Bounty shelves

Sunday I was going to go out to the barn and finish the three strings of lights that have wire ran to them. I still need to wait for the fourth roll of wire I had to order to arrive. I am not sure why I thought three rolls would be sufficient. I used the pending arrival of said wire roll as the reason to not go to the barn and instead decided to work on the new shelves in the laundry room. Our counters are getting crowded with all of the containers of dried herbs, vegetables and plums so I figured it was time to get on the shelves. The supports had come in a couple of weeks ago and The Apprentice and I had brought down the wood so it was just a matter of sanding it down and cutting it to shape.

Yeah, all I had to do was sand down a black walnut slab that was only one inch thick and had been drying for four years. Needless to say it was not flat. Even with 40 grit sandpaper and an 18” belt sander it still took me almost four hours to sand down those two shelves! I really needed a hand planer. I have never really used one before but this is the perfect use for one. I may have to learn how to use it as there are a whole bunch of black walnut boards out in the old chicken coop.

I sanded both sides with belt sander and after I got to 80 grit with the belt sander I switched to an orbital sander and started with 50 grit again. Of course about three hours into the sanding it started to rain and I had to move everything into the old house and wear an N95 for the After four hours I figured it was just time to cut the board and go with what I had. I cut the shelves, added the supports and then mounted them on the walls. I, of course, had to make two trips out to the old house to get screws that did not come with the supports.

All in all it turned out pretty good and the wife was happy. We now have a space to store the bounty of our garden harvest. I still have to wire the barn but I can do that in the rain.

Let there be light

It is really happening. The weather turned bad, started to rain solid for two days so I decided to get to work on the barn lights. I had torn apart the DeWalt charger, cut slots into it and torn out the guts with a pair of pliers but had not finished unsoldering the pin connectors and soldering on new power supply wires. I turned the Apprentice loose in the barn getting tools together and cutting some boards while I went back into the house and finished converting a DeWalt charger into a DeWalt battery power supply station for a 12V light system I am installing in the barn. I have a five switch box and am hooking the power supply up to it. When the battery dies just plug in a fully charged battery and the lights are back up!

I was able to actually test it out and got power! The regulator I bought will maintain a 6V to 20V output you just have to set it. I was going to set it at 12V but figured with wire resistance I was going to loose voltage the further away from the power source it got. The LED lights will work on a 12-20V range so I just set the output to 20V and hope the battery lasts. Until we start using the system we won’t know how much power a battery will supply. Each light only consumes 10W and each string of lights is only four sets of three lights and one set of four.

The Apprentice and I started running wire to get the five sets done but we ran out of wire. I had only bought 300 feet and really needed about 350 feet. So we did not wire the momma/baby area/tack room as the lights are only about eight feet off the ground. Some of the lights are 16 feet in the air and require some acrobatics to get to let alone run wire along beams and walls. I bought two strand red/black wire so it would be easy to run. I also bought these clamp on connectors that just go directly over the wire. They looked like they would work but I thought they might be an internet scam. I bought them anyways as they looked perfect for what I needed. They worked!! I was thrilled and relieved that I was not going to have to fix everything I had already done. I was able to get one run completed with the lights all wired in and give it a test to see if it would work and it did! I was super stoked as I had just read about the charger hack online and did not know anyone personally that has done it. I had plans for finishing up the barn this weekend but ended up doing some fall cleanup.

The trash guy forgot to pick up our trash this week, by the time I got a hold of him at the end of the week to ask why we got skipped he was very nice and apologized. He brought out an extra can and told me he would pickup any extra trash I had next to the cans on my pickup day. So I spent all of Saturday cleaning house and generating trash. I have two piles of boxes and paperwork and two trash bags full of garbage and one can is so full the lid won’t close. Now we are both happy.

The Apprentice is off to farrier school. I may see her on the occasional weekend while she is at school. She told me she is only two hours away and wants to work. We will see if she can break free or not. I should be able to get the barn lights up and running next week. My wire should be here by Thursday.

Catch all before starting Barn lighting

The Apprentice came out on Tuesday for her final before school push and we did some work. Well, she did a lot of heavy lifting and I did some other stuff! She worked on moving 120 blocks over to our bridge foundation area. After we get the foundations poured we are going to lay the bricks from the foundation over to the gate and woodshed. But before we can lay those blocks someone has to move each block, weighing 33# each! She got it done!

I was able to get an email reply from the livestock auction house near Hermiston and we pushed our little bull into the trailer. I drove right over, dropped him off and was gone in ten minutes. The check will be in the mail, he needed to go so we could make room for our bull and two rams to go into Alcatraz soon. Once we do that I can make one herd of cows as the young heifers will not get impregnated. They are for eating next year.

I stopped and got some supplies to store more pipe in the overhead of the machine shed. Eventually I will be installing this drain pipe in the barn lot on either side of the barn. I have added some drain pipe already but this should really help with keeping the mud under control in the fall and spring especially. I even remembered to cover up the pipe openings before hoisting it into the air so the birds don’t nest in the pipes. Thank you Mr Rainman for that suggestion.

