At Home In The Woods

/ At Home In The Woods #4,101  
The best I have found is to make sure Ur toilet is clean
Place cat inside and flush and make sure Ur back door is open step back
and raise lid
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,102  
That could be e e Colin that was my mistakel, I looked it up and it was a mistake however cats have been known to be a carrier of Ebola virus. Something I hope we never have to deal with here in America . If there was ever a virus from **** ( that's it)
 
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/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,103  
The astute observer will note that I chose a shirt that would blend in with the brick so as to appear invisible to the carpenter bees.

265622d1337305020-home-woods-img_3033.jpg


Score:
Obed 14
Bees 1

I have killed 14 carpenter bees with the tennis racquet since I've been working on the back porch. A carpenter bee in the garden stung my little girl on the finger this week. The bee had made a hole in a stake in the garden.
Score:
Obed 21
Bees 1

I killed 5 more carpenter bees yesterday while working on the porch. Counting them has been very revealing. I wonder if any larvae have hatched already or if all these bees are the ones building the nests.
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,104  
Try one of these. A friend gave us one and I have had a lot of fun with unsuspecting friends. They actually have a pretty good zing.
[ame]http://www.amazon.com/Charcoal-Companion-Amazing-Bug-Zapper/dp/B00008GS96[/ame]

MarkV
 
/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,105  
/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,106  
I knotched the board that goes around the outside posts. The PT posts twisted badly. I made precise out-of-square cuts to accommodate the twisting. The detail made my wife happy. The board is just sitting in place in the pictures. It hasn't been attached yet.
 

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/ At Home In The Woods
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#4,107  
We framed in the opening for the screen porch door. One of the posts was twisted which made squaring up the door a challenge.
 

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/ At Home In The Woods
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#4,108  
We put up tomato cages using T-posts and woven wire fence.
 

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/ At Home In The Woods #4,109  
Are the critters enjoying the garden? Look at the bright side a hunting license will help to harvest the nicely fed animals. The meat will fill the freezer for the winter.
 
/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,110  
Are the critters enjoying the garden? Look at the bright side a hunting license will help to harvest the nicely fed animals. The meat will fill the freezer for the winter.
PAGUY,
So far so good. Our motion detector scare devices appear to be working or we've just been fortunate so far.

However, caterpillars are causing much trouble. The scare tactics don't work well against bugs.

Obed
 

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/ At Home In The Woods
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#4,111  
The spacing between the Trex deck boards is > .25". The gaps resulting from using the Trex hardware are so large that mosquitoes could come through the gaps in the flooring boards. Thus, we are doing something I've never seen; we installed screen material on top of the floor joists. The deck boards will sit on top of the screen. We used heavy duty screen material that is designed to resist damage by pets. We don't need pet protection for the screen material under the deck boards but just want the material to last a long time.

Crawling around on the floor joists stapling down the screens and cutting them to fit around the posts took longer than I expected. In fact, everything I've done on the porch project has taken longer than I expected. Fortunately, putting down the screen material was the last prep step needed before installing the deck boards - finally.
 

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/ At Home In The Woods #4,112  
Crawling around on the floor joists stapling down the screens and cutting them to fit around the posts took longer than I expected
.
Obed....How are your knees ? I have done my share of crawling on joists on my knees..always wear knee pads to save the knees...it is worth it...Your deck is looking great and it will last forever. Nice job !
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,113  
The spacing between the Trex deck boards is > .25". The gaps resulting from using the Trex hardware are so large that mosquitoes could come through the gaps in the flooring boards. Thus, we are doing something I've never seen; we installed screen material on top of the floor joists. The deck boards will sit on top of the screen. We used heavy duty screen material that is designed to resist damage by pets. We don't need pet protection for the screen material under the deck boards but just want the material to last a long time.

Crawling around on the floor joists stapling down the screens and cutting them to fit around the posts took longer than I expected. In fact, everything I've done on the porch project has taken longer than I expected. Fortunately, putting down the screen material was the last prep step needed before installing the deck boards - finally.

Did you consider stapling the screen on the underside of the joists?

