DIY – Take-it-Down-to-Party Clothesline

 

Airing out your laundry isn’t just for TMZ.  Drying in the sun brings benefits other than saving electricity.  There’s a knack to it, but like all things done for millenia but abandoned for progress, the internet can tell you how to do it.

Staking out a sunny spot to dry your wash can be easy if you happen to have existing structures to support your clothesline.  For city dwellers, especially in the Mid Atlantic and Northeast where back yards are narrow and often bordered by high wooden fences, take a look around for a pair of potential clothesline anchors.  Consider between the corner of a tall deck and the fence, between a pair of opposing windows with sturdy iron security bars or between a pair of tall iron staircases such as we have.

Wet clothes are heavy, so your clothesline supports need to be secure.  Don’t bother tying it to that rickety wooden fence post that sways when you lean on it.  If you live in a condo or a neighborhood with an association, check the bylaws before you buy your clothespins, clotheslines can be considered shabby and may not be allowed.

For the industrious, a few ideas for building a traditional clothesline from scratch are here, here, and here.

See the photoset above for a simple take-it-down-at-will clothesline for a busy apartment building back yard.

A Few Notes:

1.  Our single line hangs a set of sheets or about a half-load of laundry (from our less-than-full-sized washer), which is fine.  I’m not doing this to unplug the dryer for good, I don’t want to inflict our underpants on our apartment building.

2.  I used a turnbuckle I picked up for cheap to make the clothesline easily detachable.  In theory, I can take up the line slack with it but it’s tiny and have much of an impact.  Any kind of sturdy carabiner or clip will work.

3.  To secure the clothesline to the staircase, I wrapped the line multiple times then tied a square knot.  I used two half hitches to knot the line to the turnbuckle.

4.  Give your laundry a shake as you take it down to knock off any hitchhiking bugs.

5.  You do need clothes pins.  It may drape heavily as you hang it but laundry lightens as it dries – a slight breeze will send your favorite tee off to the dirty corner of the yard (or alley).  Thankfully, hardware stores, drug stores, dollar stores and Target sell clothes pins.

6.  A laundry basket rules, but if you’re short on space, a clean reusable shopping bag or two works well.  It gets damp from the wet laundry but you can clothespin it to the line inside-out and upside down (pinning the bottom to the line so it doesn’t catch wind like a sail and blow away).  It’ll be dry before your laundry is.  (For large capacity, there’s always the mega-useful Ikea bag.)

String one up and soon you’ll be singing to your clothes out on the party line.

Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Converting the Cold Frame to a Summer Grow Box with Gorilla Glue

 

This post is #4 in a 5-part series. Thanks to the great folks at Gorilla Glue, The Soil Toil has 5 Gorilla Glue Prize Packs to give away!  What’s included in the Prize Pack and how to enter to win is all detailed here.

To enter to win, simply leave a comment on this postA winner was randomly selected on June 16th at 8 am.  However, you can still share what project you have in need of Gorilla Glue or testify to Gorilla Tough awesomeness by telling of projects completed with Gorilla Glue products.  The winner from today’s post will be  randomly selected Saturday June 16th, 2012, and announced at 8:00 am EST has already been chosen.

If you blog, tweet, pin, tumblr, Facebook, G+ or StumbleUpon, feel free to leave your site or social media handle in your comment and share the Gorilla Glue contest throughout your networks.

This Gorilla Glue project fills two needs for our garden: where to store my cold frame when not in use and needing a place to keep tender plants out of rats’ reach.

It struck me a few weeks ago – if I remove the glass lid and Univent opener from my cold frame, I convert it to a grow box for seedling basil and summer greens – two items our neighborhood rats developed a taste for this year.  By making a wire mesh (hardware cloth) lid, I won’t have to stash the cold frame – it’ll just remain in use as a safe house for tasty tender plants.

The wood used is from a recalled crib.  Odd, yes, and we loved this crib.  We were the third or fourth family to use it but drop-rail cribs are now banned from re-sale and I made the executive decision to cut it into pieces to salvage the oak.

Click the pictures above to view the cold frame conversion.

