I have enjoyed watching you build the Spur Cabin. I am 68 and I have disabled for almost two years. I suffer from Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). CRPS is very painful. Watching your videos are relaxing and helps me take my mind off the pain. I very much enjoy your craftsmanship and the beautiful scenery around the ranch and cabin. Thank you for your channel.
Wow I feel honored that I could make a difference in this fashion. Humbled. You watching certainly helps me, so know that it’s very much appreciated. 🙏
Chainsaw carpentry is my favorite kind. You could have plumbed a line from the ridge to the floor and then centered the bottom of the log on that line. And, the next time you peel a log put the butt end against a wall or something solid… that way it doesn’t move around on you so much.
Been watching your progress for almost a year now. I enjoy watching your videos because of how much you obviously enjoy your work. You need not make apologies for the amount of time and detail you put into your work. Looking forward to your future videos, thanks for creating and posting them all.
After reading the text of the comments that have been written by other people all I am going to say is keep up with the build project it’s given me a lot of great ideas for my project ahead of me for my future build 🎉👋👍
Dear Patrick. I watch for pleasure, entertainment and learning. I luv the quality of your work and find myself engrossed by the process and your endless list of skills. Soo many times I answer your questions out loud and wish I could reach through the screen and lend a hand. Your vids spark joy. thank you so much
I could feel the difficulty with peeling the bark off those douglas fir logs...labour intensive for sure, but remember- "The secret to success is consistency of purpose!". I think you should probably build a ladder next time, but if you want to do some wiring that's okay too! Thanks for the video.
Greetings again from snow-free Rancho de Vegas. Being a horse before the cart kind of guy, I would opt for the ladder before anything else in the loft. You will undoubtedly need to up and down numerous times and be glad you did. You can thank me later!😂
My Great Grandma was a birch weaver. There was still chairs with woven backs in the farm in 2000. They were built to last and later in the years I think my Uncle put short screws in them to make sure they stayed put...but like my Mom said, after 100 years I don't think there going anywhere..lol. Enjoy the fun of branch weaving can't wait to see end result...BTW that Has KAREN JOB written all over it
Great work and determination to get those logs peeled and cleaned up, cabin is looking great. Whatever you decide to show next week, I’ll be there to watch it! ✌🏼❤️🙏🏼
Good Job, Boyyy,....that Barking....is a job, when it is dry, tight, like that, but....well, couple hours, looks good! Greetings from Lantana, Florida , only 94 today ;o) youtheman....
Watching you do the work "You" know it takes to get the look / feel you are intending, despite the time and work it takes, feels right to us the viewers. It also dates back a time when work is what people did, Pre made, machine harvested is nice but not nearly as rewarding. Great job. Ok off to the next video.
The first post looks awesome. Good job. The second post looks good too! Good choice on keeping it all wood, fits in with the decor. The black pipe may have looked good if you had included some black ceiling fans or some other black colored appurtenances to tie it all together.
Thank you for making the loft safe enough for an old fart like me. I really enjoy your shows. I'm from Missouri, but I have a lot of relatives in Ohio. My wife's from central Ohio, and we were talking about your accent. We both agreed that you weren't from Ohio or Illinois. We know folks from Indiana who sound like you. So we agreed that you were from Indiana. A few weeks later, we heard you say that you were from Indiana. I envy you living in Montana. I gotta let you get back to work. Take care. Vaughn
When i tell people about your channel, I describe it as the Blues Clues of cabin building due to your quirk of talking to the camera. Lots of good tips for one person builds. For the most part it's "don't try this at home". But that doesn't count until after you build the home.
Dude, you need a big heavy-duty work table and some good clamps! Your job would be so much easier and more precise. I like the look of the post though!
I’m glad to be back on the job site with you again! When you keep your nose to the grind stone is when things happen and things get done! I’m glad you are enjoying your journey! See you next week Patrick 👍
My coveted tool as a boy for stripping bark? A ship builders adz. You get good with that and keep it razor sharp. The draw knife will leave you with very sore shoulders over the course a life time.
Once you set the posts take a thiner log, cut it in half length ways. De bark it ,( I used a curve claw hammer, worked super). Then I drilled holes at equal distance apart but maybe 1.5 inches into the flat of the rail log. I used 5/8 inch black smooth bars into the holes in the bottom rail and placed the top rail on the bars . It was the focal point of the cabin. Everyone rubbed their hands on it that came to look at it and said WOW. Very inexpensive too.
