End of sixth day.


I forgot to take a picture halfway through the sixth day so this is at the end of the sixth day. I did not make a lot of progress since I spent a lot of time talking with the future resident of the house, a five-year-old little guy, who has a lot of questions, but who  was very helpful picking up little pieces of wood. Also, you can see that I’m pretty close to being finished now, and I will have a lot of logs left over. I’m not sure what I’ll do with the rest of them after I split them. Maybe I’ll lay out some passageways leading to the front door.

Different view.

Below is just another view of the end of the house nearest the driveway.  The second bracing wall which braces the other end of  the wall of the house, nearest the driveway, is just about finished and the beginnings of the doorway into the house can be seen taking shape.

This is just another view of the same thing as the last picture, showing the second bracing wall and the beginnings of the block, which will form the left-hand side of the entry way into the house. The right-hand end wall, nearest the driveway, will extend  several feet further then there will be another block, then there will be a right angle turn to start the form a passageway down the outside wall of the house and it will probably turn again at a  right angle to form several other passageways until I run out of wood to split.

 

 

 

 

 

End of the fifth day


End of the fifth day, the end wall located at the end of the driveway which will have a peak on it, is almost finished and you can see, on the right-hand side, at about the middle, I have put that little knothole log in there as a little window.

Another view at the same time.

Below is a picture of the knothole window from the inside.

 

And from the outside too.

 

I think it looks kind of cute.

 

 

 

Half way through the fifth day


This is halfway through the fifth day. And I have now started to build a bracing wall to the opposite end wall, which will also be a peaked wall, hence it will be about 6 feet high and must have a brace.  You can also see that the and wall has been built up to some extent.

 

another view of the same thing.

This is a little detail to show the opposite end bracing wall and another view of the end wall which will, ultimately have a peek on it. You can see that that bracing wall will form two additional rooms, so it will be a four room house.

 

 

End of day four


This is the end of the fourth day. The middle  wall has now been completed and you can see the little doorway on the left going into the end of the house and leading to the two rooms at the end of the house.

Below is another view at the same time. What I’m trying to do here is take pictures from the same vantage point at different stages of the building so that I can somehow see if I can stitch them together and make them like a little movie so one can see the house rising up.(I think I said this before.)

 

Below is a detailed view showing the doorway between the two little rooms at the end of the house. The doorway is  between the end of the bracing wall and  the middle wall.  This doorway, as is the case with all the doorways in these little wood houses, is very narrow, just wide enough for a child to squeeze through and not an adult.(Although I did make the doorways big enough for me to get through since I have to be able to get through attend to various construction activities. However, I am also not very large myself.)

This picture below shows the completed  middle wall and the doorway between the end of that middle  wall and the left hand outside wall of the house. That doorway leads to the two rooms at the end of the house.

 

That’s all for today. You know, this is not like a real blog where the blogger enters information every day or every few days. regularly.I take these pictures each day, obviously, since it shows the progress of the construction, but then I don’t enter them and the accompanying textual discussion into the blog contemporaneously, but wait until I have time to do so ,and then I enter them  into the blog all at once.

Four and a half half days, new Rochelle house


At this point, you can see that the end wall has a peak  on it and the  brace, perpendicular to the end wall, is reaching all the way up to the peak to brace it.The reason for the bracing wall , of course, is that a wall with a peak on it is about 6 feet high and, unsupported, would be in some danger of falling over which would be distressing for a house that has little children creeping about in it. The normal woodpile wall wall of a wood house  is about 4 feet high needs no bracing support. This bracing wall also forms a wall between the two rooms at the end. You also see the beginnings of another wall perpendicular to the brace wall which will divide the little house into two sections. This wall is perpendicular to,  and attached to, the right-hand wall and will reach almost over to the left hand wall, but will leave a little space for doorway,

This is a little closer view of the bracing wall and the beginning of the middle wall of the house which will complete the fourth wall of the end two little rooms.

 

Above is the same bracing wall viewed a little closer and f rom both sides.

Below is a  knot hole from a tree trunk. Maybe some little creature lived in there when the tree was alive.I was going to toss it in the scrap pile because I thought it would be too hard to split, but then I thought I could do something with it, maybe make a little window in one of the walls. We will see what we can think up.