A Few Notes:

1.  Check for fit by fitting the pieces to be glued together before applying any glue.

2.  Rats can chew through hardware cloth, but they don’t just do it for sport.  Hopefully they’ll leave this alone.

3.  I needed to keep this simple and quick – I did not make an elaborate lid, just one that works.

4.  Gorilla Glue does not let go once dried.  Protect your work area accordingly and do not glue too closely to your clamps or weights, it expands while drying.

5. Read the bottle’s full instructions before using.

(#6 and #7 added after initial publishing)

6.  For more information on my cold frame, start here.

7.  It takes a little patience to get the hardware cloth flat enough along the wood in preparation for gluing.  Using pliers to shape the wire and lots of lamps and/or weights helps a ton.

The new lid has been in use for about a week now.  It works beautifully – it’s lightweight and no rats have put noticeable effort to getting inside.  (Note: If you plan to build a similar mesh lid to keep out raccoons, you will need to latch it securely.)

To learn more about Gorilla Glue and their other products, visit their Facebook page. You’ll also find incredible user-completed projects, safety tips and a handy Gorilla Glue Guide for navigating your own projects.

Leave a comment below for your chance to win a Gorilla Glue Prize Pack! to share your Gorilla Glue stories, but a winner has been chosen for this post.  Thanks!

Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Fix That Table with Gorilla Super Glue

 

This post is #1 in a 5-part series.  Thanks to the great folks at Gorilla Glue, The Soil Toil has 5 Gorilla Glue Prize Packs to give away!  What’s included in the Prize Pack and how to enter to win is all detailed here.

To enter to win, simply leave a comment on this postA winner was randomly selected on June 13th at 8 am.  However, you can still share what project you have in need of Gorilla Super Glue or testify to Gorilla Glue awesomeness by telling of projects completed with Gorilla Super Glue.  The winner from today’s post will be  randomly selected Wednesday June 13th, 2012, and announced at 8:00 am EST has already been chosen.

If you blog, tweet, pin, tumblr, Facebook, G+ or stumbleUpon, feel free to leave your site or social media handle in your comment and share the Gorilla Glue contest throughout your networks.

This Gorilla Super Glue project is so simple but has been in the making for eight months.

Back in fall of last year, one of our landlord’s handymen was throwing stuff out of the second story apartment while refurbishing it.  One of those items hit our poor old plastic yard table.  I tossed the two punched-out pieces into my gardening bag and figured I’d glue it later.

I didn’t want to use Krazy Glue because it dries so very quickly and the pieces were a tricky fit.  I didn’t want to use a slow-drying glue since I wouldn’t be able to clamp it and didn’t wan to tape it while drying.

Enter Gorilla Super Glue.  It dries quickly but not quite as instant as Krazy Glue.  Gorilla Super Glue is impact-tough thanks for tiny rubber particles in its formulation – it’s not brittle when hit.  Perfect.

Click the pictures above to view the table repair.

A Few Notes:

1.  Consider wearing thin gloves (like medical gloves or cleaning gloves) to prevent glue from getting on your skin.

2.  Check for fit by fitting the pieces to be glued together before applying any glue.

3.  Keep a rag handy to wipe away excess glue from your project and to wipe the glue tip clean before replacing the cap.

4.  Read the bottle’s full instructions before using.

A few days after completing the table repair, I cleaned and oiled it (and cleaned it again) to remove grease spots and restore the table.  After doing so, not only did our table look pretty sharp, the repair became barely noticeable.

To learn more about Gorilla Super Glue and their other products, visit their Facebook page.  You’ll also find incredible user-completed projects, safety tips and a handy Gorilla Glue Guide for navigating your own projects.

Leave a comment below for your chance to win a Gorilla Glue Prize Pack! to share your Gorilla Glue stories, but a winner has been chosen for this post.  Thanks!

Giveaway – Gorilla Glue Prize Pack!

 

This contest is now closed, but please enjoy the projects listed at the bottom of this post, read the projects and tips shared in the comments and share your own projects!

Do you fix things?

Is your to-be-repaired pile getting a little tall?

What about that project that’s just waiting for a magical adhesive to be completed (or started)?

Whether you’re a devoted Gorilla Glue Fan or haven’t yet picked up that Gorilla Tough bottle of incredibly strong adhesive, this giveaway is for you.

