Saturday 23 July 2011

... about those windows...

As mentioned before, the front windows of the cabin are 3 feet wide and 5 1/2 feet tall.  There are seven of them and they were actually built for the Thunder Bay City Hall about two years ago.  But due to someones unfortunate sizing, we hit a windfall and now have these beautiful thermal tinted windows to gaze out at St. Patricks Island with. 

Having those windows there made me itch to put them in...  so I got the go ahead to head out to Jackfish on Wednesday July 20 to start the process.  It was late when I got in so I started the next morning.  I was just finishing the first window when Wes and Opie showed up.  They brought with them a change in weather unfortunately, but we still got a big chunk of work done.  The rain started at about 3:30pm.  We thought it would come and go quickly but boy were we wrong.  It poured torrentially for the next eight hours.  We did have the roof on, but no top cap (Problem #1).  This meant there was a line of steady rain right down the middle of the cabin.  Problem #2:  all of the open windows meant lots of water coming in everywhere.  The need to stay warm kept us working though, and we actually put in all of the front windows. 
The boys kept warm in other ways too...
We decided around 9pm, that if the 4x4 trail wasn't washed out we would head into Schreiber for breakfast the next morning.  We did make it for breakfast the next day, then headed back and really got to work...

First the metal top cap on the roof of the cabin.  Wish it was done earlier, but now we have some rain protection.
Then we got it all together and put in the rest of the windows in about two hours.  The sun began to shine in beautifully and Opie remarked that its always beautiful on the day they have to leave Jackfish.  I stayed for one more day trying to put the sheeting on the gable end, almost complete.  By the end it really did look like a cabin; windows, doors, roof, and walls.  Finally shut in.

windows and roofing and doors, OH MY!

Oops got a bit behind on the blog...  This is from the weekend of July 15, 16 and 17th.  So I finally got the courage to attempt to bring the seven front windows (plus two more) to the cabin site.  They are just panes without frames, so I was extra worried about having them come in in more than just 9 pieces.  Put together an extra strudy window holder for the toyota, strapped them down quite well, and they easily made the trip from Thunder Bay.  ... but then we had to drive them down the 4x4 trail for 3km.  On that drive I named most of the road obstacles along the way (Pebble hill, small creek pass, Pop up hill, Tie Hill, and finally Big Rock Bump.  The windows moved a bit, but not one crack!  This picture is at the end of the 4x4 trail, with one very happy me!
 Thankfully Wes and Opie showed up with Wes' dad's trusty quadrunner steed and they carted in each window to the site one by one.  This took the entire rest of the day.  Little do they know their pre-freeloading work hours are rapidly approaching the self-destruct level.  I'm worried they will be too burnt out to finally enjoy the finished product.

With the windows away and safe, we started getting ready for the new metal roof.  Starting first thing Saturday morning, we quickly discovered the roofing goes on real fast!  We were eventually joined by Sue, Sean, Jenny and Jeff.
We later discovered the fascia, roofing trim, end caps and top cap take longer to install than the entire metal roof.  It went on and on.  I hate to admit it but I worked them really hard, it was a pretty quiet campfire that night, even with Wes there.

Oh, yeah, and we also carried in a patio door.  At about 300 lbs, it was one more exciting moment on the trail and on the quad.
By the end of the weekend, the stress of bringing in all of the windows felt like it was a month ago, rather than two days previous, but also by the end the cabin had a roof and actually did resemble a cabin.  As Jeff W. would say, "Progress!!"