Monday, August 19, 2019

Motorhome Maintenance - Replacing 4 Deep Cycle Batteries and more "She Shed" Stuff

Ten and a half years is an awfully long time. Especially when you are a deep cycle marine battery in a motorhome!

Most RVers get 5 years or so out of their deep cycle lead acid batteries. But with careful maintenance and not discharging them too far down, we were able to extend the life of ours to 10 and 1/2 years.

On our Safari motorhome, we have a bank of four 6 volt batteries which are hooked together two in series to create 12 volts for our motorhome and then the two sets of two are hooked together in parallel to double the amp hours available.  4 batteries are sufficient to run all of our electronic items, via inverter, things like TVs, lights, curling iron, chargers for cell phone and laptops Etc. Just not the air conditioning. Our solar charges us back up to 100% easily by mid-morning the next day.

Steve checks the water and acid levels every other month. He only uses distilled water to top them off, and cleans the posts with a baking soda solution.

Our solar system on the roof keeps them charged right up to snuff on a daily basis. We equalize them once or twice a year, with our three-stage charger system. An equalizing cycle blasts all of the corroded stuff off the plates by giving it a really high charge for a short period of time.

A couple months ago, one of our 6 volt batteries was shorting out. Steve quickly removed that battery and it's paired up partner from the system. A shorted out battery can do damage to the delicate electronic control boards on all of the appliances, as well as the TVs, and anything else that is sensitive that we might have plugged in. Like computers and cell phones.

After the removal of the two batteries, we were running on just the two remaining batteries paired together to make 12 volts for the camping portion of the motohome. But they were both getting very weak. They would hold a charge and go up to 100%, but they drained down awfully quick. It was time for new batteries.

Side note--- the driving portion, the chassis, of the motorhome also operates on two large 12 volt batteries for the diesel engine. Those had been replaced a couple years back and are just fine.


Steve, with his wonderful investigative nose for a deal, ferreted out a money-saving situation on Facebook Marketplace. Seems like a guy with 4 batteries that were only 1 year old decided to switch over to lithium instead of wet cell acid batteries.  He had a 1 year old motorhome and it has a residential electric fridge and he is using a lot of computer power while travelling for his job.  He felt lithium batteries would go further for him (and he invested $3,000.00 to change over to them).

Steve was able to snap up his one year old batteries at half of the cost of new 225 amp hour T105 batteries! $75 each. We drove 35 miles to get them, and they were immaculate. The guy just pulled them off his rig yesterday when he had the new lithium batteries installed. We struck our deal and the guys loaded up the batteries in the trunk of my car... and off we went back home.



It's always a good thing to take careful photos with a cell phone of your existing entire battery hookup before removing anything. That way you can refer to the photos as you hook on the cables and wires in the EXACT places on the new batteries.


The first step is removing the power going into our batteries from our solar system on the roof. Steve pulled the breaker out of the cutoff box rather than just relying using the on and off lever.



Next he gathered all of his tools and some rubber mats for kneeling on. He decided that our cables were looking a little sad and we needed to replace them. He made up four brand new cables for the ones that needed to get spiffed up.


Whenever Steve does anything with electrical connections on our motorhome, he coats them liberally with a product called dielectric grease. You can't read it very well but this product is made by Permatex and you can pick it up at any auto parts store.  It prevents rust and corrosion on electrical connections.



Now it is time to concentrate closely at what we are doing.

We have to be very careful because one crisscrossed wire can mess up all of the electronics on board. So we need to use due diligence when changing over a complex system of four different batteries.

Please don't rely on some service station or big box store worker to correctly install your new batteries, especially on an expensive system like a motorhome. We do have an onboard energy management system to help shut it down in case of incorrect current, but it's better to be careful now, than sorry later.

We started to remove the old batteries from the compartment. Each one is carefully released from the grid and please take care to not let positive and negative cables touch each other in the back area of the compartment while the batteries are in the process of being removed.




Here we go out with the old batteries.  They served us well. We purchased these from Batteries Plus back in February of 2009 for $87.50 each. They were only a 180 amp hours, less capacity than the ones we bought now today.

Steve will turn them in 
and get a few bucks 
for each one 
for recycling it.



With my cell phone photos on hand to refer to, Steve carefully started applying each of the connections and cables to the batteries. We connect the positive battery last after we get everything else assembled.



It was getting hot out in the sun this afternoon, so I whipped out the beach umbrella to help cover Steve up while we worked. See? I'm good for something....



