Our New Deck
Due to having to support a hot-tub for many years our deck was pulling away from the house. It had been doing this for a few years and it was only a matter of time before it gave way completely. Most likely at a time when we were in the hot-tub. This is the story of our journey into the realm of deck construction. A much longer journey than either of us had been prepared for.
I was going to give a blow-by-blow, day-by-day commentary, however, I was too exhausted at the end of each day to type. Now that most of the work is completed, I just can’t bring myself to relive each and every day. I have now opted for a photo journalistic approach. Enjoy.
The project took us two weeks to complete. It may have gone a lot quicker had any of us known what in the hell we were doing. The weather also caused us some delays; it was brutally hot. Dave and I would put on a couple of boards and have to retreat to the shade. There was quite a bit of stress at the onset. Unfortunately, Dave and I do not make good laborers and refuse to be ordered around. Especially, since it is our house. Things did eventually settle down and a steady routine of construction started to take hold. The deck is finished now and it is enormous and beautiful. All that remains is for the hot-tub to be relocated. More on that later.
Huge thank you’s and much gratitude goes out to the folks who stood by us through this endeavor:
- Seymour – the bestest of best friends. Without you those deck boards would still be unpainted.
- Mikey & Harry for all the long, hot hours of screwing and making the impossible seem possible.
- Lock for owning serious power tools and getting those holes dug so quickly.
- Our neighbors for donating all of the decking boards.
Summer of Destruction
Aaah, Steamboat Springs in the summertime. It used to mean scenic mountain views, lazy tube rides down the Yampa River and strolling along Lincoln Avenue to do some window shopping. Well, all of that has changed. We got us some progress goin’ on now. Ten years of progress crammed into one summer. Yeehaw!! Once construction is completed on all of the massive buildings downtown and around the ski area, the only way to see the mountain views will be from the top of the mountain. The Yampa River (when it has water) looks more like an amusement ride at Disneyworld. All that is missing are the animated characters singing “It’s a Small World”. Lincoln Avenue has been transformed into a noisy, dusty, congested highway so clogged wih traffic and people that strolling is impossible.
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