What do you win?  The Gorilla Glue Tool Box Prize Pack!  The prize pack comes in an appropriately tool-box-shaped box filled with:

- Gorilla Super Glue

- Gorilla Glue 2 oz. with Anti-clog Cap

- Gorilla Wood Glue

- Gorilla Epoxy

- Gorilla Tape Handy Roll

- An awesome Gorilla Tough t-shirt!

You’re either already very excited about this giveaway or wondering what on earth you’d do with a box of fierce adhesive products.  Well, Gorilla Glue’s Facebook page is a mega sushi-go-round of incredible fan-completed projects.  From the making of the Idyllwild, CA, town monument to DIY lamp shades to The Soil Toil’s own repairing cracked clay pots, this is one Facebook page to like for inspiration and wows.

Oh, and Gorilla Glue Facebook page features key info like the Removing Gorilla Glue From Skin video (an ounce of prevention: wearing latex gloves) and the Choose Your Glue Guide.

So, how does this Gorilla Glue giveaway work?

Easy.

1.  Starting this Monday, June 11th, I will publish one post a day featuring a different Gorilla Glue product from the Prize Pack.  The final post will be Friday, June 15th.

2. You have FIVE chances to win because we have FIVE Gorilla Glue Prize Packs to give away!  (To be fair, once you win, you will not be eligible to win a second Prize Pack.)

3.  To enter, simply leave a comment on that day’s post.  Share what project you have in need of that post’s featured Gorilla Tough item or testify to Gorilla Glue awesomeness by telling of completed projects with that post’s featured product.  Scroll down for links to all posts, they are added as they are published.

4.  If you blog, tweet, pin, tumblr, Facebook, G+ or stumbleUpon, feel free to leave your site or social media handle in your comment and share the Gorilla Glue contest throughout your networks.

5.  For each particular post, a winner will be chosen at random from the comments.  The winner will be chosen and announced two days after each post debuts.  For example, the winner from the comments on Monday’s post will be chosen and announced Wednesday 8:00 am EST, the winner from the comments on Tuesday’s post will be chosen and announced Thursday 8:00 am EST, etc.  The final winner, from the comments on Friday’s post, will be chosen and announced Sunday 8:00 am EST.

6.  This post (the one you are reading right now) will be updated with links to each new giveaway post every day and feature a link to each winner’s blog and/or social media page (if the winner prefers).

7.  Choose your follow format from Facebook, Twitter, tumblr and Pinterest to keep abreast of The Soil Toil Great Gorilla Glue Giveaway.

I can’t wait to start the giveaway and spread a little Gorilla Tough love throughout the gardensphere!

Post #1: Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Fix That Table with Gorilla Super Glue (Monday 6/11/2012)

Winner #1 Announced: Jim Erb!  

Post #2: Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Patch that Trashed Plastic Pot with Gorilla Tape (Tuesday 6/12/2012)

Winner #2 Announced: Amy Bounds!

Post #3: Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Re-Seat those Wooden Chair Slats with Gorilla Wood Glue (Wednesday 6/13/2012)

Winner #3 Announced: Jeavonna Chapman!

Post #4: Gorilla Glue Giveaway – Converting the Cold Frame to A Summer Grow Box with Gorilla Glue (Thursday 6/14/2012)

Winner #4 Announced: Melissa M!

Post #5 (Final Post):  Gorilla Glue Giveaway – New Plant Markers from Old Items with Gorilla Epoxy (Friday 6/15/2012)

Winner #5 Announced: Betty!

Closer Look – The Univent on the Cold Frame

I installed a Univent automatic vent opener on the cold frame to take all the guesswork out of when to open and close it for temperature regulation.

It costs around $50 and it works.  I love it.

It takes no electricity to operate, it works by means of a gas-filled cylinder and piston.  The gas expands or contracts as the temperature rises or falls and it moves the piston to open or close a vent (or cold frame lid).

It is very simple to use, just make sure to lightly lubricate the piston rod and moving parts (including your lid hinges).

I’ve noticed a bunch of search engine hits the last few days searching for “installing univent on cold frame.”  This could be because the instructions that come with the Univent are terrible.  With a dozen languages and an incredibly bad illustration set, the Univent instructions deserve their own Trophy of Fail.

