The Slow Motion Retirement Plan

   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan
  • Thread Starter
#151  
cycle_gator and rjwassing67, thanks for the kind words. i don't have much experience in these kinds of endeavors, so i very much pictured this thread as a 'learn from my mistakes' kind of thing. the fact that people say they are inspired by my efforts is beyond gratifying.

ok, i have now done the humble thing. now on to the victory dance :)

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the actual victor is in the background. today my cleary salesman came out and officially staked the barn pad. there are 6 stakes that define a 30' x 48' structure with a 8' x 48' porch attached to the west wall. the maximum difference between any two stakes is 2.5 inches. according to my salesman, in his 20 years of selling cleary barns, my efforts are the second flattest of all owner prepared pads. the owner that did better than i was out a maximum of 1/2 inch, and i take my hat off to that gentleman (or lady, as the case may be). a big part of my success was my tractor, the loader, and the box blade. the box blade and the loader have been proven to be properly sized to the tractor, and the tractor has been stone reliable. it has generated enough power and traction to drag a 7' box blade through undisturbed soil with all 6 ripper tines at their lowest setting with the transmission in the middle range.

one problem that the tractor was unable to surmount was a small ridge of incipient sandstone. the cx300 loader is not designed for heavy-duty work and i have worked it very hard indeed. the 'will be sandstone some time in the future' can be crumbled in your hand if it is in small enough pieces, but a solid bank of the stuff is something else.

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so, i finally bought the bigger generator than i have been thinking about for years. after looking at a variety of generators, i ended up with a yamaha ef2800i. it's an inverter, so i can power electronics and at 2800 watts can power pretty much any single tool that i could conceive of using. it worked very well.

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and this blasted thing is what it powered. i rented this makita 27 lb demolition hammer from home depot. i could muster enough steam to run it for about 5 hours a day. i ended up renting it sunday and returning it, taking monday off pretty much, and then rented it again on tuesday. cleary requires a 5' flat envelope around the building perimeter to enable them to erect the building. so, my 30' wide building plus the 8' porch plus 5' on both sides means i need 48' in width. i used the demo hammer to cut the sandstone wall back enough to give me 48' and stopped. after thinking about it, i'm going to cut the wall back another couple of feet or so to ensure i have enough room to install a drainage tile. the tool does most of the work of course, but continually picking that vibrating 27 lb object up to reposition it makes me tired just thinking about it. that will wait until next week, thankyewverymuch.

IMG_20150402_143446674_zps1duhzvz5.jpg


and there you have it. cleary told me what they needed, and i took my little john deere and made the earth move to suit my personal requirements. the whole thing has been very satisfying, and i am quite proud of myself. this doesn't happen all that often, so i hope everyone will pardon me if this post is a little too self-congratulatory.
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan #152  
Quite alright ol' chap. You have earned it. Five hours with any demo tool will give you a different point of view.
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan #153  
Thanks for the thread. This is what we want to do in about 10 years. Unfortunately we know what area we want to settle down in, but we have not been there yet. So there is nothing we can start to do until we know for sure that area will work out. I love seeing threads like this.
Start getting your area staked out. The web and Google Earth Pro are excellent tools.
I knew the county we wanted to retire to but it took us about 3 years to find the bargain that suited us. We bought our house and 70 acres in 2011 and are still only half moved. Low interest rates are a great help.

cycle_gator and rjwassing67, thanks for the kind words. i don't have much experience in these kinds of endeavors, so i very much pictured this thread as a 'learn from my mistakes' kind of thing. the fact that people say they are inspired by my efforts is beyond gratifying.

ok, i have now done the humble thing. now on to the victory dance :)<snip>
Those pictures indicate a victory party is needed.

i rented this makita 27 lb demolition hammer from home depot. i could muster enough steam to run it for about 5 hours a day. i ended up renting it sunday and returning it, taking monday off pretty much, and then rented it again on tuesday. cleary requires a 5' flat envelope around the building perimeter to enable them to erect the building. so, my 30' wide building plus the 8' porch plus 5' on both sides means i need 48' in width. i used the demo hammer to cut the sandstone wall back enough to give me 48' and stopped. after thinking about it, i'm going to cut the wall back another couple of feet or so to ensure i have enough room to install a drainage tile. the tool does most of the work of course, but continually picking that vibrating 27 lb object up to reposition it makes me tired just thinking about it. that will wait until next week, thankyewverymuch.
<snip>
You are setting the bar high for what us retirees must do. Did you expect retiring would be so much work?
and i took my little john deere and made the earth move to suit my personal requirements. the whole thing has been very satisfying, and i am quite proud of myself. this doesn't happen all that often, so i hope everyone will pardon me if this post is a little too self-congratulatory.
Don't sprain your arm patting yourself on the back, you've done a great job. Just reading about the sandstone makes me tired.
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan #154  
DHAGOOD:

Great work!! Sometimes those demo hammers are a necessary evil and I do mean evil. I am not sure I could handle one of those for 5 hours lifting it up the bank. A chainsaw for five hours is enough for me and mine only weighs in a 14 pounds:).