There's a tool called a log wizard that attaches to a chainsaw bar and uses standard 3 1/2 inch planer blades. Makes peeling logs easier. The only problem is that you have to drill holes in a chainsaw bar.
So how much longer before I can come up and rent your cabin for a week or two? Heck, I'll even bring my tools and help ya. Great work Patrick. Can't wait for the next video.
Around the 9:00 minute mark you said you were going to grind through it. They make grinding discs for doing that exact thing. They are faster and easier.
I’d do the ladder first if you have any wiring going up to the loft. 12” of new snow in WI and still snowing. Love your channel, cabin & location. Just beautiful Patrick! Great job!
Wiring works, get that out of the way and your one step closer to closing her in. Looking good Patrick, the woven branches will definitely draw your eyes when you or anyone enters the cabin. 👍🏼👍🏼
there are wood curving/sculpting disks for angle grinder that can make a quick work of something like this. not expensive either. get couple of different kinds if you think you might need to do this again.
Nice job! Getting bark off a log can be super difficult. I have never had access to Doug Fir. Be careful with the cold hi of zero here in WI next week.
Thank you! 🙏 Yeah I thought of that too. Aside from the fact I don’t own one and don’t have a water source there, not sure it would have worked, either.
One thing you can count on from me there will never be a criticism nor will there ever be a suggestion . Why because you ain`t building it for me so it is no concern of mine . You seem to be completely capable of building whatever you damn well please . By the way really like the videos especially the absence of guys or you guys at the beginning or end of every sentence
I have seen an easier way to get the bark off of the trees on another channel. If you can cut them down in the spring time after the sap starts running and get to them to peel a few days later, maybe a week or so even, the bark almost falls off due to the sap.
8:01 I was waiting for you to realize the temperature of the log doesn't make a blind bit of difference in skinning an aged log. I skinned a butt load of logs as a boy to built me a log cabin (back there in the 19hundred and 70s) Patrick, today you are a man!!! WAit wait wait! did you only debark 12 feet of logs? ....... sorry to prematurely honor you.... I don't think that's enough linear feet to confer the debarking honor. We won't pull your card but Our panel of judges will let you know when you can brag about it.
I have a Mr Heater on site, but I’m reluctant to use it as it’s a small one that could hardly make a difference when it’s that cold… without insulation. Once it’s buttoned up, that heater will work just fine.
I would say to do the ladder first. You are going to have to wire in the loft after all. Why not make it easier for yourself doing wiring by having a nice safe ladder first.
right now at the 2 min. or so mark..I am saying wood and pipe together...ok..let's go with it..here to just watch this time..if you really need me..holler ..lov from south alabama.[ it is 73 degrees right now at 4:35pm ,,it is suppose to go down to 32 in a lil while..]
😮I heard you say you couldn't find your draw knife at first and saw you using a hatchet and hunting knife. I have a good sized kukri I use for peeling natural wood. Also good for splitting or notching smaller pieces. All around the most versatile camping and wood butchering tool I've ever owned. Love your videos but seem to have missed one or two along the way, and haven't seen any from before this spur cabin. Do you have an index? What comes first? When my wife and I were renovating our house I couldn't get her to understand that some things had to be done before others. 😄 We survived the project anyway.,😉
29:33 This is just me (and I'M CERTAIN YOU'VE HAD ENOJGH of that...) but I would have drilled a 30-60 degree angled hole about an inch through the top of the top rail down into the log upright, and then glued a hickory dowel down through it. Maybe even a steel bolt all the way though and recessed and cut flush on the other side of the log upright. Dark rust patina finish on the bolt if I couldn't find anything authentic that I could rethread and use. Big though, ya know? If you use just the dowel? Measure the length of the hole into the log upright and put an oak wedge in the end of the dowel going into the log upright so it starts to split the dowel when it hits the bottom of the hole. Don't let the tail of the dowel be more than a half inch. That and the glue? That baby ain't movin. You could do the same thing to the exposed end of the dowel for that matter. Careful on the milled timber when tapping that wedge in, you could split that rail. Just some precautions if anyone's considering any type of Japanese joinery like this. Pine is no match for hickory, oak and Pythagoras.
