Who’ll stop the rain? May 23, 2013
It started raining over the weekend and hasn’t really quit. All manner of rain -- torrents, downpours, thunderstorms, sprinkles, passing showers, showers that hang around.....
Things are going wrong and downhill, literally. Yesterday we observed that parts of our driveway were washing out, rivulets bringing silt from the excavations down into the road. Today, Mitch discovered that he’d cut the 6 bent-connecting girts one tenon length too short. We either have to replace the girts, or use a free tenon made out of cherry. We chose the latter.
Today, I called to see how things were going, and I knew right away that they were going really badly. When you’ve been married to someone for 21 years, timbre of their voice is like the soundtrack of a Saturday morning cartoon. You don’t even have to hear the words to know what’s happening. “What’s going on?”
“Everything’s going wrong. The sides of the hole collapsed. It shook the house. At first, I thought it was thunder. but after a few seconds I realized it was the sound of dirt falling.” The sides of the excavation have caved in, pouring dirt and mud down on top of the stone and the drain pipe and radon pipe. Gerg climbed down into the hole and rescued the ladder and the tools. It’s going to rain more tomorrow. More dirt will come down. Nothing to do but wait and assess the damage when it stops raining. Chris said he was sorry, it’ll work out. Indigo said he was sorry too, probably too much to dig out by hand. John said if it were a traditional construction we could have poured the foundation right away and maybe avoided the problem. He’s probably right. We’ll regroup & re-dig next week. It's completely depressing.
I have to give two presentations over the next two days, and I’ll be away tomorrow night. Hating to leave when things are so bad, having trouble concentrating on what I have to do. I’m thinking that it could get worse.
Hard times blowing round our cabin door.
May 26, 2013
Still raining. More collapses of sides of the pit. At this point, it doesn't really matter because they have to dig it all out again anyway. At night it’s so cold that it’s been snowing. They got 4” of snow at Mitch’s in Plainfield, and it collapsed one of the two 20’ x 10’ canopies we were using for work areas for pieces of the timberframe. Flooding and devastation in NW Vermont. Requesting FEMA aid for disaster area. It's ironic that this cold, intense weather is part of the global warming trend.
