A McCoy's building supply truck delivered the first order of lumber on June 3. My records indicate I spent $680.92 for this initial load of framing materials.
I remember making multiple mistakes as I misread the blueprints – probably because I was nervous about making mistakes. I recall that building the first wall involved almost as much destruction, redoing and swearing as it involved actual constructive progress. It took me twice as long as any other. Anne provided moral support as she sat in the shade and watched me struggle. She tells me now that she had absolute confidence that I knew what I was doing, but I suspect her mind was mostly on childbirth – which was only days away.
I had no immediate plans how to lift the wall into place once I had built it, other than wait for friends and family to help me.
June 12, 1981: Our little bundle of joy, Chris, was born, bringing a temporary halt to the construction project. When these photos were taken two days after his birth, we could not have imagined that within a couple of years the little guy would be following me around the construction site with a 22 oz. framing hammer, refusing to play with plastic toy versions of tools. Not yet able to form real words, he called the hammer "nuh-nuh" – and learned how to drive nails as a toddler.
Within about a week of Billy's arrival, the two of us managed to frame the outer walls and start connecting them with interior, supporting walls.
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The roof takes shape:
Prior to this project I had had little experience reading and interpreting architectural blueprints. As mentioned in an earlier post, Anne and I purchased these house plans from a New Jersey architect. Mr. Chirgotis, the brains behind the plans, specified that the steep roof would be framed with 2x8 rafters 24 feet long. Well, anyone who has visited a modern lumber store in the last half century knows that finding any piece of lumber 24 feet long is next to impossible. Imagine: That's almost the height of a wooden telephone pole!
I did some research and quickly found that a special order of about 50 rafters of the specified length would cost a small fortune. Such lumber would have to come from very tall, straight trees in the Pacific Northwest.
Thus began some improvisation: I decided to build the roof by splicing together shorter rafters, overlapping them – and using the 2nd-floor "knee walls" for support. So instead of single 24-foot rafters, I spliced together standard, off-the-floor pieces to get the required length.
Using geometry and a builder's T-square, I calculated where to notch each board to rest over the short "knee walls." After making a master rafter that fit perfectly, I traced the pattern onto all the other pieces of 2x8. I then proceeded to saw, and saw, and saw – while Billy did most of the nailing. As I recall, installing all these lower rafters took us a week, maybe even 10 days. Note, also, that we installed "bird blocks" horizontally where the rafters crossed the lower walls.
Rear view: With the lower roof section complete, it was now time to figure out how to top out the house.
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