Gazebo up!

This was the weekend to finish up the gazebo! The rental equipment came on Friday at 0900, a scissor lift and 45’ boom lift. I got the requisite five minutes of training and I was in control of my own fate. I knew that I needed to get the boom setup first as it was needed to hold the roof up so I could tear down the platform. But I needed to get the scissor lift onto the front hillside first as I was going to park the boom in the corral and all access would be blocked. Luckily, there was a hook hanging from the bottom of the forks so I was able to just use the hook on the boom. I thought the 45’ boom was a little overkill but it just barely reached out far enough! I ended up with the boom fully extended and had to drive the boom forward a few inches to get the needed distance.

I was able to put up a chain attached to two points of the center ring and over the boom hook. When I took tension off the platform I was ready to tear it all down. During the dismantling of the platform I discovered that one side was only held up by a single screw, the other two had failed. The pallet I had built the platform on fell apart into three pieces. I was pretty impressed that it all held together long enough to get the rental equipment out to the house. The best part is they rented it for one day (8 hours run time) and did not pick it up until Monday. So I was able to use it over the entire weekend.

Once the platform was off the Kubota, I drove it out of the middle of the gazebo. I then tried to drive the 4×4 scissor lift with big tires into the gazebo, after having to drop all the protective rails to make it go under the opening, it was four inches too tall. Nope, one wheel kept spinning and it would not go more than three feet. I called the rental company and they sent out the mechanic. I worked on the baler as the new parts came on Thursday. I put the gear on backwards and had to pull it and was attempting to get it on correctly when the mechanic arrived. It turns out that this machine had been having some issues and he did not know about it. It turns out to mostly be poor design. It uses hydraulic pressure to drive all four wheels and once a wheel starts to spin all the pressure goes to that tire! We got the lift into the gazebo by nudging it a couple of times with the tractor forks. I was able to get four more roof panels on by myself for a total of 8/24 that were attached on top ring and bottom to the wall.

Mr Rainman came out Saturday morning at 0700 and we dove right in! It turns out we had four roof pieces that had the upper eight inches cut off! So you cannot bolt them to the upper ring. It was pure happenstance that I installed one on Friday and then Mr Rainman found three more. Once we knew how many we had we spread them out every fifth panel evenly around the roof. The scissor lift had to have a little push/pull help with the Kubota to get it turned inside the gazebo so we could finish getting the roof panels up. We made really great progress but it was starting to get late and we had three panels left. I was tired and wanted to quit, but we were almost there so we stayed and finished the last three. The entire roof was up, all the panels that could be bolted to the center ring were but we were having trouble with six panels not lining up at the bottom of the roof. The roof was too high, it needed to drop about one to two inches on just those panels. We decided to let gravity do its job overnight and come back in the morning and all would be perfect. Especially since we had already bent one anchor by me extending the boom when I should have been retracting it.

It was not perfect the next morning, absolutely no part of the roof had shifted. Now on one hand this is great news, but it still left us with the conundrum of how to lower the roof. Especially, since the wind was blowing 10-15 MPH, I was so glad we finished putting up the roof on Saturday! We talked about going up in the scissor lift and trying to just hang and throw our body weight around to get the roof to slide down. Instead we moved the boom truck around to the back of the gazebo and used the boom to “push” down on that side of the roof. We got all but two holes lined up and ended up drilling new holes for those last couple of holes.

I had this brilliant idea to cover the center top ring with the panel I had cut in half earlier in the assembly process. I wanted to just use one piece of the panel but it was not wide enough. So my awesome idea was to just stack them like a cross at 90 degrees, drill a hole and put an eyelet on top then drill four more holes and put the eyelets in the opposite direction so I could then anchor the new “free” lid to the center ring. The wife was away at church and I was sure this was going to work. The big issue was neither myself or Mr Rainman knew how to tie quick release knot. The second knot I tried was called an exploding clove-hitch knot and it held 60# of metal and let us raise it 45’ into the air with the wind blowing! I wanted to release the hitch as soon as it hit the roof but Mr Rainman wanted to wait until we knew it would work.

We went up in the scissor lift and started working on getting it attached. As we were getting ready to attach it he asks me if we should go down in the lift, walk out and look up to see how it appeared from the sidewalk. I naysayed this suggestion immediately! I was tired and wanted to be done. We got it all tightened down when the wife pulled up and promptly walked over and started saying “no” repeatedly. It was all Mr Rainman could do to not fall over laughing. So we dropped the lift and I went and looked. It did not look the greatest but I did not want to spend a $600 plus for a new cap if I could even find one so I got her to agree to let me use the cap idea as long as I cut the cross into a circle. Of course I thought I had a lot of metal cutting wheels and ended up only having two new ones and two used ones. I got it cut with my big DeWalt 60v grinder. I had half a disc left and only exploded one disc.