Hi Patrick, thank you for another great video. I love the country side where you are (the hills, valleys mountains trees and snow) and I was wondering what degree of latitude you live on. I’m from Melbourne Australia and we are 38 degrees South so no snow here in winter. Keep up the good work. Cheers Steve
Hi Patrick. It was great when you mentioned me in the video. I appreciated it a lot! Thanks! And certainly, if I was there I would like to give a hand or two building the cabin! 😁 Btw, the work today was heavy. Peeling these trunks was quite hard. But they look great in place. About the next step, I would probably work on wiring. But I'm curious about what you have in mind. And I have a question for you: I watched lots of videos about building off-grid cabins (yours is the best for sure), but 99% of them don't build a bathroom in or near the cabin. Is this the usual for off-grid cabins? Or just for the videos? Be safe and take care! Cheers.
I saw you rollin' up your sleeves to jump in. Then let off the hook. BTW- the outhouses are kept a fair distance from the cabin due to odors. Unless you have a modernized septic set up, you don't your #2s too close to the cabin.
@@greglawrence742Here in Brazil it's not usual to build a cabin. Usually, it's built a cottage but all of them has, or an outhouse or an inhouse bathroom, but always with a septic set-up. Nonetheless, probably it's quite different from the septic setup there because we don't need to worry about very low temperatures and snow.
You’re welcome! Greg’s right with respect to outhouses. We may do a detached composting toilet, but not sure. A lot of the cabins you see on RUclips are “dry” so no plumbing or toilets. Usually meant for short-term stays. Thanks for the compliment btw! 🙏
@@LifeontheMoose Great! Now I could understand! So if someone decides to build a cabin for renting or for a 2-week stay, it will need to be a different cabin. More complex because of the plumbing and toilets. Thanks to you and Greg for the explanation. 🙂
I'm not the kind of guy that's afraid of work, heck I could stand right next to it and watch all day long, but I got nervous when you were straddling that log and pulling that drawknife toward your... uh, self. Do they make PPE for that? lol
Before you sought this holy ground Before you put your money down The land that you now stand upon Was free of your intentions But now where your small cabin lies Nature had to compromise Her flowing lines your angles met Her nature-children under threat I’m sure you’ll find these words extreme You have the right to live your dream By human standards this be true By Nature standards shame on you Driven men who do, do, do Find it hard to calmly be Like a dog that marks its turf This wall belongs to ME! ✌🏻 Sent from my iPhone
Ron, I believe that you probably get the c last two words in your conversation with your wife, just like me, Yes Dear !!!.... Ha, ha, 😂 Sincerely, the old Montana cowboy, Frank Scherping
I am confused. It seems that if you had a pair of saw horses with some kind of clamping mechanism or hold-down straps you wouldn't struggle so much with your lumber processing.
I have enjoyed watching you build the Spur Cabin. I am 68 and I have disabled for almost two years. I suffer from Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). CRPS is very painful. Watching your videos are relaxing and helps me take my mind off the pain. I very much enjoy your craftsmanship and the beautiful scenery around the ranch and cabin. Thank you for your channel.
Wow I feel honored that I could make a difference in this fashion. Humbled. You watching certainly helps me, so know that it’s very much appreciated. 🙏
Chainsaw carpentry is my favorite kind. You could have plumbed a line from the ridge to the floor and then centered the bottom of the log on that line. And, the next time you peel a log put the butt end against a wall or something solid… that way it doesn’t move around on you so much.
All great advice!
Hysterical! I said , "What are you doing?" out loud and you instantly said "I don't know if I want to tell you yet."
lol!
Been watching your progress for almost a year now. I enjoy watching your videos because of how much you obviously enjoy your work. You need not make apologies for the amount of time and detail you put into your work. Looking forward to your future videos, thanks for creating and posting them all.
Kind words indeed! Thanks for sticking with me so long. MUCH appreciated. 🙏
Spring time when the sap is flowing is the best time to peal bark. When dealing with a dead tree, well, you know how it goes 😊
True!
Thanks for sharing, Patrick! I enjoy your upbeat, positive attitude. The world needs more people like. you! Peace from Daytona Beach!
Now that is WAY kind. I appreciate it. 🙏
Peace, DB!
