Wow! I would have never EVER been able to do that!If you're treating a de-gloving wound, you really need to keep the animal inside if possible. Outside there is too much that can get in to it, like dirt, flies, other bacteria. Inside you have more control over the environment.
So, after 4 hrs of work, the door has been properly hung. Vice grips and a lot of patience, a dull chisel to get the difficult screws going the right direction, finding the right combination of things to get it the right height while keeping it level, finding the right branches to shim one party of the frame with, filing the door so it closes around the bolts, sawing the branches after getting them in place and tightening screws, loosening and tightening the screws so they're just right, and opening and closing, locking and unlocking until its just right. Good grief, it was easier to put in the other way. Sad thing is, it would have been just as difficult if I had put it in this way in the first place. The other thing that doesn't help is that the door had an outward curve in the middle, so I had to shim the door frame in the middle so it would lock decently. What a pain in the tater, but hey, the worst is over, just a small adjustment to the top bar of the frame, then seal and eventually add trim to the outside so it looks decent, and so people can't pop the shims out and break in, though they would still have to go through the main door, the teeth and the lead to actually steal anything. Yay for inheriting my dad's mechanical abilities (to an extent), his ingenuity, and for having the patience/persistence to get it done.
Great job!!!!!!!!!