Thank you! They are very efficient too, only 60 watts for over 100 ft of light string. A night time garden tour sounds like a fun idea, I will keep it in mind for this summer!
Neat job. I built a smaller one about two years ago. We had our first crop of home grown tomatoes last year. I did not go to the trouble of putting the half arches through the planer. Would have liked to see how you put on the plastic. Well done.
Thank you for watching!! The interval between the arches is 3 feet, which brings the length of the structure to 39 feet. It is about 12 feet high and 18 feet wide. It worked out perfectly with the recycled plastic we got, so we didn't have to overlap or cut the plastic at all.
How is the greenhouse holding up this growing season? You mentioned that it was built from "wood from your land" did you work it green or after it had air dryed? I should have finished reading the comments you answered my question indirectly, three weeks ago, thanks.
Lovely build, I am thinking of building the same type, but have lost my book on how to, so I have to wing it I guess. But what did the spouse say about you glueing up the Archer in your living room? 😁😁😁😁 I know mine would say I was making a whole lot of mess. .. But then again, I'm the only one that does love growing and so on.
Well, since she wanted the greenhouse as soon as possible, the mess in the living room was forgiven and i tried my best to clean up real nice afterwards😄 till to this day though I find here and there a little dried up drop of Wood glue that I missed on the tiles...
We do use a no dig strategy for the most part, but we incorporated a ton of manure into hard packed native clay soil, so the tiller was hard to avoid in this particular situation.
All the arches are covered with 3 coats of waterbased polyurethane. That will protect the wood from taking on water and prevent mold or rot. The foundation beams are preassure treated lumber and can handle the moisture. Also all the condensation around the arches just drips on the ground, the endwalls are the only spot where it can drip on wood. So far it is holding up well.
These are pylex foundation screws and you can get them at most hardware stores here in BC Canada. They are meant for the foundation of sheds or decks but work in this application well as long as you keep potential lateral movement in mind and prevent it. I talk about that in an update video on this channel. You also have to make sure they are installed below the frostline which is in our case at around 4feet. You can get 24 inch extentions for them which gets you close to 6ft. They work great in our ground since it is mostly sand and clay but I wouldn't not want to install them in rocky soil. In my opinion it is a great choice under the right circumstances and can save you a lot of time and money.
@@adrianwoodworm Thanks for responding so promptly Adrian. I see they do sell them here in the States for about $50 a piece. (the short ones) Sure could save a lot of labor and materials. Thanks for the leads, and all the great info in your videos! Keep up the great work.
I am sorry, I don't understand your question, but if you are asking how the arches and the endwalls are all connected together, I used steel brackets and plates with screws to connect everything.
If I remember correctly, I let it dry for two weeks. That being said, the trees have been cut down the previous year and have been already sort of dry since they were dead. My main goal was to dry off the water from the sawmill. I don't own a moisture reader, so I had to trust my guts. Between the dehumidifier right beside it, the heat of the sun and the fan to circulate the air, I felt like it did the job.
@@adrianwoodworm Thanks Adrian. The wood looked pretty seasoned judging by the planer chips. I guess if hasn't de-laminated or shrunk excessively, it was perfect. Nice job. I get the forgiveness on the wood stored inside. All depends on the end result, LOL.
I know this is an old post but I found the same thing. Pine kept cracking. Then I started ripping it to half inch and laminating two pieces instead of one thicker piece. I cracked way less and found they hold the curved shape better
I bought them at homedepot. I added a two foot extension to get down to 5 1/2 feet. The frost goes 4-5feet deep in the winter around here, so I had to make sure to be below that.
Thank you! I am sorry, I never made plans for this. And I don't own a computer or laptop so there probably will never be any plans. I appreciate your interest though!
you can still give information on: the length of the arc, the thickness of the board used for the curve. the dimensions of the pieces used in the middle of the arc and the spacing between them. The width and length of the greenhouse. the greenhouse
No rocks in our soil, only endless clay and sand at the base and the added soil was sifted, so no rocks in there as well. My tiller would jump too though if it hits something, but only forward. Either way, I get your point, please don't get me wrong, I am not advertising for tilling barefoot, but I think the risk is very low. I think it would be almost impossible even if you try to hit your feet. The next thing is, if it does hit your feet a pair of shoes won't do that much to protect them unless you have maybe steel toes. Those are just my thoughts and I will never judge someone for being more protective than me (since you most likely will outlive me😄). I am aware of how dodgy this looks like to most.
