly.

We have had four ewes give birth, two sets of twins and two singles. We had to bummer off one of the white twins two nights ago. It refused to get up and was limp. We brought it inside, warmed it up and fed it and then gave it to Tisha to raise. If it’s going to make it she is the reason. Unfortunately, when we went out to bring the sheep in last night and look for babies that same mother was standing by the spring hollering. The other baby had jumped into the water and got stuck in the mud and drowned. We are not going to ding her for this loss. We have closed off this alleyway so the sheep cannot get to this area. The main barn lot has 2-3” gravel in the base of the ditch so that it can be driven through. This makes the water only about 1-2” deep and the lambs are safe. Those other twins have been over there more than ten days without any complications. Lambs always find a way to die. I have some leftover large gravel and will be hardening the edge of the water line with it. The lambs won’t go out into the deep water. Every year something comes up. The ditch is lined with concrete blocks behind the barn so there is no mud to contend with for the lambs. The mud build up comes and goes in certain areas and not always the same areas of the ditch.

Gazebo progress

After we sorted cows we worked on getting the 1/4 round trim installed on the porch. I made a mistake and only bought ten pieces 10” trim to cover 78’ of trim. This may sound like a lot of extra but it was going to take one piece for each end (2) and four for each long side (8) for a grand total of no extra pieces! I have never installed 1/4 round overhead before but knew there was going to be something special about it. I cut the first end piece and installed it without any difficulty and went to cut the adjoining 90 degree piece and could not get a match despite cutting it six times! I was trying to cut a 45 degree miter with another 45 degree slant. I had it all so screwed up I could not figure it out. I knew I had to quit guessing or I was going to run out of wood. So we watched a YouTube video. You have to use the wall side against the fence and then cut a 45 degree cut. Once I did this I was able to cut all of the pieces and reuse my short piece to get the trim completed. We had to use the router on the trim to get around a metal connector and on a separate piece two nails stuck in the overhead that cannot be removed. The blue color on the porch ceiling really turned out nice and the blue trim really made it snap! The only thing left is to clean off the porch, scrub it down with cleaner and get the furniture back on the deck.

Mr Rainman was able to finally get the dirt/gravel pad all compacted down nicely so we could start figuring out where to place the grain bin/gazebo. I started setting up the first row of walls to get a decent orientation on how it was going to fit. Once I had it bolted together then Annmarie and I went out and we discussed where the support beams would be located and how much of the walls I was going to remove to create an open type building. It turns out that it takes six panels to make a full circle. We are going to take out two panels on one side to create the entrance. They only sent us enough panels to go three high but that is only eight feet high and they told us we had enough panels to go ten feet high. So to compensate we are going to take the four panels from the opening and raise up the other four panels another 32”! This will get us 10’ 8” instead but that will give us enough clearing above the posts to bolt in the ceiling.

I had to order a case of 4” structural bolts so we could attach the panels to the wooden posts. We are going to install 6×6” posts on steel supports that are embedded in concrete pillars. Each post assembly costs around $100. I thought it was the wood until I looked at the receipt today, the stainless steel supports that go into the concrete are $65/each. Once I had the first ring assembled I marked the post holes and placement with some paint then we took down the walls again. I had converted the little John Deere over to a post hole auger. We drilled a 6” hole first then once all six of those were done we came back over them with the 12” auger. I managed to snap two shear bolts on the 12” auger. We kept hitting buried metal, large rocks and large tree roots.

Tomorrow, Mr Rainman will reassemble the first layer of the gazebo so he can start pouring the concrete piers. Hopefully, he can get all the piers poured but I am unsure if it can be done in a single day.

The grass is getting very high on the front hillside. We are going to let the alpaca nibble on it and see if they can make a dent.

Lambing continues slowly

Moonlight barn picture, phone picks up a lot of light!

The sheep are kind of having babies at a glacial pace. We have had one more single born since the twins last week. We have moved the sheep to the upper fields now and it makes it a lot easier to check on them. We can just hop on the tractor and drive up the fields all the way to the end. This is not even a slight possibility on the lower property due to the creek and fences separating the fields. I spotted the new mom when I was bringing in the sheep one night. The baby had just been born and was still warm and wet and messy. I grabbed the baby and used it like a lure to get the mother to follow me into the barn lot where we are keeping the mommas and babies.

Lamb productivity is easy currently. one set of twins, one single born to two mothers = 150%.

The child and her now official Beau are bringing us apples that have fallen off their fruit trees and we are feeding them to the sheep at night. Every evening I toss out a bunch so when the sheep come in at night they are rewarded. It is starting to pay off, the sheep are coming in 2-3 times a day to check for apples. This makes it much easier to put them in at night if they are voluntarily coming in. There a bunch of ewes that look like they are going to pop any time and several that have full udders already. We are hoping they get with the program and pop them out soon.

No one is related

I needed to match a cow/calf pair as we are selling one this fall. I spotted two cows and two calves off by themselves so figured I would get some tag numbers so it would make it easier to sell them. I was headed down to clean up field one of the old hay bales that had not gotten removed. I drove up to the cows and the calves jumped up and ignored the cows that were right there. They started to run down the fence line and all of a sudden the cows that were 75 yards away started hollering and running at the fence line. Turns out the adult cows were just baby sitters and not the actual mothers. I was able to get a picture of the mother cow with calve #24. This same person wants a pregnant cow also. So Mr Rainman and I sorted cows today.

Sorting cows never goes smoothly. I know this and yet I seem surprised when we are running the cows for a solid hour on the back hillside because the cows refuse to go down through the gate that is in the middle of the hillside. It took us two hours to push the cows into the corral and sort off two, a female cow and an eater for this year. The same person that wants a cow/calf pair wants an eater so we are hoping that by putting the eater in with the family pairs it will learn to be calm. Running with the teenagers all summer has not made any of the cows calm. We had two of them leap the fence. The fence on the hillside that we had just tightened and reinforced! They jumped it without even hitting a strand of wire. We are just going to leave them for now. They will stay outside the fence with the mommas/babies and knock down some of that tall grass. They won’t run away with the cows on the other side of the fence.