So here we are, early morning, Ken, our permanent helper was all ready to go to work with his measuring tape, stakes and rope to create the size and who would know, Husband came out and told us to move it here and there and then it was too small. So we spend a whole morning just laying the thing out. Plans in my head had to be reworked and I just absolutely do not like when I got something already all worked out, someone has a different idea and insists that it had to be done his/her way. Frustrating! Well, I finally broke down and compromised, the building got a bigger footprint by the minute, but that was OK. We had enough material. We could do that. I swear, even the horses shook their heads in disbelieve over the foolishness we created. Digging holes and covering them up again just to dig another hole 2 feet away. then the pallet measurements did not compute, again we measured and dug more post holes.
Finally, all corners where determined and the digging to set the poles started. three-foot deep and a little bigger than the diameter of the tree trunk. Six holes, four corners and one each in the middle of the longer part of the building. In our dry and hard ground, that is a job and a half all by itself. But with a little sweat and muscle power, and water, it got done in one morning.
Getting the trunks to the holes, however, was a different story and took some creative engineering. We rolled and moved, rolled and moved until the big end of the tree was right over the hole. Between Ken and I, we muscled it in the hole and set it up straight. While he was holding it up straight, I braced it with three brace boards. Then put the dirt back in, watered it real good and left it sitting to pack in. Watering is an essential part here in our hard clay dirt, it settles the dirt and packs tight around the trunk, much like cement would do. By the time we got all four up, the day was done, the sun was setting and we were worn out. I think the both of us fell asleep that night as soon as our heads hit the pillow. But it was a good day and a good start.

A power nailer was a godsend and made things a lot easier and faster.
Already it was looking good and we could imagine what it will look like when all the pallets are up. We figured that two rows would give us enough hight for this monster we are building. We got the Horses approval on that and called it a day. Yes, it is important to get the horses approval.
The first row of pallets well on the way to be set in place.

But the two rooms are defined, big room for barn purposes, smaller room for tack and storage. In hind-side, however, I got to say that the smaller room is not big enough and the bigger room could use some extra footage too. Reckon we are never happy.
Rafter poles are up and inside is taking shape
The rafters are up and secured, The Tack Room is floored and insulated with whatever we could find, mostly styrofoam I have collected from my husband's meal deliveries, then covered with the big and cut open dog food bags I also collected over the months. 7 dogs eat a lot and there are a lot of bags I had squirreled away for one or the other purpose. They all had been stored in tubs under the trailer house.
The door came from the dump and has all the hardware still on it, so we build the doorway to fit the door and we did that with every door we put into this building.
Electricity came from Solar panels and a Generator, I think my biggest expense so far was the gasoline for the Genni and for screws. We tried to use screws as much as we could, mainly on structural important parts, like walls and beams. Nails will work themselves out of the wood in this area, but if you live where there is little wind, you should be OK with using the cheaper nails.
Outside is starting to take shape

OSB on the outside and it is starting to look like the building I had in my mind. These are 4X8 foot sheets and you can tell that the building will be 8-foot high. on the lower side, 10 on the high side. I decided that I really need to put new OSB up because of the strength it will and is giving to the walls. It was a bigger expense, but well worth it.
The inside is starting to come together, The tack room is all separated and framed in, tools all over the place and we are having a hard time with the heat. It is only going to get hotter, so we decided we only going to work early in the morning and late in the evening. That will drag the building time out some, but it will also save us from having a heat stroke.
This is the finished tack room, ceiling all in, Walls are insulated and up, the floor is also insulated and put down. There are pallets under that OSB that got stuffed full of insulating material.
The door was a dump find and we framed it to size. It leads to the feed and water stations for the horses.
So a little more cosmetics, some shelving, and that room will be done.
A few days later and my can good storage room is all done and I have already started to fill it up. The door is still missing and will be on there a few days after this picture was taken. I build shelving right on the wall, roll shelving on the side where I can store many cans and rotated them at the same time because I take the bottom ones out. You see in the picture below, these have been build also right on the wall

Outside is starting to take shape

OSB on the outside and it is starting to look like the building I had in my mind. These are 4X8 foot sheets and you can tell that the building will be 8-foot high. on the lower side, 10 on the high side. I decided that I really need to put new OSB up because of the strength it will and is giving to the walls. It was a bigger expense, but well worth it.
We also put on the roof and there we had it, our basic barn-shaped building.
It's time to move on to the inside and out of the sun!

It's time to move on to the inside and out of the sun!

The inside is starting to come together, The tack room is all separated and framed in, tools all over the place and we are having a hard time with the heat. It is only going to get hotter, so we decided we only going to work early in the morning and late in the evening. That will drag the building time out some, but it will also save us from having a heat stroke.
This is the finished tack room, ceiling all in, Walls are insulated and up, the floor is also insulated and put down. There are pallets under that OSB that got stuffed full of insulating material.
The door was a dump find and we framed it to size. It leads to the feed and water stations for the horses.
So a little more cosmetics, some shelving, and that room will be done.
A few days later and my can good storage room is all done and I have already started to fill it up. The door is still missing and will be on there a few days after this picture was taken. I build shelving right on the wall, roll shelving on the side where I can store many cans and rotated them at the same time because I take the bottom ones out. You see in the picture below, these have been build also right on the wall


The door is ready to be put on there to hide the food storage area and I decided that this tack room needs some additional insulation, so I am going to put some carpet in there.
Yes I know, crazy idea, but it will keep the cold out more.
Now we can move on to the bigger part of the Barn.
Sharon and Otto had found a big load of siding that we can use to cover the palettes on the inside and it is starting to look a lot better then what I first thought it would look like.
I ripped all pallet boards off again and we started to install the siding, Here is the north wall, we cut some rings out of an old PVC pipe and there we have storage for rakes, pitchforks, and other long-handled tools.
I put pallets on half of the floor space because I did not want the hay to sit on the floor and get rotten. The way into the tack room is also floored with pallets and siding boards on top.


The door from the main room in the barn to the pasture is framed and put in and soon we can dismantle the buck fence outside of that door, we now have a door to stop the horses from just walking through and escaping.

W did leave spaces for breathing holes under the rafters, after all, I am planning to store Hay over the winter in there and that needs breathing space.
The workbench you see here will eventually go the whole length of that wall. All build from resourced tabletops from the dump and 2x4's that also have been resourced from different construction sites and the dump.
This is the north wall, facing the pasture/feeding station. The buck-rail fence is still up so we won't get surprised by a tool- stealing horse. Yes, I have one of them. My Scar has this thing where he takes tools out in the middle of the pasture (we talking a 20-acre space here) and literally laughs at us when we have to walk out there to retrieve the hammer or any other tool he can get his teeth on.
Two doors, one into the tack room, one into the main part of the barn. The door for the tack room is already on there, the barn ha to wait a few more days.
The north and south wall finished, well sort of.
There is still a lot of chaos going on, building materials everywhere and the big dutch door with a walk-in side door is not on there yet.
But as you can see, we got a building and the estimated cost so far is less the $900, most of that in the OSB.
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1 comment:
Love all of the repurposing and ingenuity!
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