Sunday, August 26, 2012

Accumulating Break

Sooooooo...I haven't been working on anything major lately. For two reasons.

Reason 1: One of my best friends just had a baby. He was born the 22nd by planned cesarean. It went perfectly and they're both doing fantastic.

Well, while she was busy growing a baby, I got busy filling her deep freeze. I made four meat loaves, two pans of baked ziti, six or so gallon bags of chili, two meals of steak and twice baked potatoes,a loaf of cinnamon raisin french toast, six smoothies, and two bags of extra Italian sauce.

I think I'm forgetting something. The point is, I was busy doing other much more important things.


Reason 2: It's apple season.

Apple season means I get to stock myself up on all kinds of yummy apple based jellies, marmalades, sauces, breads, pies, and anything else I can think of making.


So, in summation. Making sure my friends and family are taken care of and as little as possible gets wasted is more important to me than a cute chair. There will be an apple update though.





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Sunday, August 12, 2012

My dirty little secret

I'm not 100% certain why, although I'm fairly sure it has something to do with the amount Super Mario Bros I played as a child, but I love plumbing. Seriously, I LOVE plumbing. I'm sure somewhere deep down in my soul I have a place that's made almost entirely of rusty pipes, valves, and wrenches.

How much do I love plumbing? Shortly after we moved into our house I decided we needed a new faucet on the kitchen sink. It actually had something to do with the sprayer breaking but it's been a while. So I wedged myself into the funky space under and behind the sink and changed the faucet.

If you're looking for a quick and relatively easy improvement I highly suggest changing a faucet. It looks awesome when you're done, it's totally satisfying, you get all dirty so it looks like you actually did "real work", and it only takes about an hour.

Anyway....Recently we had a major pipe burst. By major I mean that it flooded the neighbors driveway and we were without water for about a week. On the outside I was saying "Holy crap! This is the worst thing that could possibly have happened!" Yeah, I'm a bit of a drama queen. But on the inside, I was squealing like a little girl "Eeeeee! I get to use my tools!"

So my husband set about finding the leak.



It was conveniently located in our neighbors yard under an oak tree. We took turns chopping and digging. One of us had the axe and arbitrarily hacked at the ground till we got tired then the other one shovelled the loose dirt and root bits out of the way. Funtastical-ness.

My mom even came over and helped dig. Eventually we ended up with this.



Upon first inspection what we have is unexplainable plumbing stupidity. What we actually have is the location of the former T joint where my house and the neighbor's house were being supplied with water off the same meter. That elbow doesn't actually have any water flowing in it, its just a dead pipe. The straight pipe with the compression fitting and cap is mine, I've got water flowing nowhere.

First I tried to cut it.



But I broke my tool and ended up just taking the compression fitting off.

This is what I found on the underside of the nipple.



The hole was so big I could seriously put my pinky all the way into it.

Hmm, I feel like I just got some glazed looks when I used the word nipple.

Here,




Better?

I ended up replacing everything from the old compression fitting down with new stuff because I couldn't figure out how to weld steel. ( And, I was getting tired of the idiots at Lowe's talking to me like a mental patient)

So here it is now.



Yeah. I did that. I even used pink thread tape so if anyone else ever needs to dig it up they'll have some clue that a girl did it. And...Yes, that's a brick "holding" it in place. I wedged the brick between the end of the new plumbing and the side of the hole just in case.

Hey, I said I love it, I didn't say I was good at it.

The best part about this is that to have a plumber come out and simply tell us it's broke would have cost $70. Then it would be $400 or more to have them dig up the yard and actually fix the thing. So in the end it would have been $500+ to fix a rusted pipe.

What was the cost doing it myself? About $12.

It would have only been $6 but I had to buy everything twice because I'm solid muscle and I over tightened the first fitting and stripped all the threads off.

Dirty little secret no more!

Later.


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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Roadside Rescue

I'm fairly certain this will turn into a series. Mostly because I pick up a lot of stuff off the side of the road and not everything is deserving of a name.

Anyway, Tom and I were rolling through Antioch at 3 am bumping our newest mashup mix-tape and I spotted a busted up piece of furniture on the side of the road. Naturally, I stopped because it was just too cute to pass up. (Yeah, I just used rolling, bumping, and cute in the same sentence. I'm so ghetto-fabulous. I thought you knew.)

Fortunately, none of the wood was actually damaged, it just needed to be reassembled.

I didn't get a before picture of my own (I'm far too enthusiastic for that) so I took one from the Internet. This is basically what it looked like after I pieced it back together.





Nothing fancy, just a little bench thing.

Here's mine right before I put the upholstery on. Oh yeah, and my Husband playing air guitar on the baby.



This is what it looks like now.



Not too bad, huh!? The husband wants to sell it. I suppose I'll be setting up an Etsy store soon.

Later!

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Friday, August 3, 2012

My Humble Abode (A Series)

I've said before that my family moved into our current house in 2010. At the time there were only four of us and the house seemed to fit well. There were three bedrooms and a pastel pink bathroom.

I discovered quickly that no home is ever perfect. Three weeks later I was actively ignoring my husbands prodding about how late my period was. Eventually I was forced to admit that I was very pregnant and with that came the fact that our new house was about to get much much smaller.

We set out to finish the partially finished upstairs. Now, by "partially finished" I mean that I'm pretty sure the people that rented it before we bought it were growing pot up there. There were some random walls, with some random holes in them, very large industrial garage lamps, and assorted crap.

I don't have pictures but trust me, it was bad.

Now we have a hallway that leads to The Monkey's room and the attic. Yay! It's not perfect, we still need to put some trim up, and paint but at least we've got enough room for the kids.

The unfortunate part was that we didn't have the time or the funds to fix the stairs. So we basically had a hermit kid that seemed to live in the attic. It was fun for a while. I really enjoyed telling people we fed her buckets of fish heads.

We recently got the stairs finished. Yay! Again, by finished, I mean someone else built them and I'm responsible for smoothing, priming, painting, and poly-ing. It's an incredibly slow process, but it needs to be done.

Here is what we had before.






Fun, right?

No.

Well, the stairs are all rebuilt and looking nice. I'm finishing the walls and whatnot right now and pretty soon I'll get to show you what all that looks like!

Oh, and no one has answered the giveaway question.

Later!

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