needs more duct tape?

there is the rule that if something can’t be fixed with duct tape … you’re not using enough duct tape. so we went a little feral, but i’m sure this is fine. so here’s our duct-tape-guerilla-rig of a stormwater pipe re-direction designed to fill the firefighting water tank – the combined 48,000 liter of rain…

blink & you miss it.

things are moving really fast now, which, given how much of a random walk building projects seem to be, will likely mean they’ll slow down even faster in the near future. but hey, one can only keep one’s fingers crossed and hope, right? i spent today moving a whole bunch of really large rocks into…

tidying up – a bit.

things are starting to shape up inside the house: all the cavity slider cavities are in place, doorways and required bracing have been installed, and most of the tools and materials are now being stored in the house, rather than in unsightly stacks around it. as a result the container has moved on to bigger…

eviction.

we love our local wildlife, we really do. we even have a plaque to proof it. but, and i say this in the nicest possible way, we really do not appreciate it when they move into our home before we had a chance to do so. and as cute as possums are (although many people…

wrapping up.

when we talk about our hemp house, we mean that about two thirds of the circumference (maybe a bit more) are made using hemp walls. the central part is not; the main reason for that was the fact that this part, the living room, has very little wall to begin with. it’s mostly massive windows…

down the hill.

we had a lot of rain recently. i’m not sure whether this is already due to the third la nina season in a row, climate change, or just sheer luck, but the shed water tanks are almost entirely full, despite all the water we used up to mix the hemp & to clean the equipment.…

details.

now the hemp walls are finally up, and the windows in, the guys are working on finishing off the roof. when the roof was installed the gutters were left off, because the rain heads, those boxes in the corners still had to be manufactured. i think this part came together really well, and we are…

imagine that.

the ‘drug house’ is done. i’m not even joking, that’s the name the tradies gave our new home; it probably sounds more exciting than telling the guys at the pub that you’re working with ‘industrial cannabis’. it took us 10 working days to finish it, and i’m proud to say that was pretty much what…

hit and miss.

the trouble with building with hemp is that it is not immediately visible if the work has been done more or possibly less well. that is only revealed when the formwork is removed. then everyone can see if the brew (we learnt that is what the mix of hemp, lime, sand, binder & water is…

the big reveal.

here we go, time to pull the formwork off and we’ll be able to see if we’ve done a good job or not. did we tamp too hard? not hard enough? – if so parts of the wall may just fall out. will we see cool wave patterns? or will it just look like a…

rough start.

let me clarify this right away: when i say rough start i mean the circumstances could have been better. mostly, we could have done without that rain we were having. we started on tuesday, and then the friendly folks from the weather bureau forecast rain practically coming in vertically for wednesday. it wasn’t quite as…