Lot of work for just two days, but it looks great. The composite boards are great, you don’t have to stain or refinish ever. Wish we had those available when we built our deck. No doubt you will enjoy the evenings sitting up there with an adult beverage listening to the wildlife. Have a great day and give Viggo a pat on the head for me.
...six man crew job... SUCCESSFULLY and pretty much flawlessly completed by two very, smart, hard working, seasoned, calculating and determined fellas...kudos & applause...to both gentleman..looks absolutely fabulous brian and dad &also to amy & viggo as well for moral support . .☮️&🌱's
You'll love that composit we have had it on our decks for 16 years and it doesn't look any different. Just hose it off just love it. Doesn't show nicks and NO painting or maintenance. Nice to see your upper deck high enough so bears don't come on it for sure and wow what a view absolutely gorgeous. Great job on deck there.
It's a relief to see those posts secured. All that weight can be dangerous. Pretty ingenious. Glad to see those diagonals underneath to prevent racking. And you're going to like that decking. I have the Trex composite and it still looks great after 19 years in our harsh climate. It looks like the big storm missed you. We've got freezing here in central Washington State with rain and snow and strong winds. Very unusual in September.
Good morning from Florida, you might want to consider buying a remote microphone so we can hear what Bryan is saying when he's not standing next to the camera. You also need to speak a little louder when your outside filming Amy, the wind drowns out your speaking. The house looks fantastic, Bryan you and your dads are good builders, can't wait to see the inside work. Good luck, Chas***
Thanks. I do have a better mic on the shopping list. I bought one, but it created too much static and hadn't got around to buying a second one- one that specifically aims for the voice and not the wind. So windy here so often. Thanks so much!
Hat off to those two managing those posts. We used 6x6 PT posts and had a time. I can only manage dealing with those. Not bad once you get a system going, but it always seems when that comes you're almost done.
No we're not done, just the video is over. We have straps and bolts and carriage bolts, etc. Appreciate the attention to security- super important around here with the winds.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving Where i built homes we had to meet 120mph wind codes on everything we built. We also had to use 6 nails/staples per shingle on asphalt roofs.
Before you cut off the outside posts, I would think about the possibility of adding a roll out awning that would attach to the house and roll out to the posts. That way it would not have to be extended all the time, just when you want it. It would give added stability to the awning.
Wow! That deck is massive and beautiful!! Love the use of the rough timber posts! Were the decking boards vinyl? That will be easy maintenance and last a lifetime! Great job guys!!
Curious what kind of hold-downs did you use to connect the log posts to the concrete footers so you don’t have uplift when a high wind comes blowing up hill?
That's a lot of weight for a tube to take especially laterally, with the issues of freezing/ground movement can I suggest you remove the backfill of earth around the tubes and refill with concrete.
@@joedoakes8307 Yep, Which should resist settlement I'm talking about sideways movement, you basically have a tube of concrete surrounded by packed earth on which a large post is resting. Any movement laterally of the tube will result in the wooden post tipping in the opposite direction. You need mass to stop this happening and filling around the tube is a start.
Thanks for the tips! This may not have been clear in the video, but the tubes are on stilts and the concrete flowed out to fill the entire bottom of the post hole, so it's like a flared column, hopefully that resists movement some. We are backfilling another 8 feet past the piers on the hill side, which should help add more packed dirt.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving Ideas: Split a 6-10 inch tall section in half for lamp mounts. Carve the same section hollow for wall lamp covers. Split long sections in half, add legs and top with resin or acrylic for benches and/or tables. Slice 2 inch thick discs- Add table legs, or... Add chair legs and arched stick back, or... Paint both sides as dart boards for rec area. (stencil PDF) You can wear out one side and flip. (Also if they're nice enough, make gifts.) Hope that gets the wheels turning.
Nice deck. I'm impressed everytime I watch your progress on the house. Just a heads up, I've watched contractors that have used composite decking and I know that not all composite decking is the same. The contractors warned that certain composite decking will get scorching hot in the summer with the sun beating down on it. I just wanted to make you aware of the possibility of excessive heat. So no bare feet and maybe a rug for the dogs paw protection if needed.
Thanks so much! I bet that is absolutely true in the mid summer months.What i've observed so far is it's not too hot, but we only have temps in the 60s right now.