Soon all of the connections were made and everything was spiffy clean and ready to go. We double checked and triple checked everything to be sure.



He hooked up the final positive lead and powered up the bank of batteries. Then he put the breaker back in the cut-out breaker box for the solar system.

We checked our onboard Progressive Industries Power Management System and everything seemed to be operating. We checked the Trimetric gauge inside which registers the capacity of the battery bank, as well as how many amps and volts are going in and out. It shows the percentage of charge which we knew the batteries were already charged up to 100%.  This gauge is very handy to have and it has a little wire that goes through a fuse and a temperature sensor device that also attaches to the batteries. It's nice to have it inside mounted on the wall so we can monitor what is going on without having to go outside and look at the Blue Sky MPPT Controller in the basement compartment.



THERE WE ARE. 
ALL SPIFFY AND 
OPERATING LIKE IT SHOULD!



Well, now that the batteries are done on the motorhome, we should be good to go this weekend.

We are going camping with some of our kids and grandkids.  A "Last Blast" before school begins. The batteries will be an added plus to be done and in place. Although we will be camping at a campground that does have electric hookups, we will be set in case we decide to do some fall camping with no hookups - boondocking - or take off somewhere this winter. Who knows?

~~~~~~~~~

For those of you blog readers who only tune into my motorhoming maintenance blogs, I will catch you up quick with what we've done the last 3 months.

Since Steve is now fully retired, we decided one day to put our house on the market in Chilton. It sold the very next day.  We put an offer in on a cute little National Folk Farmhouse back up in Oconto, closer to most of our grandchildren. We have spent the last three months fixing it up and making it our "home".


It is located in town, but is situated on 2.5 acres of land. It already has a new large four stall garage and a motorhome parking pad for Steve. So he decided that we could convert the single stall little attached garage into a "She Shed" for me!

We removed the single garage door and started closing it in with new windows and adding French doors around both sides and French windows across the back. It will house my weaving looms and large quilting machine, our sun room furniture, as well as operate as a kind of mudroom for leading into the kitchen.



it is a work-in-progress, and we are doing a little bit every day while we intersperse our time between visiting with our grandchildren, going camping, and taking long walks with our dogs.

Last week on the "She Shed" project, we've gotten two more steps further and did one other step item out of order!

I'll start with the two steps first:

1. We removed the big ugly awkward pantry that was jutting out into the She Shed area by 3 feet. It was covered with old paneling, the top portion had a squirrel nest and bat droppings, and the bottom portion had a funny charred burn smell???


The three sides that aimed out into the attached garage were butt ugly with paneling. The fourth side that faces into the kitchen had a cheap plastic vinyl door. I didn't even put anything into the pantry because it smelled. The previous owners also said anything they put in there froze, because of the freezing temperatures in the unheated garage. Well, that would change because we are going to insulate and heat this "She Shed" by fall.

As we dismantled the old pantry we discovered there had been a fire at one time on the floor in the pantry! So THAT was the smell! I can only imagine somewhere along the line of the 25 years that there were renters in this home, that somebody had a little firebug kid that was squatting down in the pantry playing with matches and started a fire! It seemed to only be on the floor area and not up the walls or the ceiling, so someone must have extinguished it quickly. But being renters, they obviously didn't want the landlord to know what had happened. So they just covered over the charred burnt floor with another piece of linoleum! As we were excavating, we discovered it!!!



We pulled out the pantry walls and adapted the existing doorway opening from the kitchen. We made a shallow open pantry of only 11 inches deep. That is the width of the thick walls that are in this house.



We made a shallow pantry and removed the existing door. It was just one of those cheap vinyl wood look simulated doors anyhow. We made it an "open pantry" and added 8 shelves with adjustable brackets.



Now I had a perfect spot to display and store all of my home canned goods. I have my pickled beets, canned tomatoes, and jars of homemade jam. There's some extra space, so I filled it up with some white mixing bowls and serving dishes and other assorted items.  I want to get a couple of nice white bins for at the bottom to put things like bottled water or potatoes on the bottom row.

~~~~~~~~

Now on to step 2 that we worked on.

Right next to the pantry is the doorway that leads from the kitchen down into the "She Shed". There had been a big awkward exterior wooden kitchen door that was in very rough condition on the back side. Also a screen door that had been patched, kicked, and battered over the years.



We decided to remove those doors completely, change the swing so it went to the left instead of the right. We replaced it with a heavy glass French door with safety glass panels. We ordered the door to size, and it came primed and ready to paint.