No reply needed, just know I truly enjoy your channel
After reading the text of the comments that have been written by other people all I am going to say is keep up with the build project it’s given me a lot of great ideas for my project ahead of me for my future build 🎉👋👍
Great! Glad you’re getting something useful out of these videos. 🙏
YES INDEED ALL THE WAY
Dear Patrick. I watch for pleasure, entertainment and learning. I luv the quality of your work and find myself engrossed by the process and your endless list of skills. Soo many times I answer your questions out loud and wish I could reach through the screen and lend a hand. Your vids spark joy. thank you so much
Wow what a nice thing to say. You help by watching, and I appreciate that. 🙏
Love those posts in the loft look forward to your videos they should be longer videos !!! ❤❤❤
Ha what an awesome thing to say. 🙏 And a first! I’ll work on it! 😅
My wife and I are enjoying watching your cabin come along
I’m so glad you’re watching! 🙏
Moose On The Loose
I could feel the difficulty with peeling the bark off those douglas fir logs...labour intensive for sure, but remember- "The secret to success is consistency of purpose!". I think you should probably build a ladder next time, but if you want to do some wiring that's okay too! Thanks for the video.
The thanks goes to you. 🙏
Greetings again from snow-free Rancho de Vegas. Being a horse before the cart kind of guy, I would opt for the ladder before anything else in the loft. You will undoubtedly need to up and down numerous times and be glad you did. You can thank me later!😂
That is great thinking!
Love to see you start the wiring next. Another great show. When it’s something you like doing, it’s not work, it’s a labor of love.
So true, and thank you! 🙏
Look forward to see what you do with that hand real
Build the ladder 🙂
My Great Grandma was a birch weaver. There was still chairs with woven backs in the farm in 2000. They were built to last and later in the years I think my Uncle put short screws in them to make sure they stayed put...but like my Mom said, after 100 years I don't think there going anywhere..lol. Enjoy the fun of branch weaving can't wait to see end result...BTW that Has KAREN JOB written all over it
Love that story! And yeah I wish Karen was here to help with that! 🙏
Leave some of the red under the bark on the log, it looks great.
A 4.5 inch grinder with a 40 grit flap wheel takes knots off nicely. I use it on hiking sticks I make.
I like that idea. I don’t own one of those…yet!
Great work and determination to get those logs peeled and cleaned up, cabin is looking great. Whatever you decide to show next week, I’ll be there to watch it! ✌🏼❤️🙏🏼
That’s awesome!
Determination is what gets jobs done .. Way to show that log who the boss is Patrick!!
I SLOWLY kicked its butt, lol. 🙏
Good Job, Boyyy,....that Barking....is a job, when it is dry, tight, like that, but....well, couple hours, looks good! Greetings from Lantana, Florida , only 94 today ;o) youtheman....
Thank you! Stay cool! 🙏
Watching you do the work "You" know it takes to get the look / feel you are intending, despite the time and work it takes, feels right to us the viewers. It also dates back a time when work is what people did, Pre made, machine harvested is nice but not nearly as rewarding. Great job. Ok off to the next video.
🙏
use a table saw to remove the bark.
The first post looks awesome. Good job. The second post looks good too! Good choice on keeping it all wood, fits in with the decor. The black pipe may have looked good if you had included some black ceiling fans or some other black colored appurtenances to tie it all together.
I appreciate that!
Chainsaw bar debarker
Thank you for making the loft safe enough for an old fart like me. I really enjoy your shows. I'm from Missouri, but I have a lot of relatives in Ohio. My wife's from central Ohio, and we were talking about your accent. We both agreed that you weren't from Ohio or Illinois. We know folks from Indiana who sound like you. So we agreed that you were from Indiana. A few weeks later, we heard you say that you were from Indiana. I envy you living in Montana. I gotta let you get back to work. Take care. Vaughn
Ha, thanks for the comment, Vaughn! Born and raised in NE Iowa. Perhaps an old Deutsch drawl with an influence of Scandinavian slur? 🤔
Love it! So we were neighbors then. Love the show. Vaughn
When i tell people about your channel, I describe it as the Blues Clues of cabin building due to your quirk of talking to the camera. Lots of good tips for one person builds. For the most part it's "don't try this at home". But that doesn't count until after you build the home.
Thank you! I think…! I’ll have to check out Blues Clues as I am not familiar. Appreciate you watching! 🙏
Blue's Clues was a Saturday Morning children's program from the 1990's (I think). @@LifeontheMoose
Dude, you need a big heavy-duty work table and some good clamps! Your job would be so much easier and more precise. I like the look of the post though!
