Some of the floor joists are glue-lam wood, to support some of the longer spans; most of the joists are 2x12's. The second photo shows some. The cut-out in the foreground is for the stairs down to the basement.
The next step after the joists was the subfloor; the 3rd photo shows the plywood going in. First a layer of glue on the joists, then the wood, then nails (with lines drawn on the wood to show where the joists are). Not great photo ops, mostly butt shots.
This 4th photo shows the 2 younger guys toting a beam from the solar kiln (which is 100 yards away next to the well). This was wood that James logged last year from hemlock and Douglas fir on the property, and had milled into beams by a mobile mill operator (see earlier posts). The wood has been stacked in a modified solar kiln all winter, drying. Dean, the framer, says it is some of the best and straightest wood he has worked with (although he also complains it is heavy). We harvested enought 2x8's to frame all of the exterior walls of the house, as well as many of the larger beams.
Now we're getting somewhere! By the end of March (this photo was taken on the 26th) we actually had a few walls up! This will be the south wall, with kitchen windows visible on the left (the sink will be facing those windows), and a door onto the deck from the family room on the right side of this wall. Dean the framer is in this picture, admiring his handiwork.
Becky has made several lunch-time dashes to the work site to discuss wall placement and window placement, fortunately it's only 5 miles from the office!
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