What was interesting is that the glass was all covered with a film of plastic material that let you paint right up to the glass and over it without taping off the glass.  Now I could easily paint all of the wooden grids of the window glass without taping.  Once two coats were done on each side, just peel away the plastic and the door is ready to hang!



Now the door is on full range hinges that are able to let it swing completely wide and it can cover the pantry area if we want it to. Once we finish the lower "She Shed" it will also be heated and we will probably leave this door open most of the time.



It lets in much more light and sunshine, as well as adds to the french window type theme of the "She Shed". We added little handles that match our kitchen cabinets instead of a big awkward doorknob that would bump against items in the open pantry. We also put the small hotel type safety lock back on. This is a good preventative lock to keep toddlers from going down into the "She Shed" when I'm babysitting the grandkids.

~~~~~~~~

Now for the other item that we did that was out of order, but again that marvelous husband of mine with his nose for a deal found something we just couldn't pass up.

We weren't ready to buy flooring yet. That's one of the last steps of the room. Again, we are doing this on a tight budget and only trying to spend so much each month on materials.

Our original plan was to put down level floor framing, insulation and subfloor, then some vinyl plank flooring BUT not until we had the walls and ceiling completed.

But.... That Bargain Hunter ran across a Marketplace ad for someone selling brand new beautiful 16 ft long strips of tongue and groove wood flooring. The price was only $1 a square foot versus $4 to $5 a square foot at the stores. It was left over from a job he did a while back and he never used it.




He had 660 square feet to sell, but we really only needed about 430 square feet. The deal was for him to hold it overnight but that we had to agree to take it all. So I think we will use the extra pieces by cutting off the tongue edge and using it as trim around the windows, doors, and baseboard... as well as making it into stair treads when we construct the new stairs going up into the kitchen.

We needed to buy it by the next day, or lose the deal. He had multiple people calling on it but we were the first. The problem is that he lived way up north of Sturgeon Bay.  Which is 75 miles away. Steve and his very helpful brother Pete drove all the way up to Sister Bay 100+ miles to get his dad's trailer which was sufficiently long enough to haul our wood flooring. From there they had to travel back down to Sturgeon Bay to load up the wood. Then back to our house to unload the wood! So it was about a 250 mile round trip to get this wood flooring!!!



They backed it in and unloaded it onto some wood supports and a tarp to keep it off the cement floor in our garage until we are ready to use it.  It was a long day for the guys, and we really appreciated Pete's help in getting the wood to our house.



I'm going to mess around with a couple different colors of stain on a scrap piece and see what color we want to go with. I'm kind of leaning to leaving it clear and just covering it with two good coats of polyurethane. Still thinking on that one. We will see!

But for now, I'm just going to keep plugging away at my "She Shed" and finish organizing some of my books and shipping materials in our little office room. Our son-in-law Waylen came over and helped Steve carry in this humongous book case.



It was left in our garage by the previous sellers, and I gave it two good coats of paint to spiffy it up.



It just fit in the office without even an inch to spare between the two pieces of baseboard and quarter round molding trim. Talk about lucky!


We so appreciate living closer to the kids now. For the ones who help us, they can pop over and lend a hand with things as we need it. In return we can babysit their kids or run over to let out their dogs if they are out of town. It's a good thing that we moved here because it's a win-win situation for all of us.


Sunday, August 11, 2019

CAMPING - Kleinke Park and Problems Come in Threes!

We have been having some family situations lately that have been causing extreme pressure. It has really been taking it's toll on my dear husband Steve. I felt he needed to get away but he's been so focused on these problems that he is tense and I fear the pressure is going to make him blow.  Not good for his health!!!

On Tuesday we were on our way back from the Menards Home Improvement Store with a load of trim wood, aluminum soffit and fascia, and other supplies. I feel he is trying to drown himself in the house repair projects to take his mind off his family situations.

We got back to the house about noon and unloaded the trailer. I whipped up a quick lunch while he was thinking of things he wanted to do next on the house. I turned on the TV and saw the noon weather report and it was going to be beautiful weather for the next 3 or 4 days.

That was it.

I put my foot down and said we're going camping!!!

I started packing up food and clothes to throw out in the motorhome while he was filling the fresh water tank and loading up the lawn chairs. We keep most everything else on board all spring, summer and fall.... so we can just throw in fresh food and clothes and dogs and GO!

By 1:30 in the afternoon we were on the road heading north!!!! Yayyyyyyy (or so we thought).

Rut roh ... They always say things happen in threes. Here's the first of the three:

Because the motorhome has been setting for the last 3 months, things can kind of seize up or rust up from non-use.

We got up the highway few miles and I said: "Steve I smell something hot!" his smeller doesn't always work so good. He's learned from past experience he better rely on me and my nose. He pulled over on the side of the highway and got out and walked around the rig. The hot smell was coming from the driver's side rear dually wheels. He couldn't get close enough safely, because of the passing traffic.  He diagnosed from afar that it was a stuck brake caliper.

We limped ahead to the next exit and pulled off into a vacant parking lot. Now he could safely examine the situation. Yes the caliper had been stuck but it appeared to have broken free after a few stomps of the brake pedal and he relieved a bit of the brake fluid at the bleeder valve.

We stayed for a while in the parking lot until things cooled down on the caliper and rotor. No sense ruining it any further by driving if it was still hung up.

He was pacing back and forth kind of like a caged tiger. I could tell this was really stressing him out. We were safe and sound. We had the generator running with the air conditioning blowing and I made him sit down and relax for a while.

After about half-an-hour we were good to go. We drove around a big block of the industrial park and came back to the same parking lot to double-check the brake caliper. Yes! It had released. Whew.... Crisis averted!

From there, we drove up past Peshtigo, Marinette, and into Michigan through Menominee. We headed to one of our favorite parks. It's called Kleinke Park and it's on the bay Waters of Green Bay near where it flows into Lake Michigan.  It is a little County Park of only 31 campsites. It sports a beautiful picnic area, shower building clean and neat, a dump and fill station, and a beautiful sandy beach. It is also dog friendly as long as it is on a 6-foot leash. The park has three different stations with doggie pick up bags and your dogs are allowed on the beach and anywhere else within the park.
link:



The sites right along the edge of the water were all filled, which is kind of surprising for a Tuesday. We took one right across the road on site 1, which looks directly over onto the water with nobody across from us. We have camped in this site before but always had backed in, with the motorhome nose facing nose out.

This time we decided to drive in and park cross-ways horizontally in the site. The park does not care which direction you park your rig. This way the majority of our windows look out over to the beautiful water.

In the pic below we have the awning out and lowered for some shade in the morning because we are facing the east. By afternoon we raised the awning up higher and get a really good view out across the bay.



Camping here is only $21 a night with 50 amp service. There's no water at each individual campsite so you have to be sure to fill up before you reach your campsite. Because we had filled up at home this was not an issue.

But one thing we did note is that at their fill station, the end of the hose is a straight pipe without any threads. That is fine for people who gravity fill their tanks like in tow behind travel trailers. But a lot of fifth wheels and motorhomes have what's called a street connection. The only way to get water into your fresh tank is by a hose with threads hooked up with water pressure to fill the tank. This can be a problem for people who have traveled long distances and need to refill, or who travel with empty tanks to cut down on their weight. I later did mention this to one of the park supervisors that was nearby and showed him our filling apparatus and why their lack of a threaded fill hose can be a problem for approximately half of the rvers that patronize their park. I mentioned to him that we generally stay at state parks and all of their fill stations have threaded hoses. Anyhowwwwww on to the park itself which is absolutely beautiful!

We walked around a bit with the dogs and just let ourselves unwind. There's a little creek that flows out along a sandbar into the bay. A few weeks ago our grandkids were here catching polliwogs in the same creek.



This is the view directly across from our campsite. Absolutely beautiful. You can see way way far off in the distance the very tip of Door County. You know, the long skinny finger of Wisconsin that reaches out into Lake Michigan?



We cooked a nice supper and set back to relax in our chairs. I had flicked on the water heater to heat it up to get dishes done.

Here comes thing number two!!!

A few minutes later, we could hear water running on the ground on the other side of the motor home. Rut roh!!! Water was pouring out the side of the water heater compartment door!!!

Steve got the door open and water was pouring out of the pressure relief valve. We immediately cut the pump pressure inside and opened some sink faucets to reduce the pressure on the lines.

Once things cooled off a little bit and the pressure went down. Steve tried resetting the pressure valve to see if it would hold. Nope.

Water would still come out as soon as we pressurized the line and water heater.

Again, things like this happen when a motorhome sits for a while. Because we hadn't used it in 3 months. It was time to think about replacing the pressure valve.