Boy do I ever! 🙏
labor of love. looks great so far
I appreciate that. 🙏
Woven branches - sounds like a good place for willow. That’s what I would use here in Minnesota. Sure do enjoy your vid and your work.
I appreciate that! 🙏
I vote for a ladder since it will help you every time you need to go up there thereafter.
Sound reasoning!
I’m glad to be back on the job site with you again! When you keep your nose to the grind stone is when things happen and things get done! I’m glad you are enjoying your journey!
See you next week Patrick 👍
Glad to have you back! See you soon.
My coveted tool as a boy for stripping bark? A ship builders adz. You get good with that and keep it razor sharp. The draw knife will leave you with very sore shoulders over the course a life time.
Lookin good! Stay warm up there!!!
🙏🙏
You are an inspiration.
Wow that’s nice of you to say, and I take it as an honor. 🙏
Nice work on the logs
Thank you!
Once you set the posts take a thiner log, cut it in half length ways. De bark it ,( I used a curve claw hammer, worked super). Then I drilled holes at equal distance apart but maybe 1.5 inches into the flat of the rail log. I used 5/8 inch black smooth bars into the holes in the bottom rail and placed the top rail on the bars . It was the focal point of the cabin. Everyone rubbed their hands on it that came to look at it and said WOW. Very inexpensive too.
Sounds awesome!
remember some time back i said that i had been a vo-teck instructor? well, it was the electrical SO be sure that I will be keeping an eye on that! lol
Oh boy…be gentle!
Thanks Patrick, you do just fine. No need to answer😉. See you next time, take care!👋🏼
You, as well! 🙏
Amazing how beautiful logs can be! You did a great job as usual!
Ah thank you! Agree with you, love the look of a “hand-hewn” log.
The three little words that get me out of trouble " I WAS WRONG " ......
There's a tool called a log wizard that attaches to a chainsaw bar and uses standard 3 1/2 inch planer blades. Makes peeling logs easier. The only problem is that you have to drill holes in a chainsaw bar.
That would certainly have been faster and easier!
I vote for a Jefferson Ladder
I like the idea, but that may be a “step” above my pay grade!
Ladder
Watching you struggle with that log lets me know it really is a labor of love.
Sometimes more labor than love!
Very inspirational.
Thank you!🙏
Love your channel! ❤
Thank you! 🙏
Thanks, another great video.
Thank you!
Hello from Midway,Texas, feeling a little better sorry I missed work last week, I’ll be in late next week 😂….
Glad you’re on the mend! Take as much time as you need.
You got to love these videos. Thank you
Build a Ladder. I will sit by the pool drinking a cold beer watching how it’s done.
By the pool?! Ouch!
Thank you, and cheers. 🍻
ladder
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching
Hey Look!
SNOW!!
I was beginning to think you were on a sound stage :)
Great Video (as always)!
Ha, it’s the real deal! Thanks for tuning in again. 🙏
Was there a super sale on snow dishwashers? Looks like you, all of your neighbors, and the local deer all ordered new ones!
lol indeed there was!
So how much longer before I can come up and rent your cabin for a week or two? Heck, I'll even bring my tools and help ya.
Great work Patrick. Can't wait for the next video.
Much appreciated! 🙏
Love watching your videos! Fyi, the best months for peeling logs don’t have an R in them. Saw this on the woodland escape videos.
Ah, great way to remember that. And so true! 🙏
Around the 9:00 minute mark you said you were going to grind through it. They make grinding discs for doing that exact thing. They are faster and easier.
Yeah that was about the time I was wishing I had all sorts of other tools! Good idea for sure.
I’d do the ladder first if you have any wiring going up to the loft. 12” of new snow in WI and still snowing. Love your channel, cabin & location. Just beautiful Patrick! Great job!
Hey thank you very much! WI was my old neighbor, born and raised across the river in IA. 🙏
Drawknives work best when they are VERY sharp!
nice
Wiring works, get that out of the way and your one step closer to closing her in. Looking good Patrick, the woven branches will definitely draw your eyes when you or anyone enters the cabin. 👍🏼👍🏼
Ah thank you. 🙏
The original use of hacker was a guy that made furniture with an axe.
👍 A drawknife is a handy tool.