I hope these photos help.  You can pull them up on your mobile device while installing your Univent as motivation while you struggle with the worst instructions you’ll see all season.

Post Publishing Note:

I am not affiliated with Univent nor do I receive items from Univent.  I simply chose a Univent opener for my cold frame after searching online.

This is a bonus post to a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

DIY – Reclaimed Sidewalk Land

Sick of the weeds and trash last summer cornered away between our  fence and the sidewalk, I dug it all up with a trowel, a borrowed shovel and leather work gloves.

I found a chair leg in the weeds, a recycling bin’s worth of glass in the dirt and untold broken bricks.

$27 later it was a mulched little patch with bargain perennials and clearance annuals since it was already early summer.

This spring it hosts a few clearance grocery store tea roses, an annual whose name I forgot, a thick row of smiling pansies, poppin’ crocus and a few nodding daffodils.

B loves saying “Hi, Pansies!” to them so much that she can spot other people’s pansies from the car now.

We rent.

Despite this, the land reclamation is moving along the fence this spring – I have big plans for that neglected little Weedtown out there.

I am so completely ahead of the game this year – I’ve had a bag of mulch and a bag of humus & manure mix out there waiting for me to dig this mess up.  I got them a month ago.

Neal found a $5 well-worn shovel for me at the flea.  That, my trowel, cultivator, leather gloves, classy pink plastic hospital pan (my constant garden project companion) and that 80-degree Sunday afternoon last weekend turned Weedtown into Mulchburg.

Mulchburg is still edgy, though.  I stopped pulling the large chunks of glass out about 10 minutes into it.

Sowing with Chopsticks – Root Vegitables

My seed-starting calendar I filled out a few weeks ago says I should be really busy this week and next.  I’m short on deep containers for root vegetables but feel an urgency to get some planted this weekend.

Whether you are starting seedlings in starting mix or direct sewing into potting soil, moisten your medium before planting the seeds.  Why?

1.  It leaves no doubt as to how full you have filled your container.

2.  It’s easier to poke holes for sowing (or make little furrows).

3.  Your carefully placed seeds won’t float away as they do when you wait to moisten the soil until after sowing.

So, moisten your potting soil, work it around to break up clumps (it get compressed in transit), smooth it out then get those seeds in there.

I’ve seen a few blogs and how-to pages mention using a chopstick to sow your seeds.  I’ve also seen pencils and plastic utensils suggested.

I’m telling you – the chopstick is a superior tool.  It’s perfect: you already have more in your kitchen drawer than you will ever need (since take-out offers an endless supply), it has both a tapered end and a uniform end (whichever suits your fancy) and you can even mark 1/4″ and 1/2″ depth on it if you’re concerned about uniform seed sowing.

As a bonus, both ends are blunt so you can just poke any stray seeds into the soil where they lay to add a little spontaneity to your meticulous operation.

Once your seeds are sown at the suggested depth (found on our seed packet or seed catalog), mist with a spray bottle.  My fairly cheap hose nozzle has a wonderfully fine mist setting that far beats my cheap spray bottle.

My dog-eared seed catalog emphasizes the long germination period for parsnips (two weeks) and the need to keep the soil moist until they sprout.  It suggested using radishes as markers and for keeping the soil from crusting over.

I skipped the marker use but did plant radishes throughout the parsnip pot.  With their 24 days till harvest vs. the turnips’ 105 days, they’ll be long gone before the parsnips really do anything.

To manage the soil moisture, I happened to have a clear-plastic bag that fits nicely so over the parsnip pot.

Today’s lineup:

Hollow Crown (Sugar) parsnip

Cherry Belle radish

Early Wonder Tall Top beet

Purple Top White Globe turnip

By the way, as of 2:00 pm today, FOUR tomatoes have sprouted in the cold frame.  That’s three more than we had yesterday.

Seed Starting – The Glory

The crew.

Seventeen days after starting the seeds – they struggle to maintain their soil moisture in the 80-degree bizarre DC March weather.

I built the cold frame in a blur, got some seeds sown in seed starter in a rush, filled a spray bottle with water and told our neighbor, “Thanks so much – you are awesome.”