End of the third day


One more day of splitting, which means another half a cord. This is the end of the third day of splitting, which is the first day of the second weekend. However,  this happens to be Presidents’ Day weekend so, since I had the wood and the will to do so, I split for three days. Here is what it looks like after another day:

end of third dayAnother view

Two walls are finished . The  end wall, however, has to have a peak put on it. I usually make the walls of wood house as high as a normal woodpile, 4 feet. That’s a safe height and any higher risks the possibility of tumbling over on the tiny inhabitants. But the end walls, with the peaks,I usually make about as high as  my head ,since there has to be a slope from the peak down to the walls to carry off the snow and  the rain of about 30°. Therefore the two end peaked walls need to be stabilized .So I put in a stack of logs perpendicular to the peaked wall with the block at the end of the stack about 4 feet high, just the height of the other four stacks at the end of each wall, and then I slope the wood up to the top of the peak to brace the wall. It is pretty solid. Indeed. that is my criterion for  all aspects of any wood house, since we don’t want any part of it tumbling down on anyone.

Start of third day of the latest house 2-11-12,New Rochelle


I forgot to bring the camera along when I started working on this house so the first weekend, two days, went unrecorded. I put up most of one wall, the end wall with the beginning of a peak  on it and the start of two other walls. Here it is:

Third day,the house is "framed in."

Third day of latest housethe same, different view

I also include a view of the logs remaining to split. Quite a pile.

A radio interview about my wood splitting


Through information from one of my wood splitting “clients” a radio reporter , Sean Adams of WCBS radio, which is 880 AM  radio,called me to interview me about my peculiar proclivity for splitting wood for free for people. The interview took place and is posted on his website:http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2012/01/23/stories-from-main-street-woodsplitting-in-larchmont-and-a-great-deal/.

This has resulted in about a dozen calls from people,who heard the interview on the radio, and  who want to have their wood split which, of course, delights me,because, of course to indulge my desire to split wood I have to have wood to split.

I have already completed two splitting engagements in Larchmont and am working on another one in New Rochelle which has the delightful combination of: a lot of wood, probably about  two cords; room to build a house; and small children in the family.

Needless to say I’m quite pleased and  have already put up one wall of the house. I will post pictures on this blog of the progress of the house. I am not sure how big the house will be. That’s one of the interesting things about building a wood house, which is, trying to estimate how big the house will be, that is, how many rooms, and how long and wide. The object being to  have enough wood to finish it and, when I finish it, not have any wood left over.

I thought of another interesting thing to do. I  will try to take pictures of the house as it goes up from exactly the same vantage point, so that it might be possible to make a little slideshow, which, if viewed rapidly, will  show the house rising or, if  viewed in  reverse would  show it going in the opposite direction. I don’t know if this will work or not but, anyway, I will take pictures as the house goes up and post them on this blog.

By the way, I notice a lot of people started looking at this blog since the radio interview, which is not surprising since the blog was cited on the website where the radio interview was posted.  Indeed the largest amount of views, 86 in any one day, occurred on the day of the interview.

I never really thought anybody would look at this blog since I just put it up for my own amusement and because I like to write and because it’s easy for me to write since I use this dragon speak dictation software and just drone on and on and the words pop out on the page. Any  astute reader would  probably have surmised this by now.

Latest Wood House,Larchmont


This is my latest construction, a three room little beauty, just completed at the end of October to the great delayed delight of the neighborhood children who watched its construction with interest and anticipation over a period of about six weeks. I did not start recording its progress at the beginning but, rather, after I had  already finished two rooms. Here are the first two rooms. The house is about two thirds finished:

Two thirds of the latest house

In about a week or so the house looks like this:

A week later Same stage of construction, different view

As I have mentioned, on a normal day, {i.e., a day splitting logs without a whole lot of knots in them which, of course, can take more than usual amount of splitting time} I will split a half a cord.  So, that is a cord a weekend, if I split for both days.) As I recall I think Paula( my wife) and I, went away for one of these weekends,so I think the actual number of weekends to make this house was four weekends,which would be about four cords which is about what it looks like. Remember, a cord is 4′ x 4′ x 8′ of closely stacked firewood.

Okay, now a week later:

Now to show the inhabitants; three children, two of them neighbors, and one of them living at the house (a real house not a wood house)  where I was splitting the wood:

Three children in three rooms of the the house