The amazing exploding clove-hitch was again used. It was easier to tie the second time and it did work as we tried it out after we brought down the cross. We got the round one up, we dropped the scissor lift, looked at it and then tried to anchor it down. This necessitated a trip to the hardware store to get shorter tighteners. We got six tighteners on it and it is not going anywhere. The knot gave way when it was pulled from the ground, we used 100’ rope and tied the knot in the middle of the rope.

All the equipment was moved out so it could be picked up on Monday. Again the scissor lift required some pulling to get it out of the gazebo but it was a down hill trip to the driveway so I was able to get it out without any more assistance. So it only cost about $1100 to rent equipment and I only had 2.5 hours of run time on the scissor lift and 2 hours of run time on the boom truck. Yes, I do know that I probably should have done that 3-4 weeks earlier. So learn from my hesitancy/cheapness and just rent the equipment early. It is a dang sight safer that is for sure.

Gazebo back on the menu

I was not certain that this weekend would be the completion of the gazebo. On Monday I was not able to reserve the needed equipment. It was still out. On Wednesday I missed work due to illness and slept most of the day. So on Thursday I went and rented the equipment, I had to get a boom that had uneven forks but they agreed to deliver it on Friday but their delivery driver was out sick so Friday was up in the air. This morning the two pieces showed up. I had to move the scissor lift into the yard first then set up the boom truck as it was going to block access to the yard.

I noticed that when I was driving the 4×4 scissor lift into the yard that it only had two wheel drive. It tried to get stuck in the driveway on the gravel. I got it into the yard without too much difficulty but I had noted that when one wheel spun all other wheels ceased turning under power. The boom was another experience. You can choose three different types of wheel turning. This ended up with me going into the corral crooked. I got trapped up against the gate and had to crawl out the window. I was convinced I was going to have to remove the gate on the corral to get into it. Once I walked around I realized that I was trying to go into the corral on a diagonal. I got back out of the gateway, straightened it out and tried again. I was able to jog it back and forth between the two open gates to get it lined up on the center of the gazebo. My one minute instruction did not handle the myriad different ways to move the boom. I was shown how to change the angle on the entire vehicle to straighten out the forks if needed. There is a large hook on the boom and I am just going to use it instead of the forks. I was able to reach out and center the hook where I thought it needed to go. I then went and found a chain and crawled up my central platform. The wooden shims had all fallen out and the entire ring was cockeyed. I had the chain on it and ready to lift when I realized that the hook was fixed and could not swivel and my chain was at a 90 degree angle to the chain which would cause the center part to try and spin when I lifted it up into the air. So I got brave and moved a whole bunch of loose wood and moved the chain 90 degrees. I then went and lifted the chain with the boom, it worked! I had the roof suspended in the air from above. I then proceeded to tear down my original platform. This was slightly disturbing. I only had one screw on one side holding the platform level. When I got it all down on the ground the pallet I had built it on broke into two pieces immediately and if I had kicked it, it would have fallen into three pieces. Needless to say the platform was not my greatest idea and went from unsafe to death defying in fairly short order.

The 4×4 scissor lift would not move on the grass, it kept spinning. I called and they agreed to send out the mechanic. I worked on the baler while I waited as the new parts came yesterday. I had one gear that I attempted to put on backwards and am now putting it on correctly but it’s only on about half way when the repairman arrived. Come to find out this exact machine has had several documented issues that the mechanic did not know about but the sales staff did, he was not happy. It has to do with hydraulic drive central pressure and no articulating wheelbase. He was able to get the machine closer to the fence for a nice straight shot. I ended up using the Kubota to push it into the gazebo. I had to lower the rails as the lift is 96” high and the opening is only 92” high. Once we had it inside the mechanic was kind enough to help me get the rails back up. Safety first! It then took me another 30 minutes to get all the tools together.

I was able to get three new panels installed and four more attached to the gazebo at the top and bottom. I was also able to get about 70% of the bolts in the middle of the panels installed. I then got about 100 bolts and nuts set up and ready for tomorrow. The only thing I could not find was a 1/2” open end wrench. I had two and now I cannot find a single one in either the machine shed or old house. Mr Rainman is coming in the morning and I am hopeful we can get the entire roof installed tomorrow. The nice thing is once the lift is in position I just turn it off to conserve my run time hours.

The horse is loving this project as she has to be in with the sheep because she cannot get to her water. So it’s an all you can eat buffet for her.