Then we left town for 13 days.

While we were away, the east coast heat-wave continued but with a few cool nights in the low 30s for DC.

We drove down the Carolina coast to Florida, stayed with Neal’s parents as they got their own garden ready for the new season and his mom sent us home with an extra tomato plant.  We’ll have tomato races – FL vs. DC.

This will be fun.  She, a seasoned second-generation gardener.  Me, a fourth-season gardener.

When we returned, I popped the potted Florida tomato plant into the cold frame (a “Celebrity” slicing tomato).  The recorded low temperature on the cold frame thermometer read 38 F.  Lower than I had hoped from our period away, but it only gets a few hours of direct sun a day given the height of our yard’s surrounding buildings.

I looked closely at the seed pots.  Any number of factors could explain the distinct lack of action within.

Fourteen days in the fateful cold frame and nada.  None of the following items we planted sprouted:

Jimmy Nardello’s Italian Pepper

Rosita Eggplant

Eva Purple Ball Tomato

Glacier Tomato

Garden Peach Tomato

Fourth of July Tomato  <— Free seed packet in the Washington Gardener 2012 Seed Exchange goodie bag!

The seed pots, especially the little toilet paper roll ones, were not staying moist enough through the day.  I doubled my watering and placed little plastic covers on half of them (i.e. I reunited the strawberry carton lids with their bottoms that held the seed pots).

So here we are, March 16th.  Day seventeen.  I took some pictures.  And guess what…

A TOMATO SPROUTED!!!

LIFE!!!

Our first seedling of 2012 is an Eva Purple Ball tomato!!!

The seeds either found motivation from the big-brother Florida tomato or they saw me sowing the back-up-plan starters yesterday that I set in our incredibly sunny bedroom windows.

DIY – Thermal Mass for the Cold Frame

My cold frame does not have a hot bed (a layer of manure a few inches below the floor to create heat as it decays), and it only gets a few hours of sun at this early point in spring, so I wanted to add thermal mass.

Thermal mass is simply extra material that will be heated by the sun during the day and then will give off that heat after the sun goes down to maintain the warm temperature of the cold frame.

Online suggestions included painting milk jugs black and filling them with water.  It was already night so I didn’t have time to paint jugs, plus if I painted my bottles and jugs I wouldn’t be able to recycle them later.

All I really needed was black water.  It would absorb the heat better than the clear water and I could just pour it out when I’m done with the cold frame.

FOOD COLORING.

Every art class since kindergarten demonstrates that mixing all the colors makes black.  I dug out my Target-brand food coloring left over from Christmas and got to it.

It worked like a charm – one good squirt of each color into each container made inky-black water perfectly suited to add thermal mass to the cold frame.

As I arranged them inside the cold frame itself, in the dark with a flashlight, I wrapped a few of the bottles in aluminum foil to help reflect the precious little sunlight that was making it into the cold frame in early March in our city back yard.

DIY – Recycling Bin Seed Starting

How to Start Your Own Seeds:

1.  Fantasize about all those home-grown vegetables you see repinned a thousand times on Pinterest.

2.  Remind yourself mankind has grown his own food for thousands of years.

3.  Scour the internet for more detailed DIY pages than the one you area reading this second.

4.  Realize you may not actually be ready to really do this but, determined, keep digging online.

5.  Go nuts and order a ton of seeds.

6.  Justify all these seeds by building a cold frame from scratch out of reclaimed materials (my cost: about $20).

7.  Justify the purchase of a $45 automatic vent opener for said $20 cold frame because you spent $60 on all those seeds and you don’t want them to cook in the cold frame.

8.  Find exactly the DIY solution you need at You Grow Girl for saving cash by making your own seed starting containers (because you’ve already maxed out your annual garden budget).

9.  Justify your friends’ suspicions of your hording by hording saving (er, upcycling) three reusable shopping bags worth of toilet paper tubes, fruit containers, egg cartons and yogurt cups by your entry way.

9.  Get your calendar, your seed catalog and your internets and determine your Date of Last Frost and work backwards in the calendar to plan your seed starting dates.  Or cheat and use this handy What to Plant Now clickable map.

