Major progress on the remodel. Reframed the south wall over the nook, fridge and fireplace with J. and the roof didn't collapse while we did it. Yay.

Also hauled off the pile in the driveway that's been accumulating the past two months. Four trips to the dump totalling 2760 lbs of rubble.

I so tired.
Oh, and did I mention we're also in the middle of a remodel?
It's every bit as bad as it looks. Only the bath is functional at this point, and only cold water. No heat. Outlets and switches dangling from cables in the middle of the room. Rubble and dust everywhere. (sigh) Remodels are just that way. They suck. You never know how you're actually going to build anything new until you take out what's there and see how it was built in the first place. Then you always run into stuff you didn't know was there. Unless you don't, and then you have to figure out how to deal with that...
Yeah, I know, I'm a buildergrrl so this should be no big deal. But to be honest, I'm a new construction type of builder. I usually start a project with a bulldozer - because I HATE REMODELS. (sigh)
Living in the remodel just makes it all that much worse. Nothing works, there's dust and rubble and crap everywhere, everything you own is in boxes under sheets and plastic - so who knows where anything is?? Trying to do your own remodel is like trying to drill and fill your own cavity - it's messy, no working space, no perspective, and absolutely no reason to do it yourself - unless you're a dentist and even then I bet it sucks.
I'm getting out of town this weekend.
Next week I'm camping in the back yard. Seriously.


The Flying Fish and his oldest friend have begun building 322MikeXray, the plane we plan to fly to Patagonia and back in the winter of 07-08. 322MX is a Glasair Sportsman. An experimental class airplane. Seats 4, carries a cubic shitload of gear, can be configured as trike, taildragger, or with floats. It's comparable to the 1950's era Cessna 180 that we currently fly, but with more modern materials, aerodynamics, engine and avionics.
Here's day one of the build:

Flying Fish & Friend will be up at the Glasair factory in Arlington, WA for the next two weeks putting together the airframe. They'll go back a few weeks later to install the engine. Then 322MX will come back to our warehouse for instrument panel install and final fit and finish. Estimated completion is in the fall 2006.