I dug out the light post near our front bridge, the sheep had knocked it over and honestly we don’t need a light there. I poured a concrete footing and will build a bricked outlet box. I also dug and inserted a piece of conduit so eventually (hopefully next year) I can get the 16’ grain bin outdoor kitchen area installed and we can have some outdoor lighting. Hence, the reason for having power available.

We also managed to find two dried black walnut boards from the old chicken coop to use inside the house. One is for the new dried spice shelves I want to add in the laundry room and the other is for the upstairs bathroom. There is one spot next to the toilet that is still plywood and needs a covering. Unfortunately, I need a 21.5” x 26” triangle and my wood piece is only 20” wide. So I am going to cut a 3” square piece and glue it on one side so I can sand it all down at the same time and cut my triangle from this fabulous piece of two inch thick black walnut.

I of course set all this wonderful wood out on a stand in the yard to sand and it started to rain the next day as soon as I got home from work. I had to run out and move the wood in out of the rain. One would think I pay attention to the weather but I don’t, only during hay season.

As it was pouring down rain today The Apprentice and I worked on getting the 12V lighting system installed. We managed to actually draw out a plan and get all of the lights mounted. I started to run wire but there was a disaster at work and I had to go in. So we will hopefully get all of the wire runs completed tomorrow and maybe even get the lights to work! It’s a pretty ambitious goal.

Bridge Foundation

Mr Rainman came out over the weekend and we worked on getting the foundation ready to pour. We built the forms out of old wood pieces we saved just for this purpose. We cobbled it together as we could not drive metal spikes into the ground, too rocky. I had to run to town to buy a pallet of Quickcrete (56 bags). We then went to turn on the mixer, our prefill check and it did not work! So I ran over to Home Depot and got another new mixer. It will only do 3.5 cubic feet at a time but it is way cheaper than trying to rent one and it is a super tight location.

So the next day Mr Rainman moved 50 bags of Quickcrete from the trailer back to our work spot and after I emptied and mixed ten bags I let him fill the concrete mixer while I shoveled the mixed concrete and tamped the poured concrete. We were only able to mix two bags at a time. It took us about five hours to mix and pour 50 bags of Quickcrete. We got the first side poured and now have to wait seven days before we can pop the forms off and rebuild them on the other side. I will have to go buy another pallet of Quickcrete to get the other side done.

I was wrecked by the time we got done. I was exhausted, I am getting too old to go out and do ten hours of hard manual labor every day on the weekends. Annmarie tells me the answer to this is to start working out every day so I don’t have to recondition my body every spring. I think after 12 years of me listening to this same speech she may be on to something, maybe. I was trying to finish the dishes so I could go to bed early and knocked over a bottle of olive oil. I had glass and oil everywhere so my bedtime was delayed another 20 minutes. After I moan a few times, while awake just moving around, I am guaranteed to sleep downstairs so I don’t keep the wife awake all night. I even manage to wake myself up when I turn over in bed and start moaning because my shoulders and hips are killing me. I keep telling her that pain is transitory. It has been four days since we did this and I feel way better, no moaning at all. I used to be able to snap back after just one night, now it takes 3-4 before I feel human again and it’s usually just in time for the weekend to start and me to do it all over again!

This may sound insane to some but it keeps me busy. I cannot imagine just sitting around and honestly, I feel better and do better if I am able to stay busy. I don’t do idle well any more. I used to do it a lot better but over the years I have come to appreciate what can be done and I can see the impact I am making on our home and I appreciate it. There will come a time where I won’t be able to do these things and I want to know that I have done what I could while I was able.

Round-Up Week

It’s been a while since I blogged. I blame it on the Pendleton Round-Up. All the locals say time stops and all projects go on hold while it occurs and the reality really does reflect the saying. I have been picking fruit non stop every few days and Annmarie has been drying it, canning it or freezing it. We managed to get the 50 lambs sold before the coyotes ate any more! A person from the west side of the state came over and got all 50, he was gone 20 minutes after arrival. We had them all ready to go. Honestly, this is the best way to sell lambs, all at once. We got a fair price $100 for all over 60# and $80 for all 40-59#.

The apprentice came out for a few hours a couple of days and weeded the hillside again and went in and cleaned up the lavender patch. The patch looks great, I just need to trim it all for the winter and we will be ready for next year. We have about five plants that have taken off on their own and need to be replanted. She is about ready to go off and learn to be a farrier at the end of the month. We will have to tear out our garden soon as the temperature has started to dip down to 45F at night. We have prunes drying in dehydrator now as soon as they are done we will dry the last of the spices before winter.

I had another project for my mother that I was able to get completed before it froze. I said I would be able to do it at the beginning of summer and managed to get it done with a lot of help from a lot of other people. My mother and sister did a great job. Now I can start working on the back bridge foundations.

The quail are everywhere! You literally cannot walk around anywhere on the farm without running into a covey or if you sit still you can hear them calling from all over. They are so used to people that as long as you are 30’ away they will just ignore you. This bodes well for a healthy population going into winter. We also have two covey of Hungarian partridges. We usually only have one on the farm. We also have a bunny rabbit living along the driveway again.

When I leave for work and the moon and stars are out I always try and take a picture with my phone. Sometimes it works out, sometimes not. I keep trying.