It was about 7 p.m. in the evening and we knew there was a Menards further back to the south in Marinette, WI about 20 miles. There was also a Menards up in Escanaba, Mi to the north about 35 miles. I had in my mind to also pick up pasties at Dobber's pasties in Escanaba, so this would be a good time to do both if we went to the Menards up there.

We checked online if they had the correct pressure relief valve in stock. Yes they did. So off we went in our little Tracker to buzz up there and pick up a new one. It was either that, or we would not have showers or dishwashing that night.

As we buzzed up further north, I realized Dobbers pasties closed at 8 pm. This is a problem because the section of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan we were in happens to be an Eastern Time zone. Other parts of the UP of Michigan are Central Time zone like all of Wisconsin. Dangnabbit, it was already past 8 pm eastern time - too late to pick up Dobbers pasties. Oh well. We continued on to Menards as planned.

Steve went right to the plumbing department and picked up the exact part he needed. It was only $14 and we would be able to install it ourselves and have water again in the motorhome.

While he was in plumbing, I wandered on back through the clearance area of construction materials. I have had my eye on the look-out for a piece of matching countertop to make a coffee bar in our kitchen back at home. We know we could just buy a piece of matching laminate and make our own with some wood and a router, but it would be much nicer to get one with the pretty scalloped edge exactly matching the countertop we already have on the island and throughout the rest of the kitchen.

The reason for the coffee bar is that our present coffee maker, which grinds the beans for us as well as makes the coffee, is too tall to fit underneath our cabinets on the existing countertop. We have to take it out each day and set it on the island and plug it in just to make coffee where there is enough overhead space. But.... there's an awkward space on the wall where the refrigerator cavity used to be years ago. It is the perfect spot to erect a coffee bar with an adapted piece of other cabinetry we had taken down to create a doorway into the half-bath. All we need is about a 2-foot hunk of matching countertop.



Soooo, what did I find in the countertop area? A beautiful big hunk of our matching countertop called Carrara Pearl. It was marked from $80 down to $20. Then there's an additional 11% off rebate which brings it down to $17.80 !!!!  Score!!! Although it was longer than we needed, that is even cheaper than buying a piece of laminate, plus two end pieces to finish the sides, and making a base of our own wood to glue it all down to.

By buying this piece of countertop, we can just cut off the one side, reattach the end piece, and have the exact length we need for under $20.  Much easier for sure.

We just managed to fit it into our little Tracker and have it extend up between us in the front seats. Steve needs room to shift gears, so it was tilted to my side. Lol



We got back to the campground just about by dark, and Steve installed the new pressure relief valve while I held the flashlight. That's my job, you know.

We fired up the water heater and pressurized the lines with the pump. Yay! It worked!  Now we could finish up the dishes and also take showers before bedtime.

That was number two. Now we have to have number three, right? They say things happen in threes.

Steve went inside to the motorhome to turn on the lights. Only some of them were working. Others were not. This just got to be too much. Like I said, he's been under a lot of pressure. I think he was almost reaching his breaking point.  Instead of being so upset and thrashing around trying to figure out what's going on with the electrical system, I handed him both dog leashes and told him to walk the dogs. It was almost dark and they needed one last walk before bedtime.


The 12 volt DC items were working but not the 120vAC items. (battery operated stuff vs regular household current stuff)

I checked our plug-in connection at the post. I checked the breakers at the post. Those are the two most common problems in a campground.  Nope. Then I checked our breakers on the inverter. Then I checked our breakers in our electrical panel. Finally I did the last known thing was to check the GFCI buttons on each of the three GFCI outlets we have on our rig. Voila!!! The one up in the kitchen under the paper towel roller is the victim that had been tripped. I reset the GFCI and everything was right again. Yayyyy

So the third thing was easily resolved.

Honestly, Steve came back from walking the dogs and his mind was so hepped up with his own worries that he didn't even notice I had fixed the light situation. Lol!

We sat back and had a couple adult beverages of choice, talked out some of the family situations, and realized we cannot change the choices that some people make.

No matter how much it hurts us and stabs us in our hearts. Steve needs to realize that we didn't do anything wrong. We cannot have a discussion with somebody who does not answer our phone calls, messages, or even multiple handwritten letters. We had a good cry. And I think it released the pressure just the same as that water heater valve.

By then we took nice long showers and headed to bed and got a good night's sleep.

I woke up early, and this is the beautiful scene we could see as the sun rose along the shore of the campground right outside of our windows.



This gave us a better perspective on the day.



