I am currently working on permit for building our "CORDWOOD HOME" My sons, father and I are going to design ourselves and luckily I've been involved in our very small mountain community for years and have made a lot of friends to help in trade, because in Colorado you have to have a licensed electrician, plumber and excavator, I will be relying on friends to help us. My plan is to use as much material from our land to build our home, to spend as least as possible. So I would like to welcome you all to our journey and hopefully this will help others venture out to follow there dreams in building your own Homestead like our fathers before us. Here are a couple pictures of my property, a little brown, cant wait until spring. UPDATED May 7th..My daughter and I decided to see if the ground was workable...it was! Digging underground garden for my non-profit organization Harvest For Humanity, since it doesn't require a permit and all my seedlings I planted, corn, sunflower, tomatoes, peppers, peas, lettuce, herbs and edible flowers are taking over my house! also waiting for my baby silkie chicks, all going towards living off the grid and being sufficient.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Monday, February 18, 2013
Sunday, February 17, 2013
A summer time family project
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A great breakthrough in manual cob mixing occurred in 1994, when Becky Bee developed a system for mixing on tarps. Before that, we had been mixing with shovels on a level platform made of tamped earth, concrete, or plywood. The tarp method is quicker, easier on the lower back, and requires fewer tools. It has now diversified into several quite different techniques—“different folks, different strokes!”—and it pays to change technique as circumstances demand. Experiment! You will need a squarish piece of durable, slick, and water-resistant material, six to eight feet on a side, larger than your armspread by about a foot. Some people prefer a tarp a little longer in one dimension, 7 × 8 feet for instance, or 8 × 10. Lay the tarp out on clean and level ground, close to your cob ingredients and your building site. We have found it saves work to dig out a shallow dish for the tarp to lie on: about 8 feet in diameter and 6 inches deep in the center works well. Spread the ingredients out on the tarp, alternating buckets of sand and clay to accelerate mixing. We normally use from three to five 5-gallon buckets of ingredients for a single batch of cob. This is the largest amount most people can handle easily and repeatedly. When mixing by yourself, you can simply grasp one or two corners of the tarp and walk backward over the tarp until the mix is folded back upon itself. Do this repeatedly, rotating to a different corner each time, until the dry materials are mixed. Though it is quite easy to mix alone, the initial stages of mixing are faster with a partner, so call over a helper if one is nearby. Each person should firmly grasp two adjacent corners of the tarp, then lean back slightly. Keeping their spines straight, both partners slowly rock side to side from one leg to the other, using the greater strength of their legs to roll the material on the tarp back and forth. Part of the tarp and most of the weight should remain solidly on the ground as you roll the dry materials across the tarp. After a few long rolls, in which the mix travels all the way from one side of the tarp to the other, stop and rotate positions 90 degrees. Then rock and roll in the other direction to make the mixing more thorough. Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/do-it-yourself/mixing-cob-ze0z1301zwar.aspx#ixzz2LDWrm461 |
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