Non essential garden work goes ahead amidst warnings

We’re waiting until the weather warms up a bit so we can continue work inside the house, specifically concrete repairs to the ground floor (concrete needs to cure in temperatures above 50°F/10°C), so in the meantime we decided to do some garden work especially as the weather was lovely, albeit a little chilly.

We had hoped to put the side area to grass last year but we ran out of time. Our plan now is to seed it next weekend and hopefully get a nice healthy lawn in time for summer frolics. On Saturday we faffed about trying to get a decent level with a couple of planks and a string and then towards of the day I realised that we had a load of leveling guides/planks that we used for the top lawn, doh!!! Two of the six planks were missing so we replaced those, getting some peat for the soil at the same time.

Sunday started slowly, due in part to some birthday inbibes, that said we still managed 7 1/2 hours down the house. It took a while to get the guides together and after that there was a lot of shoveling, raking, stone picking up and tilling with our great little Mantis.

The front ten foot of the ground is where we planted our daffodils so we’ll wait until they’ve flowered and the leaves have died back before we turn that to lawn.

By the way the buckets are for all the stones and pebbles we find.

The Ponckhockie Chief

As most of you know our house is in Ponckhockie which was first inhabited by Native Americans. Legend has it amongst the locals that the head of one of the chiefs was carved into the rock cliff above Ponckhockie. I didn’t think much of this until last Autumn, just after the leaves had fallen and low and behold you can indeed see a profile of a head on the cliffs. Whether it was carved or a natural rock formation I don’t know but I’d like to believe the former.

On a good day I may have to grab a rope and harness and clear away some of the saplings.

THE INDIANS

In legend and in names they live,
By lake and stream and mountain wild;
Seldom a thought to them we’d give,
Were these reminders but despoiled.
Their forms have faded from the land,
Their songs unheard upon the shore,
They sleep in death on every hand,
Their war-whoops wild are heard no more.

A Legend of Aowasting Lake Near Lake Minnewaska Shawangunk Mountains, New York. By Jared Barhite, 1911

Incidentally the book this poem was taken from mentions that Ponckhockie means place for canoes.

Digging a hole

Last weekend, as the weather was good and the ground was above freezing we decided to dig. We weren’t just digging any hole, but were trying to find the old waste water/sewer pipe. Paul Sinnott, our plumber, was hoping to connect a new pipe to the existing pipe near where it went under the pavement/sidewalk, thus hopefully saving us from the cost of digging up the road etc. Our aim was to expose about five foot of the pipe so Paul could see what the deal was.

We knew the old pipe ran roughly parallel to the side of the house and rather than dig it up all the way down we dug an exploratory trench about 10′ foot up from the pavement/sidewalk and once we had located the pipe we roughly knew where we should start digging near the pavement.

On Saturday, adjacent to the pavement we went down about 4′ and nothing, then some of the soil under the pavement fell away revealing a terracotta pipe. I had no idea what this was, possibly a sewer pipe, possibly not, either way I’m glad we didn’t damage it. This pipe is shown below. Still no sign of our cast iron pipe, so further digging was required.

On Sunday we another exploratory dig 5′ back from the pavement, went down until we hit our cast iron sewer pipe and worked our way to the pavement and as you can see we revealed about 5′ of pipe, which goes beneath the terracotta pipe by about 18″. There were no obvious holes in the cast iron pipe, but the outside corrosion looked pretty bad and I wouldn’t be surprised if we need a new pipe from the edge of our property to the main sewer which I believe runs down the middle of the road.

In the end the hole was maybe 5′ deep in parts but luckily the soil here is very sandy so the digging could have been a lot worse. We covered the hole with branches and leaves to make sure no one falls in [spfx: evil laughter]

Off with the parging

Today we removed most of the parge coat from the house and in case you’re wondering why, it was because the existing (modern) parge coat was done with Portland cement over the existing lime mortar walls. This is not a good idea as pointed out in this article:

Lime is the base product widely used to produce mortars, plasters and limewashes for traditional buildings. Lime has distinct advantages over cement based alternatives for external rendering of traditional properties. Lime is less dense and more vapour permeable than cement based materials and does not trap water in the substrate which is the leading cause of decay in all buildings. Lime materials accommodate general movement better than harder cement based alternatives and are closer in strength to many of the types of stone and brick used in traditional construction and therefore do not exacerbate their deterioration.

Instead of using lime materials, many traditional buildings are repaired and renovated using harder, impermeable materials designed for modern buildings which use completely different construction methods. The result is often worsened damp problems. The simple advantage of using a lime render is that it allows the walls to diffuse any water vapour that penetrates into them, referred to as the free passage of moisture vapour.

which to summarize means that a Portland parge over a lime mortar wall will trap moisture in your house, cause your walls to deteriorate and will likely crack due to its inflexible nature. By the way that is snow in the video.

To remove the existing parge coat I used our recently purchased rotary hammer drill. What a great tool.

By the way, where the mains water pipe goes into the house (clad in blue foam insulation) there used to be a door and steps down to it. It probably got filled in when the garage and driveway were built.

In the process of preparing for french drains and new footings we’ve already cleared a trench around most of the house so this is an ideal time to do a fresh parge coat as well as to repoint all the corners etc. We’re hoping that our friend Derrick can do the work as he is an expert in old school plastering. Once the parge coat is on it’s recommended we wait for two weeks for the parge to partially cure before we apply a lime wash which is an old fashioned whitewash, the sort that you’d see on old farm buildings. Allowing another two weeks for curing we can start to install our french drains and fill the trench in. It will be nice to have our paths around the house back as currently you can’t walk around the house.

Concerning the the new parge coat I’ve been talking to Chris at LimeWorks and he suggested a 3.5 Natural Hydraulic Lime for the parge and a 5.0 Natural Hydraulic Lime for any small structural repairs. I can highly recommend Lime Works if you have lime mortar in your old house.

Aimee in the meantime has been double bagging asbestos tiles which were removed from a section of the house last year. This is the second load we’ve disposed of and it will be good to get rid of the stuff. We have to make an appointment at the dump before we take it in and were told that it ends up near Syracuse which is about 200 miles away.