Oct 10
My posts are becoming fewer and fewer as our work, 'though barely dented, is winding down due to economic forecasts. We are finally coming to the end of the saga of the roof... 9 contracts and 11 months from our first estimate. The Durable guys have been really busting hump on it, and they've been able to with the dry spell we've had the past couple of months.
Durable does mostly slate. When I asked them about the shape of the roof when they started, they commented that they've pretty well seen it all... but generally not all on one roof, until our place. Aluminum substituted for felt as underlayment. Mismatched slates. Slates installed sideways in order to get more run out of it to cover more area... even though it had been pre-drilled for proper installation so the holes showed. Aluminum gutter straps instead of copper slate hooks. Slates with tar, mastic, Great Stuff, mortar, and caulk... what, no duct tape? Slates screwed in with deck and drywall screws. Slate installed with the seams matched, (instead of staggered.) Cracked, delaminated, chipped and shattered slates. Squirrel nests in the ridges. And a 14/12 pitch to boot. Yep... this job had it all. So now, with 12 weeks of work and for the price of a bungelow in any midwestern state, we have a roof that looks much better, stops water from getting in, and will last for about another 70 years. (Or longer with proper maintenance.)
Dec 10
I really haven't much to report. I am happy to tell you that we've been holding water, (on the outside, for a change,) since the roofers got done. We are still waiting for them to finish up the stucco work, but that will probably be hanging out there until spring now.
The new roof does look very nice, and certainly the fact that it no longer rains inside is a bonus. It was an expensive endeavor, slate being more akin to a lifestyle than just a roof, but ultimately it should last another 75 years or so which makes it a worthwhile project.
Rob presented Dan and I with some 'Jahn-wear' last week, part of their frequent buyers club. Larry and Rick have been working in the white house for a couple of weeks. It's starting to shape up. It'll go faster next week after the asbestos abatement is completed and we can get the guys down into the basement to start plumbing, electrical and HVAC.
OK... so that brings us to today, 29May08. I have much to tell but let's start with the fun stuff.
Last weekend Dan and I spent all day Saturday picking up debris around the yard from various projects we've had going. We had quite a lot of fence panels sitting around from where we pulled it all out for the landscaping project this spring, as well as roof and gutter debris to clean up. Also, back behind the pool

We were pulling nails out of the panels when all of a sudden Dan was in a cloud of what looked like large gnats. We looked around and discovered it was a swarm of termites coming out of an old stump. Termites swarm when the nest becomes too big. Half the colony grabs a queen and splits. I ran for the Raid while Dan smothered the stump with a bag of mulch. The last thing this house needs is a loose swarm of termites looking for a place to nest.
