Of hay field and house

   / Of hay field and house #1  

deranged

Gold Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2013
Messages
257
Location
Marthasville, MO
Tractor
Cub Cadet 102, L3600 Kabota; 1530 John Deere
This weekend we finally broke ground on the new house. We are building on what was up to now Mom and Dads back hay field. We got 6.5 acres from them last year and have been working on it since then. All I can say is I hate easements and access rights.... Below is what we started with.

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We have done what we could in the last 5 months, like trench 780' for underground electric to the site and start clearing a road. This has been fun, I learned how to operate a backhoe and a few more ways NOT to operate a tractor. After the first two months my wife's only request when I go out to work is, "Just don't get it stuck again".

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The high lift operator arrived about 8 am on Saturday. It is amazing to watch someone who knows what they are doing. He had the entire basement dug by 2. After that he worked on the roadbed a little but due to my not having finished the culverts he had to leave for the day.

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Fast forward to Monday. I woke up to work already being done. The guys where here to pour the footings. They only had one day as today we got hit with another arctic cold snap. Needless to say, I had to take a 100 mile emergency trip to secure a culvert, as the concrete trucks slid down the hill without a road and they where not coming out the way they came in. So we now have footings and the road in a much better condition. If all goes right tomorrow rock will be poured for the roads and I can stop having stuck trucks...

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Last edited:
   / Of hay field and house #2  
Very nice setting. My wife and I went through a similar process two and a half years ago and while some of it is stressful overall I found it very enjoyable. Any upgrades you want to do on the house that can't be done easily later I would recommend if finances allow. There were a few upgrades me and the wife had a hard time deciding if they were worth the money but looking back now it was a no brainer. Good luck
 
   / Of hay field and house #3  
will enjoy seeing pics of the build. I built my own house in 1997, after having convinced the wife I could build a larger house on a larger lot than what we had, for the same cost of selling what we had. Good luck on the build.
 
   / Of hay field and house #4  
Welcome to TBN. Join the fun:thumbsup:
I went through that home construction experience about 9 years ago on my 10 acre place here in the North Sacramento Valley. Moved to CA from MO (Florissant/STL area) in 1990.

Good luck with your new home.
 
   / Of hay field and house #5  
That field looks like a beautiful place to put a house. I'd sure like to have a view like that!
 
   / Of hay field and house #6  
Congratulations!!!! I'm looking forward to following your progress.

Eddie
 
   / Of hay field and house #7  
deranged,

What a nice setting! I've been working on mine since 2007 and will finish this year. Building your own home is a great experience.

It looks like straw in the footing areas. What's that for?

Hope to see more pix.
 
   / Of hay field and house
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Its been fun out here the last few days so not much computer time. But I'll try for a quick update. We are fighting or better said waiting on mother nature to calm down. The day the footings where poured it was 50 degrees out. The next day the high was 9. So much for living in the temperate part of the country. While we are waiting on some warmer weather to be forecast, I got the road rocked and the concrete crew has the high wall piers up. (I hope I said that right). IMG_1375[1].jpgIMG_1378[1].jpg

I've been learning why three bids is a good thing. On the septic side the county's install sheet listed 1,200' of pipe. The last bidder noticed that the county guy had read the soil sample wrong and listed our soil load for low pressure pipe instead of normal pipe. So my pipe length has gone from 1200' to 600'. What a relief.

Also due to some reading on here of people smarter then myself, I took my first tree down with the backhoe root ball and all. That was too much fun to watch the weight of the tree take the root ball out instead of digging it out after felling the tree. Much easier so thanks guys.
 
   / Of hay field and house
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Raspy,

Congratulations in advance on finishing. I never thought mine would start so I cant even fathom finishing right now.

The straw was my attempt to keep the sudden arctic air off my footings. We thought we had a few days of warmer air to cure in but the night after we poured a cold snap drove in hard. Since I didn't have blankets that my wife would let me use outside on concrete, I grabbed straw as a hail mary. I hope that makes sense.
 
   / Of hay field and house #10  
Great start... I enjoy posts like this along with the accompanying pictures that show the hard work you are putting in!
Good luck.
 

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