Deck looks good but I sure hope you put some lag bolts into those posts. The screws are ok for temporary use but I believe something that small in diameter will fail in the future.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving I just had to do about 45k in repairs to a house I bought last year because of this. A log is like a huge straw and wiil suck up every bit of water it comes in contact with at both ends. For the tops google log caps, we went with some nice copper ones. For the bottom (wish I had seen this before you had it built!) you need some type of break between the concrete and the wood. Anything is better than nothing but the best thing I know of is bituthene waterproof membrane. Find a way to get something in there and preferably get some slope to the concrete so water will run off. Good luck, you don't want to be replacing those posts in only five years....
Thanks for the tips!! We'll see what we can do. Not sure if the super dry climate will help prevent rot somewhat. Our neighbor has similar log posts on his deck he's had for many years. We'll ask him what he did. The logs are larger diameter than the posts (they hang over) so that should keep it dry too.
Make sure to leave that spot your dog was laying on when you were leveling and squaring the tubes, then again same spot when pouring concrete, same spot again whan hand digging 3 hole and of course laying on that same spot when standing logs up.
It will rot away in no time , and the big pole railing is weak as piss , the only thing holding the deck up is the house it should be self supporting on a deck that high and big
Colorado Mountain Living no engineer would sign of on that deck , fastening of the main posts and railing is substandard. The hole job looks strong but isn't
I usually frown upon safety freaks but this build has me severely concerned. 1. I don't know Colorado building codes but as a rule of thumb if structure attaches to a house with bolts, screws or nails it needs a permit. 2. You need some sort of hurricane straps or mounts on those columns, just gravity setting them down on peers is not good enough... Personally I would have used cedar logs or find other way protect wood and bury those peers in the ground/concrete few feet (too late for that). 3. Those tiny 6 in screws would be considered insufficient to mount 4x4 post. Ya'll need to go back and drill all the way through the log and joist and add at least 2 of 5/8 or 3/4 in thick bolts (with big washers) going all the way through the log and the joist. 4. Also since this platform is quite a bit up from the ground you will need railing with gaps no bigger than 4in It does look fantastic though.
Not to worry, the video wasn't the end of the build. Many of the things you mention are being done as finishing steps, including straps, additional backfill, carriage bolts, lag bolts and the railing.I will probably do a follow up video review since so many viewers have expressed interest.
I am a bit concerned about the stability of your deck. You appear to have backfilled your sleeves with soil. Therefore you're concrete columns will in effect only have a pin joint at the bottom. On top of your concrete columns you have put another pin joint. A column with two pin joints is not stable.
Thanks for your concern about the design stability. Bryan is not done yet with the anchoring. He plans to bolt some steel straps directly to the column. Also, did you catch the part in the video where he said the columns were on stilts, so that the initial concrete pour flowed out and filled the post hold with concrete, before the rest of the column was filled? The column is more of a flared bottom than just a regular column. I may have over edited out some of the explanation. Do you think that would make the difference in stability?
@@ColoradoMountainLiving The flared bottom to the concrete will help resist rotation of the concrete base and will help to resist sliding.The straps that you are going to install to connect the posts to the concrete that will also help resist rotation at the top of the concrete base. The straps will have to be protected from corrosion especially if they are going to be covered up by a rockwork plinth. When you have completed the deck you will have to have a party on it.
The other thing that should help resist sliding, hopefully, is the extension of the grading away from the house, 8 ft past the deck, so the hill won't be right on the edge anymore.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving The existing backfill appears to have been tipped on the existing slope and not compacted. That has not been a problem because it is not supporting anything. An inch or two of settlement and movement in a future path etc is a lot less work to fix than engineered backfilling to the slope which would be overkill (cutting steps and compacting in layers). The uncompacted backfill will be more permeable than the existing soil so there will be a tendency for there to be a layer of wetter soil just above the previous ground level. The backfill could slide on this wetter layer. I would be reluctant to rely on the resistance of something that could move of its own accord. My concern was rotation of the concrete rather than sliding which hopefully you will solve with the strapping. The highest loaded post is likely to be the middle one which has the uncompacted electric trench just in front of it. Did you fix the joists to the joist hangers.
I can not stand imperial staffs. Metric is far better. In the 80s i was building something in a nuclear power station where the drawings were imperial. I just could not handle the imerpail staff so I converted the dims to metric.