Or was that vetoed on aesthetic {or other} grounds?
T
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,114  
The spacing between the Trex deck boards is > .25". The gaps resulting from using the Trex hardware are so large that mosquitoes could come through the gaps in the flooring boards. Thus, we are doing something I've never seen; we installed screen material on top of the floor joists. The deck boards will sit on top of the screen. We used heavy duty screen material that is designed to resist damage by pets. We don't need pet protection for the screen material under the deck boards but just want the material to last a long time.

Crawling around on the floor joists stapling down the screens and cutting them to fit around the posts took longer than I expected. In fact, everything I've done on the porch project has taken longer than I expected. Fortunately, putting down the screen material was the last prep step needed before installing the deck boards - finally.
Good thinking, my wife always worries about the bugs that would come in under the deck, i say, who cares it cant be that many??

The only problem i see is that with to much dirt/debris it will fill up the cracks between the boards. Dirt will wash through but they eventually will fill up with pet hair and debris that you track in and or what blows though the open door?
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,115  
The only problem i see is that with to much dirt/debris it will fill up the cracks between the boards. Dirt will wash through but they eventually will fill up with pet hair and debris that you track in and or what blows though the open door?

I think Obed can always use an air compressor or blower to blow any debris up and out as long as it is not allowed to accumulate and compact..but good point and something to watch out for.
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,116  
We put up tomato cages using T-posts and woven wire fence.

For two years ina row I`v had the tomatoes fall over later in the season...Make sure the post is well driven into the ground...Once they fall over , the tomato vines break, and that`s it.....Everything is sure looking good, and the view from the porch is a nice one Tony
 
/ At Home In The Woods #4,117  
Pretty sure the screen was suggested earlier in the thread (though it may well have been last year or sometime long ago), as I think I suggested it along with a couple others. I've done it before and heard of others doing it. But no matter, it is a good trick to use. The downside is that it will collect crap, but if the porch is screened in, that gets reduced significantly. Oh yeah, and it makes installing deck boards a royal PITA as you have to be careful not to poke through it (or step through it...). But well worth it in the end, IMHO.

Looks like it is coming together nicely!

I might also suggest that you allow a bit more of a deck board gap around your twisting posts, as they may not be done twisting yet and if they do more, it could buckle your deck boards. Wood movement is basically The Unstoppable Force of the world, so it is best to allow for it rather than fight it...
 
/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,118  
.

Obed....How are your knees ? I have done my share of crawling on joists on my knees..always wear knee pads to save the knees...it is worth it...
Brin,
I wear knee pads whenever I will be working on my knees. My wife spent a day painting the tops of the joists without using knee pads and one of her knees suffered as a result.
Your deck is looking great and it will last forever.
Maybe, if the carpenter bees don't destroy it. I keep finding sawdust under some of the holes and it's quite annoying. After we get the deck boards installed, we'll puddy up the holes when it's easy to move a ladder around.
Obed
 

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/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,119  
After finishing hoeing the badly weed infested garden, my wife decided hoeing so much was for the birds. So she got some free compost from an adjacent county. She spread the compost between the rows in the garden to slow down the weed growth. In previous gardens, she put wood chips and compost between the rows to help hinder the weeds with good success. Unfortunately, this compost is not as "decomposed" as we would like. You can see a lot of leaves in it. We hope it doesn't hurt the garden.
 

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/ At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,120  
Did you consider stapling the screen on the underside of the joists?

Or was that vetoed on aesthetic {or other} grounds?
T
Stapling the screen from below was a consideration. My wife probably wouldn't have liked the looks; it would have been certain to droop.

For me, the biggest consideration was that installing the screen on the undersides would have been much harder than installing it on the tops. Crawling around under the deck in awkward positions trying to hold the screen up and staple it didn't seem very appealing to me. Plus, if you dropped something through the cracks and it landed on top of the screen, how would you ever get it out? You'd have to cut the screen or remove the staples to retrieve something that fell between the deck boards. In the current scenario, I might be able to use a pair of tweezers from above to retrieve something stuck between the cracks in the boards.

Obed
 

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