Great Vodeo, I will do the wiring and you can get on with the stairs😊😊😊
Sounds like a good plan to me!
16:05 This would have been a really good job for your drawknife.
there are wood curving/sculpting disks for angle grinder that can make a quick work of something like this. not expensive either. get couple of different kinds if you think you might need to do this again.
Good idea!
I would love to sit and watch it snow….stunning views
Me, too!
Nice job! Getting bark off a log can be super difficult. I have never had access to Doug Fir. Be careful with the cold hi of zero here in WI next week.
Thanks and stay warm!
Would have taken me twice as long! Looks great!
Ha thanks!
Removing bark from a dry log is very difficult.
Love what you’re doing!
Thanks! 🙏
Thanks for posting. I was wondering if it would have been better to use a wire wheel instead of a belt sander on those logs.
I could see the benefit of both. Unfortunately my wire wheel was at a different location. Thanks for tuning in!
Your doing great. I have seen people use a power washer on taking bark off trees, but I don't know if it would have worked on that log.
Thank you! 🙏
Yeah I thought of that too. Aside from the fact I don’t own one and don’t have a water source there, not sure it would have worked, either.
One thing you can count on from me there will never be a criticism nor will there ever be a suggestion . Why because you ain`t building it for me so it is no concern of mine . You seem to be completely capable of building whatever you damn well please . By the way really like the videos especially the absence of guys or you guys at the beginning or end of every sentence
I appreciate that. 🙏
I have seen an easier way to get the bark off of the trees on another channel. If you can cut them down in the spring time after the sap starts running and get to them to peel a few days later, maybe a week or so even, the bark almost falls off due to the sap.
Great advice! I just didn’t have that option with this one. I appreciate you watching and commenting.
@@LifeontheMoose Yeah, I saw when you cut them down, I also remember you had other things going on at that time.
8:01 I was waiting for you to realize the temperature of the log doesn't make a blind bit of difference in skinning an aged log. I skinned a butt load of logs as a boy to built me a log cabin (back there in the 19hundred and 70s) Patrick, today you are a man!!! WAit wait wait! did you only debark 12 feet of logs? ....... sorry to prematurely honor you.... I don't think that's enough linear feet to confer the debarking honor. We won't pull your card but Our panel of judges will let you know when you can brag about it.
I'll work on the wiring while you work on the ladder.
I like that idea!
When will you heat it?
I have a Mr Heater on site, but I’m reluctant to use it as it’s a small one that could hardly make a difference when it’s that cold… without insulation. Once it’s buttoned up, that heater will work just fine.
I would say to do the ladder first. You are going to have to wire in the loft after all. Why not make it easier for yourself doing wiring by having a nice safe ladder first.
That was exactly my rationale!
But then…🤔
right now at the 2 min. or so mark..I am saying wood and pipe together...ok..let's go with it..here to just watch this time..if you really need me..holler ..lov from south alabama.[ it is 73 degrees right now at 4:35pm ,,it is suppose to go down to 32 in a lil while..]
That’s cold there! 🙏
😮I heard you say you couldn't find your draw knife at first and saw you using a hatchet and hunting knife. I have a good sized kukri I use for peeling natural wood. Also good for splitting or notching smaller pieces. All around the most versatile camping and wood butchering tool I've ever owned. Love your videos but seem to have missed one or two along the way, and haven't seen any from before this spur cabin. Do you have an index?
What comes first? When my wife and I were renovating our house I couldn't get her to understand that some things had to be done before others. 😄 We survived the project anyway.,😉
My home page should have all of my videos. They are organized in builds, mostly. The Ridge Cabin (View cabin) was my first.
Maybe a wood adze?
I want one..
Use a grinder
I like your "draw knife" draw knife out of sheath and hit it with something..
29:33 This is just me (and I'M CERTAIN YOU'VE HAD ENOJGH of that...) but I would have drilled a 30-60 degree angled hole about an inch through the top of the top rail down into the log upright, and then glued a hickory dowel down through it. Maybe even a steel bolt all the way though and recessed and cut flush on the other side of the log upright. Dark rust patina finish on the bolt if I couldn't find anything authentic that I could rethread and use. Big though, ya know? If you use just the dowel? Measure the length of the hole into the log upright and put an oak wedge in the end of the dowel going into the log upright so it starts to split the dowel when it hits the bottom of the hole. Don't let the tail of the dowel be more than a half inch. That and the glue? That baby ain't movin. You could do the same thing to the exposed end of the dowel for that matter. Careful on the milled timber when tapping that wedge in, you could split that rail. Just some precautions if anyone's considering any type of Japanese joinery like this. Pine is no match for hickory, oak and Pythagoras.