I'm going ton build a dropped Gothic arch this year. Just a new subscriber. Looking forward to an amazing amount of tough tasks this year. Expanding my possibilities and self discipline.
I have never seen a more beautiful green house, it must be joy to work in.
Thank you! We do enjoy it a lot!
i love the attention to detail. It looks amazing.
Thank you! I appreciate it!
Love the Wooden Gothic style greenhouse!
Excellent construction!
Thank you!
very beautiful and very inspiring! thank you! thank you!
Thank you for watching and commenting, every kind of support helps!
Super great build. Very nice work
Thank you, I appreciate it!!
Thank you so much! You are very talented!
The lights at the end, make it so beautiful! Will you do a night-time garden tour someday? Please?
Thank you! They are very efficient too, only 60 watts for over 100 ft of light string. A night time garden tour sounds like a fun idea, I will keep it in mind for this summer!
Just as beautiful as your house boat.
Thank you!!!
Friggin awesome mate, well done! Looking to build one soon myself
Thanks!! I appreciate it! It was a lot of fun to build!
The first song borrowed the tune from Quiet Riot song: "Come on, feel the noise!" Beautiful work, by the way!!
Yes!! You are right! I didn't even notice! I found this song in the library of royalty free music in youtube studio. You have a good ear!
Fantastic!!!
Neat job. I built a smaller one about two years ago. We had our first crop of home grown tomatoes last year. I did not go to the trouble of putting the half arches through the planer. Would have liked to see how you put on the plastic. Well done.
Thank you! I will keep it in mind and film it if I have to replace the plastic!
Thank you, some good details.
For perspective what is the interval of the arches and the dimensions of the structure.
Thank you for watching!! The interval between the arches is 3 feet, which brings the length of the structure to 39 feet. It is about 12 feet high and 18 feet wide. It worked out perfectly with the recycled plastic we got, so we didn't have to overlap or cut the plastic at all.
Wow! Fantastic! You don't mess around (except for the barefooted rototilling, but I guess you didn't cut off any of your toes : ) .
Haha! Yeap, my barefooted rotortilling is causing some disturbance! Thank you for watching!
Thank you
How do the horizontal’s hook in
How is the greenhouse holding up this growing season? You mentioned that it was built from "wood from your land" did you work it green or after it had air dryed? I should have finished reading the comments you answered my question indirectly, three weeks ago, thanks.
Bravo
magnifique
Lovely build, I am thinking of building the same type, but have lost my book on how to, so I have to wing it I guess. But what did the spouse say about you glueing up the Archer in your living room? 😁😁😁😁 I know mine would say I was making a whole lot of mess. .. But then again, I'm the only one that does love growing and so on.
Well, since she wanted the greenhouse as soon as possible, the mess in the living room was forgiven and i tried my best to clean up real nice afterwards😄 till to this day though I find here and there a little dried up drop of Wood glue that I missed on the tiles...
Excellent! Ditch the tiller for no dig and you'll be all set :)
We do use a no dig strategy for the most part, but we incorporated a ton of manure into hard packed native clay soil, so the tiller was hard to avoid in this particular situation.
what was the size of this structure and was the ribs on 3-4 foot centers? wonderful job.
It is 39ft long, 18ft wide and 13ft tall. The ribs are placed every 3ft. Thanks for watching!
Wery good.
Love your greenhouse.
If condensation drips water will it affect the wood especially I worry about mold
Thanks in advance
All the arches are covered with 3 coats of waterbased polyurethane. That will protect the wood from taking on water and prevent mold or rot. The foundation beams are preassure treated lumber and can handle the moisture. Also all the condensation around the arches just drips on the ground, the endwalls are the only spot where it can drip on wood. So far it is holding up well.
@@adrianwoodworm thanks a bunch
Never seen this method of anchoring beams with ground screws? Source of screws? Any more details? Thanks.
These are pylex foundation screws and you can get them at most hardware stores here in BC Canada. They are meant for the foundation of sheds or decks but work in this application well as long as you keep potential lateral movement in mind and prevent it. I talk about that in an update video on this channel. You also have to make sure they are installed below the frostline which is in our case at around 4feet. You can get 24 inch extentions for them which gets you close to 6ft. They work great in our ground since it is mostly sand and clay but I wouldn't not want to install them in rocky soil. In my opinion it is a great choice under the right circumstances and can save you a lot of time and money.