A while back, we had stopped at Brubaker's. It's a Mennonite store out in the country on County Road A, just east of Lena, Wisconsin. Besides fresh produce, the best thick slab bacon, fresh eggs, and some of the most wonderful meats, they also sell bulk food ingredients and unbaked pastries in their freezer department.

I had grabbed a pack of 6 apple turnovers and decided to try baking 2 of them in our little oven in the motorhome. We keep a large pizza stone in the bottom surface of the oven to help spread the heat out more evenly. You can see it in the pic below.



The apple turnovers came out great. I had whipped up a little batch of frosting to drizzle over the top as they cooled.



We were sitting out in our lawn chairs, sipping our coffee, and watching the sun come up over the water. It was truly a great way to start the morning.  Our Things of The Threes was over.  We can look ahead now.



Our things are now resolved, as well as our family situation put to rest in our minds and our hearts. There are other family pressures with medical implications going on right now that we need to focus on instead.


We happened to contact some good friends of ours, Roz and Gary, with their dog Charlie. We told them we were up here at their favorite campground. They said "save us a site!" and soon they were on their way to join us.

They pulled into site number 2 next to us with their new motor home they just bought this past spring. It would be good to share a couple days with them.



Things brightened up in a hurry and we enjoy being together with these people. We all have a lot in common and now that we are all retired, we can spend more time camping.



Roz and I walked the dogs down along the beach. As you can tell, Charlie just loves the water. He laid right down in it a number of times and said "This is good"!



Our silly dogs, not so much! Here you can see the skid marks as I tried to drag them both to the edge of the water. No thank you. They would rather just sniff around on the beach and look for interesting things to smell.



As the day wore on and the sun was starting to go down, the bay got so calm. This doesn't happen very often. What a beautiful place to be. We can wander up and down the beach and enjoy the views. There aren't too many people here during the week. A lot of the campsites are occupied by campers who pay for a month at a time but just come on the weekends. Things were pretty quiet.



The clouds rolled in and we were due for some rain maybe the next day. But as it was, it made a beautiful view to look at from our campsite.


We did get some rain the next day, but we huddled in underneath the awnings and waited it out.

Did you ever know, before a rainstorm, the flies seem to bite on your ankles and your legs?

Well, these two old retired farts each got out their fly swatters. Take note, Steve could probably use a newer flyswatter than the ancient beat up antique that he has in his hand.


Both guys took out their aggressions on the flies. 
It was hilarious! 
I even made a YouTube video of them: 


Roz and I both decided to go back inside of our campers and take naps.

After the rain was done, the guys were able to get us a roaring campfire going. A neighboring property owner had stopped to chat and brought us a nice stack of firewood. During our conversation, he also happened to mention that he was a retired engineer. I told him I was a weaver. He said he had bought his daughter a loom some time back and he himself would absolutely love to learn to weave! I am sending him my DVD in the mail on Monday....

As the guys sat around the campfire, I could see Steve's tension slipping away. Yep, he needed to go camping!!!



By Friday morning, we needed to start packing up to head on back home. Roz and Gary had to leave for a family commitment as well. We said our goodbyes, dumped our holding tanks, and headed on back home.


Once we unloaded the camper, tossed in a load of laundry, it was time for a nice long nap.

Steve said he was going to start again with working on the exterior trim around the back French window panels. They were almost done and he only needed four more trim boards around the edges for them to be weather tight and secure for the winter.



He got out the wood and the cutoff saw and the caulk and the air nailer. I got out my paint brush and can of paint. The dogs of course think they are helping too, if they stand on the inside and bark their fool heads off at Steve with the air nailer and air compressor tank. 


Soon we had the trim finished and everything painted. Steve had pieced in the missing sections of cedar shingle siding. Now the east side exterior is complete.

What a transformation!

BEFORE


AFTER

We now have windows on all four sides of the She Shed!!!

On the East side, we have these four French window panels.

On the North side we have a French door.

On the South side we have a French door and a small crank-out window.

On the West side we have 3 double hung windows that match the front window style of the house.


This morning, as I write this, Steve is working on replacing a few more pieces of damaged cedar siding on the corners of the She Shed.


And to add a very very very happy note to this blog,
our darling daughter and son-in-law
have made it now public
and I can announce....


GRANDBABY NUMBER 8
 IS ON THE WAY!!!!!

YAYYYYYYYYYYYY


This is how our daughter Heather 
announced it on Facebook.... 
 how cute!  


Baby will join Mommy Heather and Daddy Jesse, with big brother Jameson and big sister Whitney on or around March 15 (which happens to be the birthday of our son Mike who passed away in 2006)    We are exhilarated and overjoyed!!!