Monday, June 14, 2010

Roofing - Day 2

I have been busy with various things and have not updated the roof progress. With Tuesday's rain halting work, we picked up once again on Wednesday.  Ed brought his son Adam, plus we hired a worker, Nate Lampe, to help.  Adam began tearing off shingles at 7:00 while I took Ed over to drop his truck at the shop.  When we returned, Adam had a good start.  Nate showed at 8:00, and the work began in earnest.

The view at 10:00

By 10:00 AM the entire roof had been stripped.  That was a full three hours prior to Monday's time.  It just goes to show what a couple of teenage boys can accomplish in simple manpower above the efforts of an equal number of over-the-hill men.  Nate and Adam worked on putting down the felt paper and fanfold insulation while Ed did trim work on the end of the house from which this photo was taken, and I helped from the ground.  At 12:30 we broke for lunch.









Roof: Ed, Nate, and Adam
Ground: Sandi and Steve



After lunch we started screwing down the steel panels.  Sandi and I worked below marking screw holes and passing up the sheets to Nate and Adam.  Ed worked on the trim for the gable end on the back right while the boys squared and fastened the steel.  The two exhaust pipes in the picture were a bit tricky.  Thankfully, only one hole was required in each of two adjacent panels which Ed skillfully measured and cut.



Left to right: Marian Bricker, Evie Petersen, and Sandi









Our mothers wanted to come up and see how things were moving along.  They were able to help by picking up trash around the house.  Afterward, they visited with our neighbor to the south, Jean Claflin, who was sitting on her porch.











Karen Fisher

 




Ed's wife Karen came with their daughter Amanda to help as they could.  Karen took the rolling magnet around the property to pick up screws and nails that had fallen.


At 6:30 we had everything finished and cleaned up for supper.











Finished product by Thursday morning's early light


3 comments:

Joe Carey said...

Buddy... looking good. The metal roof is tempting, but I have done no research at all on it.

Rodney Orton said...

Kudos to those boys. A bit of hard work and diligence can really pay off. The finished product seems to be looking quite fine!

Steve Bricker said...

Rodney, 15 months later it still looks good and works well. I do need to put in snow dams above the doorways though. During a thaw, the snow slides right off and piles up on the walk and driveway--not good.