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Sunday, May 10, 2009
Mother's Day. My Way. (or not).
So, a few weeks ago, the hubby asks me, "What do you want for Mother's Day?"
And I said either;
a) Please finish the fireplace mantel. (It is now his project because it involves the manly Art of Cutting Wood. (I hope I said please.)
b) Let's get the fence painted.
c) Build me the raised beds I want for planting this year.
d) All of the Above.
"That's not much," he replied, meaning, "that's nothing very special."
Except that it is.
It is.
I woke up bright and early this morning, excited. Something was going to happen. We were going to get one of the those projects finished.
For the fence, I just needed to pressure wash the street side of the East fence-- Oh and the inside South corner. The boy and hubby had already done 3/4's of the inside East fence--trying out the new pressure washer my Mother had bought for the family for Christmas. The West fence I was going to tackle Another Time.
So bright and early this morning, I snapped the befores.
Steetside East Fence: (Yep. A wonky panoramic).
Inside East Side South Corner, this morning:
(Yep. That pile o'debris from last summer grew under the snow, I swear).
I really thought the kids and I would paint the fence while hubby built three 4x4 raised platforms for vegetable beds. We have heavy, horrible clay soil. With raised beds, I've been told, I can happily ignore it. The instructions were posted here. In February! Gah. Fortunately I had the forethought to save them. Hubby read them over last night. He said, "Looks simple enough." Whew. Unless my man feels totally confident about the way I want a project done, it doesn't happen. So, thank you, Ree!
Those were my plans.
I would paint, he would build.
The boxes, by the way, are going to go here: eventually there will be four in a foursquare parterre-ish pattern. I just have to move the Rose. She won't like that and neither will I.
This picture is from the end of June last year.
This is the picture taken this morning. Yes, we've been sledging again!
But before washing the fence, I realised I should whack down the long grass now growing along the bottom edge (and no where else, of course.) That meant getting the weed whacker going. No problem, except I broke the string in the first two minutes. And then hubby informs me, he needs the instruction manual to rethread it. He looked in his workshop while I looked in my files: it t'were nowhere to be found. Eventually, he announced he had rethreaded it. After I finished that ten minute job, (which took all morning), I had him haul out the pressure washer for me. Man. I do not want to re-live the horror of trying to get those hoses connected and the thing plugged in and the thing moved outside. Then, inside. And upside down. Yep. It happened. Hubby eventually figured out there were screws to hold the handle onto the machine. All he had to do was tighten them!
And here's what I did to the crosspiece bit of fence in my efforts to remove the mold. Or mildew. Could've been mildew. Whatever it was--it's gone now! Gone with the chunks of wood.....
It was three o'clock before we set off to go to Rona's to get the boards for the raised beds and the paint for the fence. And just as hubby was about to back down the driveway, I cried, "Stop!"
"I forgot the paint swatch."
And then, of course, I couldn't find it.
What I did find, (hooray for no Spring Cure this year!) was last year's two cans of paint purchased as "testers." I made good and sure I picked the proper one--I held both up to the bits of the fence I painted last year. I held it up to the bright side and squinted. I held it up to the shady side (much easier to tell, by the way) and I even got my man out of the waiting Jeep to confirm my choice of can--and we headed off.
The trip to Rona took four hours. (Everything takes four hours.) Well, OK, not quite, but long enough that the next priority was plainly stopping at the grocery store to buy a pre-roasted chicken and a tub of potato salad for supper and come home and eat.
And so, the fence now?
Yep. In the evening light.
Except the skies are grey and threaten to rain. So, maybe it's OK.
Except it would have been something special to have had it painted.
It would.
Good grief. Things are never as simple as one expects them to be, are they? (Why did the refinishing of your floor, back in that long-ago Cure, spring instantly to mind?)
ReplyDeleteWe're getting the beautiful day that you had yesterday, here today, and then it's supposed to be gone tomorrow. Gah. Why can't spring last for more than one day at a time?
You *did* make some progress, though, she said in an attempt to be supportive...
the best laid plans...
ReplyDeleteLook on the bright side- the prep work is done and the projects can therefore be tackled at will and completed soon.
but you're right- it would have been special...