Why are you only allowing yourselves to have a 30 min video or less, seems silly. If you have things to film and show then do it no matter how long, I watch 1 1/2 hour videos. :) peace
That's a good point. Most people don't watch that long. Also the bigger issue is my computer doesn't have enough memory to process anything over 40 minutes.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving The computer issue I thought of after about two hours it hit me. I"m still on dial up so I get it. I just watched a 2hr camping video today. Stay warm. :) peace
Being in construction I thought the timbers were massive and 2 guys 2 days is pretty darn good. Just putting the decking down with hidden attachment takes a lot of time.
I think it is great that your Father came to help with all that. Great looking.
Yes it was!
Nice work on the deck. All that work is definitely worth it for that view!
You got that right!
Any video with a dog in it gets a thumbs up! What a beautiful view....lots of progress on your place since I was last here, amazing...
Yasss! Thanks so much. We been busy this summer!
Beautiful job . Looking very nice . Lots of figuring and measuring there . That tractor was surely needed .
Thankyou!
Lot of work for just two days, but it looks great. The composite boards are great, you don’t have to stain or refinish ever. Wish we had those available when we built our deck. No doubt you will enjoy the evenings sitting up there with an adult beverage listening to the wildlife. Have a great day and give Viggo a pat on the head for me.
Yes, very happy about going composite. thanks so much!! *woof*
What a great view! Those two guys put in a lot of work in a couple of days! That’s awesome!
Thanks! The view makes the hard work worth it!
Awesome, and something he will never forget building this with his father! Priceless.
Thanks!!
Another beautiful achievement for a magnificent result. You do everything with taste and it is a pleasure to watch !
Thank you-love reading your supportive comments!!
...six man crew job... SUCCESSFULLY and pretty much flawlessly completed by two very, smart, hard working, seasoned, calculating and determined fellas...kudos & applause...to both gentleman..looks absolutely fabulous brian and dad &also to amy & viggo as well for moral support . .☮️&🌱's
THANK YOU!!!
Great job. You two and Dad rock.
Thanks!
Looks great . I think you got two days of work in great film wise. That deck view is great.
was hard to edit all the snippets but I wanted one big video of the project. Thanks!
You'll love that composit we have had it on our decks for 16 years and it doesn't look any different. Just hose it off just love it. Doesn't show nicks and NO painting or maintenance. Nice to see your upper deck high enough so bears don't come on it for sure and wow what a view absolutely gorgeous. Great job on deck there.
That's great to hear!! Yes we can safely view the wildlife from up above :)
The best looking deck I've ever seen. Great design and building ingenuity.
Thanks so much!
It's a relief to see those posts secured. All that weight can be dangerous. Pretty ingenious. Glad to see those diagonals underneath to prevent racking. And you're going to like that decking. I have the Trex composite and it still looks great after 19 years in our harsh climate. It looks like the big storm missed you. We've got freezing here in central Washington State with rain and snow and strong winds. Very unusual in September.
Thanks. Oh wow. i can just remember that happening to us 1 year ago with harsh cold temps and snowstorm blew in. Stay warm!
What a fantastic view you have from that deck!
Thanks so much - we love it!
Wow...Nice looking deck.
thanks!!
Amy now I'm really jealous Bryan and you have a gorgeous deck view and that deck is awesome too! Enjoy it.
Thank you!
that beautiful view of the neighborhood to wake up to everyday.
I'ts very very pretty right now.
The Deck looks awesome , good job guys!!
Thanks!
The deck looks great! Nice view too!
Thanks!
Annoyingly talented! Most impressive
haha! thanks!
Great video and a well down job also watch for those 9 foot 2 legged creatures !
hahahah thanks!
So much better the sound! I apreciate the eforce! Beatiful Job!
Thanks you!!
Wow-nice job and beautiful view.
Thank you!
Nothing quite so satisfying as a beautiful project in process! ENJOY
Thanks!!
Brian’s Big Deck is impressive. Very few uprights have such significant length and girth. No wonder Amy is smiling ear to ear.
LOL you dawg
Love the deck! The house is looking so beautiful as well!
Thanks so much.
That is some real impressive work you all did there, and it looks real good too.
Thank you!
Man....wish I could send you some logs from the tobacco barns here in North Carolina! Looks great guys!
I bet they would go perfectly with our design. Thanks!!
That is one million dollar view!!
Thank you!
Love the deck
Thank you!
Awesome deck, great work! Enjoy!
Thank you!!
Your skills are downright amazing.
Thanks!
Looking Great
thank you!
Impressive! I hope the decking holds up to the elements there.
Thanks-hope so!
Great job you two keep up the cool vids.
Thanks!