That’s good stuff. I was lucky to have a dull chisel on hand! To your point, I’d like to get into finer woodworking, indeed.
Hi Patrick, thank you for another great video. I love the country side where you are (the hills, valleys mountains trees and snow) and I was wondering what degree of latitude you live on. I’m from Melbourne Australia and we are 38 degrees South so no snow here in winter. Keep up the good work. Cheers Steve
Thank you so much. At 49 degrees N.
Cheers!
Ok, thanks….wow no wonder you have snow you border with Canada. 🥶🥶🥶☃️⛄️⛄️Cheers Steve
have you tried a pressure washer to de-bark the logs??
I’ve seen it but personally never tried it. You?
I hope you keep a tourniqet on you when using the chainsaw without PPE (chaps).
Love the work you are doing. Do you need an apprentice?
Why thank you! I feel like I need a professional most days!
Build the stairs so they can be raised up and out of the way?
That’s close to what I’m thinking…
Hi Patrick. It was great when you mentioned me in the video. I appreciated it a lot! Thanks! And certainly, if I was there I would like to give a hand or two building the cabin! 😁 Btw, the work today was heavy. Peeling these trunks was quite hard. But they look great in place.
About the next step, I would probably work on wiring. But I'm curious about what you have in mind.
And I have a question for you: I watched lots of videos about building off-grid cabins (yours is the best for sure), but 99% of them don't build a bathroom in or near the cabin. Is this the usual for off-grid cabins? Or just for the videos?
Be safe and take care! Cheers.
I saw you rollin' up your sleeves to jump in. Then let off the hook. BTW- the outhouses are kept a fair distance from the cabin due to odors. Unless you have a modernized septic set up, you don't your #2s too close to the cabin.
@@greglawrence742Here in Brazil it's not usual to build a cabin. Usually, it's built a cottage but all of them has, or an outhouse or an inhouse bathroom, but always with a septic set-up. Nonetheless, probably it's quite different from the septic setup there because we don't need to worry about very low temperatures and snow.
You’re welcome!
Greg’s right with respect to outhouses. We may do a detached composting toilet, but not sure. A lot of the cabins you see on RUclips are “dry” so no plumbing or toilets. Usually meant for short-term stays.
Thanks for the compliment btw! 🙏
@@LifeontheMoose Great! Now I could understand! So if someone decides to build a cabin for renting or for a 2-week stay, it will need to be a different cabin. More complex because of the plumbing and toilets. Thanks to you and Greg for the explanation. 🙂
I'm not the kind of guy that's afraid of work, heck I could stand right next to it and watch all day long, but I got nervous when you were straddling that log and pulling that drawknife toward your... uh, self. Do they make PPE for that? lol
Ha! Believe me, I thought that very same thing!
wiring first. you got a ladder for now.
Ladder. Need some heat inside…wood stove?
Probably not…
Before you sought this holy ground
Before you put your money down
The land that you now stand upon
Was free of your intentions
But now where your small cabin lies
Nature had to compromise
Her flowing lines your angles met
Her nature-children under threat
I’m sure you’ll find these words extreme
You have the right to live your dream
By human standards this be true
By Nature standards shame on you
Driven men who do, do, do
Find it hard to calmly be
Like a dog that marks its turf
This wall belongs to ME!
✌🏻
Sent from my iPhone
I like it! I often ponder this great conundrum, honestly. 🙏
When and what kinda heat you gonna in stall ? I’m in north Idaho I know it’s cold out lol😂
It’ll probably be an indoor-rated Mr Heater for now.
Ron, I believe that you probably get the c last two words in your conversation with your wife, just like me,
Yes Dear !!!.... Ha, ha, 😂 Sincerely, the old Montana cowboy,
Frank Scherping
Thanks, Frank!
I am confused. It seems that if you had a pair of saw horses with some kind of clamping mechanism or hold-down straps you wouldn't struggle so much with your lumber processing.
Struggle is a good word! I would have taken any “easier” way out had I the option.