Wood for the porch rebuild has arrived

The wood for the porch rebuild has finally been delivered and it’s pretty impressive. I think the porch will out live the house.

Andre has spent a lot of time finding good wood at a good price and in the end we ended up with Douglas Fir from Quebec which is where a lot of the wood in the US comes from anyway, so by ordering direct from the timber yard we will have saved. It was still expensive though and we’re talking 5 figures. The order also included some lovely camura wood for the decking.

Incidentally Douglas Fir isn’t a fir tree, it get its name from  David Douglas, a Scottish botanist who first reported the species and what a tree it is. Grows up to 300′ tall and very much reminds me of the Californian Redwoods.

As mentioned in a previous post we plan to rebuilt the porch as close as possible to the original, notable exception being that we are making everything a little bit stronger, for example, the vertical posts are being upgraded from true 4×4’s to 5×5’s and hopefully it won’t be too noticeable.

Delivery day was a bit of shambles, the wood was supposed to be delivered between 8am and 12 noon but didn’t turn up until a little after 4pm due to custom holdups, during which time we had four people hanging around, including Aimee. Sucks that in this world of instant communication that the delay couldn’t have been passed on. Andre did try and call the shipping company but no joy. On top of this we had to hire a bobcat skid steer so overall quite an expensive day.

The lorry from Canada has numerous stops on its way, ours was the first and then down to Long Island and then the Carolinas. Aimee said that it was the longest lorry that she’s ever seen and it took quite a while to negotiate the turn at the bottom of the road. Cute that driver took his two young kids along for the adventure.


I couldn’t be there for the unloading but Aimee and Andre snapped a good number of pictures. I didn’t realise what a big operation it was, so in no particular order, voila!

These timbers are huge and the majority of these timbers have been stored indoors. Being a timber frame builder, Andre had a clever way to move them about, once on the ground, using a bunch of heavy duty rollers so carrying was down to the minimum.

It was dark by the time everything was tucked away.

Old details revealed

As you may know we’ve just had our porch removed for reconstruction. As for the old porch it’s sitting in a huge pile on our drive awaiting a trip to tip. We have kept all the fancy bits such as the acorns, cornices, arches, pillars and some of the main heavy beams, the rest wasn’t worth saving.

The last few weekends we’ve been taking it to the dump and it was when we were going through the pile that I noticed a hidden arch.  I had previously noticed a curved relief on the inside of the porch (see photos below) but always thought it was an odd, but nice bit of detail.

As you can see in the picture below the arch pieces just came apart when I was moving them. I think they’re original to the house as we’ve seen the green paint everywhere. I do like this old arch, seems grander that what they replaced it with but I think we’re stuck with the current design. Maybe I’ll re-add the arch trim inside the porch.

One day I hope to find some old, old photos of the house. I think the oldest we have are probably from the 50’s or 60’s.

On a different topic, we’ve been granted permission by the City of Kingston, Building Department to install traditional sash windows with period wavy glass (we have a lot of this glass), combined with winter storm panels for additional insulation. Now we just have to start making them. That’s nice windows so better get cracking.

For the last coupe of years the rough openings for windows have been boarded up so it will be lovely to see what it’s like with a bit of natural light.