If any of y’all have ever built a house from the
ground up, you KNOW it is a process. You pay lots and lots of money for
things you don’t even see – foundations, encapsulation, ductwork,
bracing, cinderblocks that you’re just going to cover with brick... but…
you’ve got to have these things before you can have your Georgia pine
board and batten siding, your antique bricks (and their expensive mortar
mind you), your “tin” roof and your shutters. Ahhh, shutters. Those
will probably be a post in and of themselves.
To build from the ground up or renovate or whatever your house’s project may be, you must have a great team. Thankfully, I have such a team. Every morning, they see me bouncing out of my suburban (clad in plaid and some sort of loafer), and they know that I’ll scale any scaffolding, race across any roof, load up any ladder or meet them wherever their working to investigate the progress. Pester – maybe – but that has such a negative connotation. I prefer “check in” for that allows me to “check out” and let them finish their task at hand. If I didn’t “check out” and head back to JFI, then I’d probably stay all day on the job site and rearrange the kitchen layout a dozen times, move the steps at least once and start painting. I am terrific at starting a paint job – finishing one is NOT my strong suit. I am good with color, so maybe I should stick with selection rather than application.
I’ve
known several of the guys building Farmdale Cottage since we were kids.
Most all of them have worked with me on clients’ homes around Middle
Georgia, and I find that very comforting. There is a trust factor and
comradery almost with these guys, for we’ve moved furniture and walls
together, transformed outdated bathrooms and kitchens together and now,
we’re building Farmdale together.
My sister Maggie captured all these action shots and some construction details. I don’t covet the guys from Wall 2 Wall
Construction working in this summer heat, but I do appreciate them doing
so. The brick foundation is almost complete, the roof is starting this
week, windows and doors arrived and some are even being installed. I’m
still a good ways away from planning my first dinner party (which I’m
afraid will probably be delivery pizza and paper plates until I get all
moved and settled in), but I cannot wait nonetheless. Big Napp had a
slogan when our church was moving from the old sanctuary to the new one –
“joy of the journey.” It is a journey – amen to that right? But the joy
comes in the little things – the little steps – that all slowly but
surely come together and create the journey proper. The journey is the
story.
So, from the Georgia Red Clay piles of Farmdale to you, thanks y’all for letting me share some of my joy on this journey.
Farmer,
ReplyDeleteLife is a journey- not a destination
but if you are like me, I'm always ready to be there by now!
Dean
I'm so excited to follow you on this journey and look forward to you working your magic in your farmhouse!
ReplyDeleteWar Eagle!
Judy (gracioussouthernliving.blogspot.com)
Our antique brick fireplace was a labor of love. We used the old brick from my husband's great grandfathers homeplace. We built our own home and the brick gathering and cleaning was a spring break project with our young boys (they did not enjoy the project with as much excitement as we did). I am still in love with our 20+ year old imperfect home, it is now filled with the laughter and chatter of grandchildren, who love to come to JoJo and Mimi's "farm", named so because we have a tractor and chickens:):) Thanks for the flashback of home building memories!
ReplyDeleteI know it is going to be an amazing house. I am glad you included a picture of the crew of men. That WILL be a wonderful treasure for generations to come, to put a face to who built your home place.
ReplyDelete