@@adrianwoodworm Thanks for responding so promptly Adrian. I see they do sell them here in the States for about $50 a piece. (the short ones) Sure could save a lot of labor and materials. Thanks for the leads, and all the great info in your videos! Keep up the great work.
I swear you could build a whole house while blindfolded
Haha!!! Thanks for the compliment! The way my eyesight is, I might be considered blind allready😉
Is there a good source for the best way to set up the jig for making your trusses?
Unfortunately, not that I am aware of. (I do consider making a detailed video about how to make a jig for a gothic arch glue lamination this summer.)
How do all the horizontal was hooking and house to pick attached?
I am sorry, I don't understand your question, but if you are asking how the arches and the endwalls are all connected together, I used steel brackets and plates with screws to connect everything.
Das Beste zu Hause für glückliche 🍅 Tomaten.
How long did you dry the wood indooors? Or a better question if you happen to know the moisture content percentage?
If I remember correctly, I let it dry for two weeks. That being said, the trees have been cut down the previous year and have been already sort of dry since they were dead. My main goal was to dry off the water from the sawmill. I don't own a moisture reader, so I had to trust my guts. Between the dehumidifier right beside it, the heat of the sun and the fan to circulate the air, I felt like it did the job.
@@adrianwoodworm Thanks Adrian. The wood looked pretty seasoned judging by the planer chips. I guess if hasn't de-laminated or shrunk excessively, it was perfect. Nice job. I get the forgiveness on the wood stored inside. All depends on the end result, LOL.
What kind of wood did you use? Most of mine cracked, it was pine.
Sorry to hear that! I used balsam fir that was dried in the house. I also applied three coats of waterbased polyurethane to keep moisture out of it.
I know this is an old post but I found the same thing. Pine kept cracking. Then I started ripping it to half inch and laminating two pieces instead of one thicker piece. I cracked way less and found they hold the curved shape better
did you make the ground anchor screws or did you buy them somewhere?
I bought them at homedepot. I added a two foot extension to get down to 5 1/2 feet. The frost goes 4-5feet deep in the winter around here, so I had to make sure to be below that.
Did you cut the lumber so all the strips were vertical grain?
Yes.
Excellent job, please can I get plans?
Thank you! I am sorry, I never made plans for this. And I don't own a computer or laptop so there probably will never be any plans. I appreciate your interest though!
you can still give information on: the length of the arc, the thickness of the board used for the curve. the dimensions of the pieces used in the middle of the arc and the spacing between them. The width and length of the greenhouse. the greenhouse
@@aboubakarfotso1005 if you read through the comment section, most, if not all of your questions have been awnsered already.
What were the dimensions of your individual lamination? Width and thickness?
The boards/strips are 1.5 inch wide and 1/2 inch thick, so after lamination the outer edge of the arch is 1 inch thick as well as the inner side.
@@adrianwoodworm thank you that was just the question I was going to ask. Thank you for a fantastic video
@@michael6154 thank you for watching!
How much snow load will it handel?
Lindo diseño pero no me gustaron las plantas como se desarrollaron
buteeefulll
I would coat the wood first, in old motor oil
So its been two years, how is it now?
Everything is holding up well. No major issues overall. I might make an update video this summer.
Are you really using a tiller barefoot?
I did indeed!
I did indeed!
My tiller jumps far when it hits a rock. It would be easy to lose toes.
No rocks in our soil, only endless clay and sand at the base and the added soil was sifted, so no rocks in there as well. My tiller would jump too though if it hits something, but only forward. Either way, I get your point, please don't get me wrong, I am not advertising for tilling barefoot, but I think the risk is very low. I think it would be almost impossible even if you try to hit your feet. The next thing is, if it does hit your feet a pair of shoes won't do that much to protect them unless you have maybe steel toes. Those are just my thoughts and I will never judge someone for being more protective than me (since you most likely will outlive me😄). I am aware of how dodgy this looks like to most.
I'm going ton build a dropped Gothic arch this year. Just a new subscriber. Looking forward to an amazing amount of tough tasks this year. Expanding my possibilities and self discipline.
That sounds great! Good luck with your projects! Thanks for your support!
What r u doin ?