Saturday, January 29, 2011

Kitchen

The kitchen cabinets are installed, awaiting their hardwood doors. Again, we've put our stock of ash planks in Willy's capable hands to build the cabinet doors. The light fixtures are installed in the roof, and you can see the kitchen drawers at the bottom right.

Kitchen counters

I thought I'd posted these earlier in the year, but I guess I overlooked them.

Kitchen counters are a funny thing. You can either buy really cheap ones or really expensive one. There is no such thing as a quality countertop that won't break the bank.

Fortunately we have these kiln dried hardwood boards we got form our woods and a carpenter not afraid to use them for a nice mid-range option. This gave us hardwood ash countertops. These are protected with 5 oats of non-toxic polyurethane. Here they are with the sink installed. The only weird thing is that it will feel like you are preparing food on a nice bookshelf.

Kitty approves!

Busy looking house site

Lots of work going on inside the house lately. Bathroom accessories, kitchen cabinets, washer driers, light fixtures, and staircases all make for a pile of cardboard boxes, wood scraps and assorted packaging junk. Lisa doesn't like this picture of the mess, but to me it means things are getting done. of curse, Lisa has been busier in the house than I have lately, so she has to look at the pile a lot more than I do.

Willy is in finishing the stairs and kitchen, while Eric is finishing the shower this week. The workbenches you see here are Willy's portable workshop.

In the bedroom, we're storing the pane of tempered glass that will wall off the shower from the rest of the bathroom (while allowing light to shine everywhere) as well as the screen door (minus the screen) that will face onto the front porch. Storage makes for strange bedfellows.

Sun for the solar collectors

If you want solar hot water,you need to keep the snow off your collectors. Lisa did a fine job this morning. You'll notice in the photo that the snow has been piling up copiously on the rooftop. I bought a nice long telescopic pole from SKWEEG (RONA's house brand, I think). Not wanting to scratch the collectors, we use the car brush attachment. It does a fine job, but with anything that freezes to the glass we have to wait for a thaw.

This is the solar controller in the utility room showing the temperature in the solar collector. When this temperature in the collectors gets a set number of degrees higher than the temperature in the water tank, the controller turns on the pump and transports the heated anti-freeze to the coil inside the hot water tank. the reading of 28.7 degrees is good for January! As a matter of fact, the collectors were actively collecting heat when the sun was out today. It's been so cloudy through all of December and January that it's been rare to hear the solar hot water pump going. When the cloud sets in, unfortunately, the collectors do not warm enough to heat the water. Let's hope for sunnier February! The sun starts getting stronger in February, and we could use a break on the hydro bill.

A Handsome Looking House

Here's a nice winter scene of the house. The snow has been pretty unrelenting this winter. I think we've had four days without snow. A scene like this makes me feel like I'm wasting heat. The solar collectors on the roof are covered snow and the sun is shining brightly. You can see the telescopic brush for clearing snow off the collectors leaning against the wall on the porch next to the door.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Woodstove delivered

Here's the woodstove all ready for installation. It's a Vermont Castings Intrepid II that we bought at Collette's plumbing in Orleans, VT. We got a nice October rebate. We were told at Collette's that we should start with about 8 cooler "stick fires" before cranking it full bore. It's an efficient little stove with a catalytic secondary burner (a little box that burns all the fumes and particles before sending them up the chimney.

Here I am lighting the inaugural fire. The stovepipe gets really hot, giving us extra heat. I think we've had the requisite number of fires, so we should be ready to crank it really soon. It's a nice compliment to the slab heating. The slab takes about half a day to heat up, so if you need to heat the place up quickly, the wood stove is the way to go.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Bathroom tiles

bathroom tiles got done at the end of December. Here's Eric with his handiwork. We still have to do the floors, install the safety bars, and install the all important glass partition.