Keep up the great work. I need to get a thread going on my place - septic installation is the current project.

Keep the progress reports coming and yes, you have every right to be pleased with yourself for the progress.
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan
  • Thread Starter
#155  
You are setting the bar high for what us retirees must do. Did you expect retiring would be so much work?

yeah, pretty much. first off, i'm not afraid of hard work.

second, i spent 25 years or so as an engineer including a little over 16 years in the aerospace industry. aerospace has a nasty habit of killing its practitioners due to stress and overwork. the mortality rate isn't all that high i guess, but there were certainly a disturbing number of ambulances driving around. but the one thing that really gave me the creeps were the people that retired from 35 years in the industry that died within a year. i personally knew a couple of people that retired who were healthy and full of life that died not very soon after they stopped work. one guy was 55 or so when he retired and didn't make it to 56. i decided that there was no way i was going to lie around bored watching old television reruns or whatever it is a lot of people seem to do once they retire.

i wanted to do something new, that would make me grow intellectually and physically, and that would keep me busy. what i chose is what you see: building a cattle ranch from bare land.

so far it's working :)

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and speaking of work, i spent the day working on the drainage tiles from the loafing shed pad. i got a lot done despite forgetting pretty much everything i usually go out there with (sunblock, hats, gloves, extra clothes, you name it).
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan
  • Thread Starter
#156  
after re-reading the last couple of posts, i'm going to go with "more construction, less philosophy".

so. i got the first cut of the site plan from our house designer by way of the surveying crew. i had a heck of a time measuring the control points that were specified. what i have to work with is distance and bearings from different points, and my considered technical opinion is that cell phones are useless for repeatable measurements. i got bearing differences of over 20 degrees while trying to ensure that i could get repeatable measurements. i went off looking for a decent, affordable compass that wouldn't take a week to show up. some flavor of used brunton pocket transit would have been great, but nobody would part with one in my price range. i finally bought a suunto compass from rei and took it out to put it through its paces. it was repeatable, it was fairly easy to use, and i got my measuring done.

and then i got the tractor warmed up and had at it.

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it would be nice if i could drive a straight line on the side of a hill while trying to look in three directions at once. more practice needed...
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan #157  
Willing to sell you, cheap, one of my two Theodolites. Reads to 2" optical, direct reading. I will admit it is not nearly as handy as my Nikon digital, but it reads to a higher degree of precision which is great for long distance work. Send me a pm if you are at all interested.
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan #158  
Willing to sell you, cheap, one of my two Theodolites. Reads to 2" optical, direct reading. I will admit it is not nearly as handy as my Nikon digital, but it reads to a higher degree of precision which is great for long distance work. Send me a pm if you are at all interested.

I'm betting that a lot of readers are reading that to be "reads to two inches" not to "reads to two seconds of angle " which is what you mean. 360 degrees to a circle with 60 minutes to a degree(') and sixty seconds to a minute (").
 
   / The Slow Motion Retirement Plan
  • Thread Starter
#159  
cycle_gator, pm sent and i appreciate your thinking of me.

i spent the day with that blasted rental demolition hammer. i got the pad wide enough for the barn as i previously posted but now i'm working on the drainage. i'm going to end up with a drainage swale uphill of the barn, a landscape wall, and a toe drain at the very least. i'm also going to need gutters at some point.

my wife bought a couple of trees and i will, weather permitting, plant a saw-toothed oak tomorrow. the sugar maple will go in probably on thursday. when most people think of the trees of the colorado front range, i'd bet that most people think of either some flavor of pine tree or perhaps aspens. colorado used to have large stands of deciduous trees. if you've ever seen the broadmoor hotel in colorado springs, all the oak in the hotel was cut locally. if you drive along some of the older neighborhoods just north of downtown colorado springs you can still see some majestic deciduous trees. we're going to slowly build a small grove of oak and linden trees in the southwestern corner of our property, and we'll add some more sugar maples as well.

mmmmm, maple syrup!
 

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