Monday, October 12, 2009

It's Finally Safe To Leave The House...

By the back door!

When we bought the house, the 'deck' (really a glorified landing) was crumbling and falling apart. Boards were rotted through, the handrails were no longer attached, and there were even steps missing, which led to people (and pets) falling through a couple of times!

We basically avoided using them as much as possible, and prayed that no one would get severely injured on them before we had a chance to fix them.

Watching a 75lb dog run up and down a couple of times a day, and the steps bowing under her, we realised we would have to replace them, now.
After a trip to HD and Lowes, we found the stand
ard stringers were only premade up to 6 steps - we needed 8. We visited Tart Lumber, who told us they would happily make the 8 step stringers, at a cost of around $78. Per stringer. We needed 3. (Although the old stairs had only 2 - deathtrap!)

The wood itself was only $17 per length, so T decided we were doing it ourselves.
We bought the pieces of wood needed (12"x2"x12') and drove them home sticking 4' out the back of the Versa at 50mph. That was fun.
Out came the skilsaw, jigsaw and drill. We used the old stringer with the least chunks missing as a template. I marked up the new pieces of wood and T cut the triangles out. We then lined them up, made a few adjustments here and there, and screwed them to the deck using metal brackets (a little more sturdy than the 25 yr old nails holding in the previous ones!)

We then attached the 8 brand spanking new treads (premade from Lowes) with screws.
We reattached the handrails and added some support to them at the bottom posts, so they are now pretty sturdy.
I then ran up and down the new stairs repeatedly. They are very sturdy!

They passed Madra's inspection.

Poochums!


On September 12th, we became proud parents to an Alaskan Malamute, Madra! She came from a puppy mill where she was being bred from, and kept in pretty sad conditions. I haven't written about her yet because she was very sick when she first arrived, and we weren't sure what was wrong with her. I'm happy to report that the vet is very pleased with her progress, and she is settling in great at THATC.
Here she is on her new 'Coolaroo' bed, with Sheepy (sticking out under her head). The Coolaroo is great for her - Mals do not like to be hot, and this keeps her off the floor with airflow. As the days have gotten cooler this week though she has also enjoyed lounging on the wool shag! :)

Extreme Makeover: Home Edition

I wasn't able to post anything at the end of August, as I was working on an episode of Extreme Makeover in DC with Burch Builders Group, where I have been interning.

http://www.burchbuildersgroup.com/

We rebuilt The Fishing School in one week. It was a great project, very tiring but extremely worthwhile! The original school was around 2000sq ft, and the new building is about 6500sq ft. All the extra space will make a real difference to the after school and community support program.

I can't post proper pics yet as the show hasn't aired, so it's still pretty secretive. We were scheduled to be aired in November, but it's now looking like February. The new season has begun, so keep watching!

Here is a sneak preview of the close to end result: