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Can't put a roof on in the rain....even if you are as resourceful as an Amish carpenter.Looks like the old barn is about to get a makeover. New roof, second wing, oak siding. Roof goes on this month.
Hey Aart, I thought I would update the leakless barn. It has porous walls, but that should only be a problem in the winter, and the adult coop area is being shored up. I have decided to really scale up and have ordered the fencing to turn the loft into pens for juvenile chickens. I have also refined my cage building skills to avoid being hazardous to the user. It turns out 1/2" hardware cloth fits into a typical kerf along a 2x3. AND my first home bred eggs hatched yesterday, 22 for 23 leghorns fertile and hatched. I think it's the bird's environment and Brinsea. 52 more in the second hatcher, and collecting Welsummers now at 6 a day.So you fixed the roof but still have flooding?
So you fixed the roof but still have flooding?
Oh, you answered that one way back in January.Well no, fixing it would make it dry right? It was repaired as can be. There is another section of roof that feeds onto it so there is a lot of flow.. I think the roof has been screwed down enough that even those holes rusted through a bit. Dunno. I have decided to go with a aluminized, fiberous, roof repair compound that takes at least two coats, no primer. 6 five gallon $50 cans should do both coats. Just hoping for warm weather. Warm enough anyway.
Yes I did, but things are even better. and the thread was deadish. It looks like I am going to offer leghorns and welsummers for sale from the driveway, with 3000 sq. ft. of housing and another 1000 heated this could be fun as it developes. I just wanted a multicolored basket of eggs you know?Oh, you answered that one way back in January.
Yes, I've been following, just not replying.but things are even better.