10.  Get your seed starting medium, dig a chop stick out of the drawer to poke holes in the dirt and go for it (per the instructions from your seed packet or seed catalog).

11.  Place your seed starting containers in the cold frame and hope.  And leave town for two weeks and leave the whole thing in your amazing neighbor’s care.

DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

Determined to finish this thing, I headed out with scrap table legs from a broken kiddie table, some wire and my drill.

The Univent automatic opener I installed works by means of a piston driven by a compressed-gas cylinder that expands or contracts with the temperature. The opener is amazing but I needed an easy way to latch the lid open to allow access to the (anticipated) seedlings within the cold frame.

I fashioned a post with a loop of wire at the end that hooks to a screw on the lid – it works like a charm. I can prop the lid open, work inside, unlatch it, and the Univent resumes the work of keeping the lid open or closed based on the temperature.

The automatic vent opener (the Univent) instructions read horribly. Ikea should contract its instruction-writing services out… I corrected a mistake I made the day before and was officially in business.

I finished the cold frame a few weeks ago, on February 27th, and March proceeded to be one of the warmest on record. It’s like bringing your umbrella to insure against rain.

Post Publishing Note:

This is 6 of a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )

Have I mentioned I constructed this cold frame hastily?

Even my trip to Community Forklift was barely planned, I was rummaging through the cabinets of door hinges while they announced they were closing in five minutes.

I set about installing the cold frame’s glass lid with a vague notion of how I would get the not-quite-appropriate hinges to fit and about 45 minutes to execute it.

By the time I finished, I had a working glass top, a Univent auto opener installed correctly and a few large gaps where there should be none.

I called it a success and returned the next day with a fresh plan to fix the gaps.

Post Publishing Note:

This is 5 of a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

Bonus: Closer Look – The Univent on the Cold Frame

DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )

I painted it.

Super fast.

Our neighbors had old paint they donated and I had some cheap brushes left over from past projects.  Actually, this entire project got me digging through my project supply stash.  I have leftovers from projects I completed long ago don’t even remember doing.

Spring cold frame = spring cleaning.

Post Publishing Note:

This is 4 of a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )

Last Saturday I gathered all the cut pieces I had hastily cut and proceeded to hastily put them together.

This whole thing is based on me looking at a few online plans and sketching it out super quick.

Because I have a toddler.

It went well considering I used screws that were too long to put it together too fast from plans not well planned out.

 

Post Publishing Note:

This is 3 of a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)

DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )

A few days ago I gathered my cold frame materials and got down to business.

Having a toddler at home full-time means afternoon-sized projects get stretched out over multiple sessions over multiple days.  Having already planned and cut the front and back of the cold frame, today I cut the two ends.

Had I gotten more upcycled wood from Community Forklift, this would not have taken so long today.  It worked out but I could have picked up plenty more wood for $2 or $3 had I actually used the tape measure I brought with me.

B was super eager to “work on our project” and was even more excited to wear safety goggles while I ran the jig saw.  She was seated a good ten feet from me during saw operations but the ceremony of it all made it super fun for her (us both, actually).

Donning her safety glasses in the designated "safety seat" in the wagon - her spot for when I run the saw.

Everything was already measured and marked before even getting the saw out.  I checked in with her at the beginning and end of each cut, “Glasses on?” “On!” “Ready?” “Ready!” cut – cut – cut “You good?” “Guud!”  Things went smooth as pie.

I laid the two ends out before putting everything away (which is an operation unto itself with the shared back yard, unlocked gate and shared basement/storage space with a forgetful careless handyman).

A quick sanity check that my oft-interupted measuring ended up as proper cold frame ends.

A toddler’s need to step on anything newly laid out on the ground is as strong as splashing in puddles.

 

Post Publishing Note:

This is 2 of a 6-part series -

DIY – The Beginnings of a Cold Frame (Part 1 of __ )
DIY – The Ends of a Cold Frame (Part 2 of __ )
DIY – The Assembly of a Coldframe (Part 3 of __ )
DIY – Painting the Cold Frame (Part 4 of __ )
DIY – Window Hacker (5 of __ )
DIY – Cold Frame – Fixing the Flaws (Part 6 of 6!)