Good morning from Florida, you might want to consider buying a remote microphone so we can hear what Bryan is saying when he's not standing next to the camera. You also need to speak a little louder when your outside filming Amy, the wind drowns out your speaking. The house looks fantastic, Bryan you and your dads are good builders, can't wait to see the inside work. Good luck, Chas***
Thanks. I do have a better mic on the shopping list. I bought one, but it created too much static and hadn't got around to buying a second one- one that specifically aims for the voice and not the wind. So windy here so often. Thanks so much!
Good job and great views but I agree with TK you need strong bolts, flat washes and nuts to complete it properly.
Thanks! We're on it!
Hat off to those two managing those posts. We used 6x6 PT posts and had a time. I can only manage dealing with those.
Not bad once you get a system going, but it always seems when that comes you're almost done.
haha. true. had about 30 more minutes of footage deleted of "figuring out" how do lift and place those posts.
Wow really coming along looks fantastic 👍👌 ☮️
Thanks!
LOVE IT. GREAT JOB GUYS‼️👍👍. Vinny 🇺🇸
Thanks!!
Great Job, it's Beautiful and Beautiful view, love it🇺🇸👍🇺🇸👍
Thanks so much.
It seems as though the dog loves watching cement dry.......lol
haha
post hole digger and a tall digging bar , needed
Thank you!
WOW!!!!! it came out fantastic
Thanks!!
You need nuts and bolts on all of those log/beam connections.
Yep don't just think the weight alone is enough. They need to be secured from lifting.
No we're not done, just the video is over. We have straps and bolts and carriage bolts, etc. Appreciate the attention to security- super important around here with the winds.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving Where i built homes we had to meet 120mph wind codes on everything we built. We also had to use 6 nails/staples per shingle on asphalt roofs.
oh wow! that is smart. we do have wind codes here specific to the roof and straps to the foundation that we had to follow.
Before you cut off the outside posts, I would think about the possibility of adding a roll out awning that would attach to the house and roll out to the posts. That way it would not have to be extended all the time, just when you want it. It would give added stability to the awning.
Thanks for the idea! We also thought of turning them into chainsaw carvings on the top of some animals.
You guys live in a great part of the world it looks brilliant
Thanks so much. We love it.
Man hearing the elk bugles in the background at the beginning makes my heart race.
Very wild up here. Love this time of year.
Great job, very nice!
Thanks!
Making me miss our home :| but great great job! Looks amazing!
aw... next time come visit! thanks so much
If that ain't like living in Heaven I don't now what is ! You guys are Blessed !
Thank you! We are.
nice work by Brian and your Dad.
Thanks!
Awesome job Brian and Dad. Get the wine chilled Amy, I'll be over n we can chat on your beautiful deck...
Sounds Lovely!!
I love elk season in Colorado!
There were a few people that got in some trouble on a walking trail with an Elk a few days ago in Colorado.
Oh wow. I saw a male with 2 females on the trail when i walked Viggo last week, but we turned around when i saw them- they were about 100 yards away.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving It happened in Estes Park. I was there a few years ago and there were Elk everywhere. Beautiful little town.
Wow! That deck is massive and beautiful!! Love the use of the rough timber posts!
Were the decking boards vinyl? That will be easy maintenance and last a lifetime!
Great job guys!!
Thanks so much. Yes they are a composite core and a vinyl/poly wrapped. for durability.
Curious what kind of hold-downs did you use to connect the log posts to the concrete footers so you don’t have uplift when a high wind comes blowing up hill?
Going to be steep straps- thanks for asking.
I didn't see much wasted motion.Those Guys work smart. Good job!
Smart and fast! Clock hours, only took about 16 to finish the job.
That's a lot of weight for a tube to take especially laterally, with the issues of freezing/ground movement can I suggest you remove the backfill of earth around the tubes and refill with concrete.
he filled the sonotubes with cement !
@@joedoakes8307 Yep, Which should resist settlement I'm talking about sideways movement, you basically have a tube of concrete surrounded by packed earth on which a large post is resting. Any movement laterally of the tube will result in the wooden post tipping in the opposite direction. You need mass to stop this happening and filling around the tube is a start.
Thanks for the tips! This may not have been clear in the video, but the tubes are on stilts and the concrete flowed out to fill the entire bottom of the post hole, so it's like a flared column, hopefully that resists movement some. We are backfilling another 8 feet past the piers on the hill side, which should help add more packed dirt.
It would be stylish to make the post cut-offs into one or two bits of deck furniture or decor.
