Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Video update Tuesday June 29 2010



It's Tuesday, and all is well on the Gentle Isle

Well, we're here! We arrived 11:30 pm Saturday, Dad picked us up, and we went to the rental house in Murray Harbour, talked for a couple of hours, and crashed. Sunday we went to the house to have a look around, then back to the rental, and crashed. The dumpster arrived at 8 Monday morning, and then we took yet more stuff to the storage unit. We dug in after lunch and ripped most of the plaster out of the second floor. We got a lot done!!! Gives me hope.
Tuesday they all went to work and got most of the first floor ripped out too while I went to Montague to line up the financials. All is good. We sure are tired

28 hours from Lincoln to Murray River. David, Dolly and me in Toronto

Lois shovelin

James @ the porch, soon to be gone

Today, the Parlour got opened up

The front hall has never been so bright


Janice

Pantry cabinet is gone to storage

Lois and me

Wheres that nice wallpaper?

It's a dirty job...




Friday, June 25, 2010

oh, Canada

Tonight David, Dolly and I drive to Kansas City, stay overnight there and catch our flight to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island (actually, to Chicago, wait 3 hours and drink Bloody Mary's, then to Toronto, wait 6 hours, more Bloody Mary's) where Dad will pick us up at 11:30 pm Atlantic time. Then it's an hours drive to the rental house in Murray Harbour (then we'll drink some Crown). I'll be posting from the Island as the work progresses. Stay tuned...

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Pantings Beach, August 11, 1963

Dad and Mike

These are progress shots from when Dad and Mike took out the built-ins. Above is the Parlour. That red wallpaper is likely over a century old, hidden from view by the china cabinet George Lowe built.
Above is Dad in the kitchen, tackling the removal of the medicine cabinet, which will find a new home in the bathroom.

Above is the mantle (that never had a fireplace) in the Parlour Bedroom. I always thought it was built with the house, but because there is wallpaper behind it, I bet George built that too. See below.

Friday, June 18, 2010

More Pictures from Sandy

Danny and Viola, September 5, 1965

Same day

Grammy and Winnie, July 31, 1988

July 31, 1988

Viola and Dolly, July 31, 1988

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

What Happens Next

Before construction can start, the house has to be prepared. Our friend Dolly whom I work with will be going to the Island with David and me to help out, and we will meet other family members there.

As much weight as possible must be removed from the house before it is lifted for the new foundation.

This porch, the cellar hatch, steps and the pantry all have to go

Interior of the back porch
This little front porch has to be torn off too

The kitchen and Parlour chimneys will be removed completely, brick by brick, and not rebuilt

Dad and Mike took out the china cabinet so we can tear down the chimney it leans on. The cabinet will be re-installed in the dining room


Remove, label and store all of the interior door, window and baseboard trim, and ripping out ALL of the existing wall and ceiling plaster. Dad and Michael did a great job there a couple of weeks ago getting the process started. They stayed at the house for four nights and they were able to remove all of the built-in cabinets and cupboards, including the china cabinet in the Parlour, cupboards in the pantry and kitchen, and the mantel in the downstairs living room, and put them in storage in Montague, along with most of the furniture.

Built-in cupboards in the pantry that were removed and will be reused


They were able to also label and remove most of the interior doors and also put them in storage too. Because of the various swales and swoops in the floors, not one of the nine interior doors close properly anyway, and they are heavy! Most will be put back in their original location later and some will be repurposed in new locations. Dad and Michael were able to pop some of the trim too. Dad told me that George Lowe used every type and size of nail possible, so it’s a little tricky, but not as bad as he anticipated, mostly because the plaster is basically dust and held up by the dozen plus layers of wallpaper.

The pump has to go


SOOO, if you are one of the lucky ones helping out when I get there, bring your hammers, sledge hammers, dust masks, pry bars, gloves, goggles, steel toed boots and shovels if you’ve got them. I have rented a dumpster for the debris. We will stack the bricks and sandstone to eventually use to rebuild the garden wall along the road.

My friend Carter will be giving the old wood burning stove a new home.

My goal is that by the time I have to leave, the house will be an empty shell, ready for the new work to begin.