Of working on a couple remodels in really old houses lately .Post and beam framing. Hand hewn beams. One was built around 1820. What’s some of the work that challenges you and makes you smile.
my Great Aunts house got indoor plumbing in 47, the year my grandma moved out of it , it had a kitchen sink probably from around 1900 on but it was on a dry well until 4 years ago when we ran a pipe over to the stack under the addition from 47
now in 1888 my great great grandfather built the house , all the rafters are cedar poles about 4-5 inches around with wide hemlock planking over them 14-16 inch wide planks about 5/4 thick maybe up to 6/4
and every last one of them was full of knot holes about this time he owned a 1/3 of the local saw mill and was harvesting wood lots for his boat building , so what do you do with every knot holed plank , build a house
the the beams in the basement are hune top and bottom but the sides still have the bark
there is the original foundation and about 2 feet inside that the basement foundation , some years after the house was built they dug a basement under it
the basement is about 12x15 the house is around 20x25 in that original section
the line had to run under the kitchen cabinet , down through the floor at the front edge of the cabinet and over about 4 feet , this dropped it down to where there was an opening , then it had to curve and run between the original foundation and the basement wall till it got out into the addition then curve and go into the stack
we had some 1 1/4 inch black abs pipe , laid it out in the sun in the front yard to get it flexible then in one long snake in the door through the kitchen down the hatch through the opening and between the walls and out to near the stack before it cooled.
I had to heat the last section to the stack to bend it a bit more with the heat gun and now it flows great
used a no-vent under the sink , so it makes a little noise when you dump a sinks worth of dish water but it is a whoosh with a buurrraap a the end sucking air through the spring sealed -no-vent , it lets air in but not out
for a hundred plus years they were so so carful not to put any grease down the dry well
as much as they could be about every 30-40 years it got re-dug