Yes, trying to think of a clever use of the pole tops.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving Ideas:
Split a 6-10 inch tall section in half for lamp mounts.
Carve the same section hollow for wall lamp covers.
Split long sections in half, add legs and top with resin or acrylic for benches and/or tables.
Slice 2 inch thick discs-
Add table legs, or...
Add chair legs and arched stick back, or...
Paint both sides as dart boards for rec area. (stencil PDF) You can wear out one side and flip. (Also if they're nice enough, make gifts.)
Hope that gets the wheels turning.
Absolutely beautiful ❤️
Thank you!
Great job.
Thanks!
Nice deck. I'm impressed everytime I watch your progress on the house. Just a heads up, I've watched contractors that have used composite decking and I know that not all composite decking is the same. The contractors warned that certain composite decking will get scorching hot in the summer with the sun beating down on it. I just wanted to make you aware of the possibility of excessive heat. So no bare feet and maybe a rug for the dogs paw protection if needed.
Thanks so much! I bet that is absolutely true in the mid summer months.What i've observed so far is it's not too hot, but we only have temps in the 60s right now.
looking good! hurry up we got 3 inches of snow in north Idaho this weekend.
OMG - reminds me of last year around here. Too soon!!
Hi guys. Very nice 👍.
Thanks!!
Deck looks good but I sure hope you put some lag bolts into those posts. The screws are ok for temporary use but I believe something that small in diameter will fail in the future.
Yes we are doing that. Will also have carriage bolts between the the 2x10s on the ends. Just couldn't fit it all into a single video.
Actually some of those new screws are better than lag bolts.
Follow up with your Dad's use of mini-split heat pumps. How reliable and cost to operate. Thanks.
Sure. He said he loves it. I will get back to you on cost savings, but he does say he saves a ton. He has had no problems with them.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving Looking forward to your report. So many people are doubting Thompson's. Thanks again.
NOW THAT IS A DECK!!!! LOL
haha! yes it is!
Impressive. Will be fabulous. LOL
Thanks!!
did you forget to put something between the concrete and post?
What do you recommend?
@@ColoradoMountainLiving A roof shingle or some plastic. Concrete always contains water and that post will rot
@@ColoradoMountainLiving I just had to do about 45k in repairs to a house I bought last year because of this. A log is like a huge straw and wiil suck up every bit of water it comes in contact with at both ends. For the tops google log caps, we went with some nice copper ones. For the bottom (wish I had seen this before you had it built!) you need some type of break between the concrete and the wood. Anything is better than nothing but the best thing I know of is bituthene waterproof membrane. Find a way to get something in there and preferably get some slope to the concrete so water will run off. Good luck, you don't want to be replacing those posts in only five years....
Thanks for the tips!! We'll see what we can do. Not sure if the super dry climate will help prevent rot somewhat. Our neighbor has similar log posts on his deck he's had for many years. We'll ask him what he did. The logs are larger diameter than the posts (they hang over) so that should keep it dry too.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving oh alright well see
nice job!
Thanks!
Well today 09/29/19 here in North Alabama it was 96 with 51% humidity.
@Py DevEagle Would have to pay me to live anywhere that gets more than 2 or 3 in. of snow.
Holy Moly- they got snow in Idaho!
How big is the deck? I saw 12X12 somewhere but looks bigger than that.
12 x 19 ft.
Nice.
Thanks!
Like the real logs! What species did you guys use?
These were "beetle kill" pine.
Love it 😁❤️👍
Thank you! Cheers!
6inch screws don't seem long enough, but the deck is wonderful. : ) peace
There's also many more bolts going in as well.
How does your dad like the mini spit systems he put in his house?
Loves it! SAves so much $$$
wow!
Yep. thanks!
Make sure to leave that spot your dog was laying on when you were leveling and squaring the tubes, then again same spot when pouring concrete, same spot again whan hand digging 3 hole and of course laying on that same spot when standing logs up.
haha! he does love that spot on the hill. He can see all up and down the road.
WOW !!!!!!!
Thanks!
You can shoot fireworks off that baby
Woohoo!!!
Love the wood beams; however, the footer needs to be wider than said wood beam.
We thought overhanging the footer would prevent water build up on the concrete.
Your husbands a beast
Yes!!
I'm not a job well done
ok
🐝 hi double 👍
Thanks!!
king kong will never get in now
haha!!! at least we got that
It will rot away in no time , and the big pole railing is weak as piss , the only thing holding the deck up is the house it should be self supporting on a deck that high and big
How much time is no time?