Winter is coming

Winter is coming and Fall has officially started. I have a bunch of vacation (staycation) planned for October. I had 22 items on the list and managed to get two done this weekend. At least 16 on the list have to be done. I tried to rent a boom forklift and a scissor lift on Friday but the scissor lift is overdue and they did not know when it would be returned. There is no sense renting one without the other. Unfortunately, after further inspection the roof of the gazebo has been blown off the blocks I had used to shim it up. This has caused the one side to fall about twelve inches. Luckily, the strap and platform are holding it all roughly in place. I will try and rent equipment on Tuesday. If not then it will be the first weekend of October project. I will only have two days to get it done. It will still cost about $1800 to rent the equipment. Now had I rented a crane in the first place I may have been able to do it in two days but I am doubtful, I think it would have taken 3-4 days. But, I would not have needed the scissor lift. I think it would have been a wash on the rental price.

I took the day on Saturday to finish up the lavender. I had spent a couple of hours on it earlier in the week. We have about fifteen volunteer plants growing where they are not supposed to be. But I had to really hack into the plants that tried to die this spring and I am not sure that we will not lose ten plants this winter. So in the spring I will replant all that die and take the extras out and put them in the front yard along the fence. This took quite a while as I had to take a pair of loppers and dig into the plants to cut out the dead and save the live part of the plant. I ended up with quite a pile of lavender scraps tossed over the fence. It is amazing how much scent the plants can put off even if there are no flowers. I smelled so strongly that I was occasionally coughing from the scent overwhelming me.

I did go check on Lil Dumper to see if the brakes were done, nope. They had ordered parts and torn it apart and discovered they had the wrong parts. So new parts were ordered and hopefully it will be done this week. When it gets done I will be able to move soil from the barn lot to new flower spot in the orchard. We are going to toss out a bunch of wildflower seed and just let that area go wild for the honey bees. Mind you we don’t currently have any bees but there are still honey bees around we just don’t know where the hive is located. We have a Nuc on order for the spring so we can start over again next year. I told the brake place that it was taking as long as the tires and rims took to do the brakes. He had assured me when I dropped it off this time that it would be done faster than the later, he was wrong.

I also ordered more parts for the baler. I was sent the wrong large gears and am missing two crucial bushings. When the parts come I can send the others back for a credit. Which is a good thing as it is $500 worth of parts, they should be here this week.

Sunday I spent on the weed eater killing the nasty stuff on our front hillside. We had a lot of thistles and tall weeds that needed knocked down. This is a messy process and it gets worse when you crawl down in the ditch and try to weed eat all of the water plants. If you angle the weed eater one way it tosses the water away from you and the other tilt angle throws it right at you! I was able to dig down into the top two inches of water with the weed eater. I did the lower half of the ditch first and by the time I started back up the ditch I was beat and left the last 1/3 for later. I thought I could just go back inside but after I filled the horse trough with water it took me another 45 minutes to spray off the walkway and bridge. Otherwise we would have tracked all that cut grass into the house. Annmarie got chain and figured out how to keep our porch gates open. The puppy, Milo, can no longer squeeze between the rails and has yet to figure out how to open the gates with his nose. So we have to keep going outside to open the porch gates for him to go potty. Since winter is coming we want him to figure out how to go potty by himself without us standing there and encouraging him.

I am just starting to get back to some sustained level of physical exertion. I had no idea how doing nothing for six weeks and then doing slightly more than nothing for four weeks would affect my level of conditioning. I still feel like I am going to die by the end of Sunday but at least I can get to that level of exhaustion now.

The coyotes are making me crazy. This morning when I went out to let the sheep out of the pasture and the moms/babies out of the barn the coyotes were right on top of the hill barking and howling. I could not see them but there were there. So after feeding I ambled back to the house, grabbed the shotgun and some hearing protection and popped off a round out the back door. They took off and quit making any noise. This is a stupid problem.

Predators 10, Farm 8

Well it could not last, the predators are ahead again. At least this year it took them until September to get ahead. We are losing chickens daily now. They have killed eight chickens so I am down to 15 hens now. I will need another two dozen hens at this rate by the spring. This could really screw up my egg production next year. Bottom line as long as we make about one dozen eggs a week we can personally eat fresh eggs. No one else will get them but they don’t have chickens. Our plan is to move up creating a better Fort Knox for the chickens. We will finish the wire roof over the entire chicken run. Since there is an auto door going into the run now and it stays open 30 minutes after the sun goes down the chickens will all have time to at least get into the yard before that gate shuts down. This way any late chickens will be protected. They may be tormented by the predators trying to get into the chicken run but as long as a raccoon cannot get through the wire we should be good.

The other two deaths are newborn lambs. I counted them last week and there were only 13, there should have been 14. I walked the entire barn lot and could not find a corpse. I chalked it up to a miscount on my part. This is a common occurrence so it was an easy assumption. I was counting lambs today when we tag and banded them and there were only 12 lambs! Again, no corpse anywhere in the barn lot.

We talked about moving the lambs and mommas into the ram pasture and putting the other sheep out into the barn lot. But on further reflection we just decided to utilize the barn. It is ready, dug out, clean and has fresh bedding. We will just start doing the nighttime feed in there so the sheep will come automatically every evening. I locked everyone into the barn tonight. Mr Rainman will let everyone out in the morning when he comes to clean up.

We worked on the gazebo today until I pulled the not safe card. We then went and tagged and banded an even dozen lambs. We had someone reach out and ask us to save an intact ram boy. We saved a pure white one, the biggest of the lambs. He got a tag in the left ear and was not banded. This time around it is an even split between boys and girl lambs.

We then cleaned up the root cellar, put away tools and cleaned off the old house porch. Tomorrow, Mr Rainman will walk all the stream beds and pick up trash/limbs/lumber from them. We want to get all of this cleaned up before the spring ,when water starts running again. There are some boards that need to go into the burn pile and a second burn pile has been started up in field four, he will get all the loose material up there and toss it into the pile. We will have to wait until late fall after the rain starts to burn.

We are working on a list of things that need to be done in October when I take off on vacation, more like a staycation and farm catch up.

Danger gazebo project halted

The platform was all ready and my only goal was to finish the roof over the weekend. We got a ladder tied into the center so that I could manipulate the center ring and bolt the wedges to the ring. It took us over two hours to get the first piece bolted in place. We had to keep jockeying the platform up, forward and back. Nothing seemed to be working so we started to lift the platform even higher, then higher. I had forgotten what it was like to stand on a ladder for hours at a time. You are constantly trying to balance yourself. Well maybe not a normal ladder but one suspended on a shaky platform anchored at the bottom and top so the ladder doesn’t fall off or lean backwards is a little different. On a side note the hydraulics have a very slight leak that is letting the forks drop a couple of inches over 15 minutes. This doesn’t seem like a bunch but when you are trying to line up four 1/4” bolt holes that is a lot of movement. It’s also very hard to move the bucket 1/4”!

So instead of moving the tractor bucket all of the time I started using a three foot span of 2×4 as a lever to move the ring enough to get the holes lined up. Then I started adding shims to hold it into its new spot. This went on for six hours and I only managed to get four panels totally bolted in place and three more up onto the ring. My legs and arms were cramping and the metal pieces were starting to get hot in the sun. It was time to call it a day. We cut four 2×4 and put them under the tractor forks so the platform could not sink overnight.

Today was the day, there are 24 roof wedges and we only had four bolted in and three more up so almost 25%. But we now knew what we were doing and the rest should be easy. Not even. It was discovered that the far end of the ring is sagging a lot. I needed to lift the center ring up another ten inches. I ended up putting ten inches of shimming under the two far sides. Since we had managed to get seven panels up onto the center ring it is incredibly hard to move with all that weight on it. I had Mr Rainman crawl up a ladder on the outside of the gazebo to reach out with a tape measure we need 108” for a roof panel, we were at 94”. I was hollering at him to take it easy crawling up the side of the gazebo as it was causing the entire platform to shimmy and shake in the air. There was no way I was going to be able to shim another foot. Not without causing the platform and all that metal crushing down on me. It was officially not Steve safe. OSHA and I have pretty drastic differences when it comes to safety but I do have some standards. I do own two roof harnesses. But no way am I going to finish this project this way.

I need a crane and a scissor lift to get the roof on safely. Using those two pieces of equipment I think we can get it done in 16 hours. So a two day rental should be enough to get it done. Now I have to find a crane and scissor lift and get them delivered to the farm. We will use the crane to grab the center ring, lift up 10 inches and then tear down the entire platform. Once the platform is torn down we will be able to drive the tractor out of the center of the gazebo and drive in the scissor lift. This will mean the tractor will be trapped in the front yard until we are done. Not really a big deal as the tractor is currently stuck holding up the platform now.

Unfortunately, this is going to add to the total price of the gazebo. But that cannot be helped. Those six weeks doing nothing with a broken foot did not do my fitness level any good. Plus, I am just starting to be able to get back into some hard manual labor without petering out in a couple of hours. I do not want to fall or have something fall on me and take me out for months or a year. I will call a couple of rental agencies on Tuesday.

Stuck. Need more equipment