Colorado Mountain Living no engineer would sign of on that deck , fastening of the main posts and railing is substandard. The hole job looks strong but isn't
24:00 get backkk :O
thanks
I usually frown upon safety freaks but this build has me severely concerned.
1. I don't know Colorado building codes but as a rule of thumb if structure attaches to a house with bolts, screws or nails it needs a permit.
2. You need some sort of hurricane straps or mounts on those columns, just gravity setting them down on peers is not good enough... Personally I would have used cedar logs or find other way protect wood and bury those peers in the ground/concrete few feet (too late for that).
3. Those tiny 6 in screws would be considered insufficient to mount 4x4 post. Ya'll need to go back and drill all the way through the log and joist and add at least 2 of 5/8 or 3/4 in thick bolts (with big washers) going all the way through the log and the joist.
4. Also since this platform is quite a bit up from the ground you will need railing with gaps no bigger than 4in
It does look fantastic though.
Not to worry, the video wasn't the end of the build. Many of the things you mention are being done as finishing steps, including straps, additional backfill, carriage bolts, lag bolts and the railing.I will probably do a follow up video review since so many viewers have expressed interest.
I am a bit concerned about the stability of your deck.
You appear to have backfilled your sleeves with soil. Therefore you're concrete columns will in effect only have a pin joint at the bottom. On top of your concrete columns you have put another pin joint.
A column with two pin joints is not stable.
Thanks for your concern about the design stability. Bryan is not done yet with the anchoring. He plans to bolt some steel straps directly to the column. Also, did you catch the part in the video where he said the columns were on stilts, so that the initial concrete pour flowed out and filled the post hold with concrete, before the rest of the column was filled? The column is more of a flared bottom than just a regular column. I may have over edited out some of the explanation. Do you think that would make the difference in stability?
@@ColoradoMountainLiving The flared bottom to the concrete will help resist rotation of the concrete base and will help to resist sliding.The straps that you are going to install to connect the posts to the concrete that will also help resist rotation at the top of the concrete base. The straps will have to be protected from corrosion especially if they are going to be covered up by a rockwork plinth.
When you have completed the deck you will have to have a party on it.
The other thing that should help resist sliding, hopefully, is the extension of the grading away from the house, 8 ft past the deck, so the hill won't be right on the edge anymore.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving
The existing backfill appears to have been tipped on the existing slope and not compacted. That has not been a problem because it is not supporting anything. An inch or two of settlement and movement in a future path etc is a lot less work to fix than engineered backfilling to the slope which would be overkill (cutting steps and compacting in layers). The uncompacted backfill will be more permeable than the existing soil so there will be a tendency for there to be a layer of wetter soil just above the previous ground level. The backfill could slide on this wetter layer. I would be reluctant to rely on the resistance of something that could move of its own accord.
My concern was rotation of the concrete rather than sliding which hopefully you will solve with the strapping.
The highest loaded post is likely to be the middle one which has the uncompacted electric trench just in front of it.
Did you fix the joists to the joist hangers.
The posts are to large and the pins to small !
uh oh! how can we remedy?
I can not stand imperial staffs. Metric is far better. In the 80s i was building something in a nuclear power station where the drawings were imperial.
I just could not handle the imerpail staff so I converted the dims to metric.
Much more precise I imagine and easier math.
Way too guys👌 🇵🇷 😘
Way too go guys👌 🇵🇷 😉
Thanks!!
Why are you only allowing yourselves to have a 30 min video or less, seems silly. If you have things to film and show then do it no matter how long, I watch 1 1/2 hour videos. :) peace
That's a good point. Most people don't watch that long. Also the bigger issue is my computer doesn't have enough memory to process anything over 40 minutes.
@@ColoradoMountainLiving The computer issue I thought of after about two hours it hit me. I"m still on dial up so I get it. I just watched a 2hr camping video today. Stay warm. :) peace
I'm sure your husband is happy with the low bar you set for defining "massive" , but that deck is not. nor should it have taken 2 days.
Being in construction I thought the timbers were massive and 2 guys 2 days is pretty darn good. Just putting the decking down with hidden attachment takes a lot of time.
16 ft logs aren't massive in your book? sorry to hear that.
Technically it was about 8 hour days so, according to clock hours. it was a 16 hour build, less than a "day."
after looking at your RUclips list and followers looks like only a critic trying to survive off of others