Showing posts with label barn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barn. Show all posts
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Barn Raising....
Well, Dear Readers, We had a lovely holiday (much to share with you). But first we are happy to say we came home to find our new barn built...
We had 'ummd and arred' for a while over where to put it, but decided in the end that it had to shift from its current position by the potager, as it is in the way of the drive and vineyard expansion; and also we didn't want to be trekking across our nice lawns with the tractor and farm equipment, so it had to shift to the farm.
It is in the paddock closest to the park, so there won't be too much trekking the other way with the lawn mower and mulch. We are constructing three large compost and mulch pits beside the new barn, as well as a couple of small animal pens for any stock that might need isolating or close care...
We really wanted the look of an old oak barn, but not the maintenance (or price), so we decided on a 'colour-steel' barn in a brown wooden colour with a slate coloured roof. We went for a four bay design to allow for easy access to multiple vehicles / implements from the first three bays and the fourth for a tool shed / work shop.
Above: The bare site as seen from the gate between the park and farm.
Below: The sand infill into the excavation they dug for foundations.
Willoughby surveying the new sandpit
The reinforcing mesh, boxing and polythene liner
The newly poured concrete. The farm is not looking the best in this bleak photo with the deciduous trees like skeletons on a overcast skyline...
The barn starting to rise up from pad...
The finished barn...
Now we can start to landscape around it to give it that rustic look; to build the animal pens and composting pits; and to move everything out of the old barn and dismantle it to extend the vineyard.
Labels:
barn,
Barns,
Oak Buildings,
Willowbrook Park Farm
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Pig Hilton Mark 2...
After 2 years of breeding Wessex Saddlebacks, we were in need of a larger pig sty. Pig 'Hilton' mark one was a rectangular ark made of plywood, open at one end - functional but not pretty. I did some research into traditional pig stys, ones that would look at home on an English-styled farm. There were several which caught my attention...
Above: A Traditional Welsh Pig Sty
I like the look of the old traditional pig stys, but they are impractical, non-transportable, and designed for non free-range pigs.
Having seen some of the shelters on the market...
And some old stone huts...
...I struck upon the idea of making a stone-look sty out of wood. So, my grandfather and I set about building Pig Hilton mark 2 - out of completely recycled materials.
We had some timber from previous projects lying around, and we pulled the plywood lining off the inside of the current barn (knowing that it is going to be demolished to make way for the driveway next year). One of our neighbours gave us a whole lot of spare roofing iron, and so we were set to start building.
Above: Old Timber which we used to create the floor (below)
The floor size was 7'x10'.
Above: Putting the framing for the walls up
Below: Starting to make the trusses for the roof
The finished roof framing
Below: Cutting the roofing iron
Putting on the roof...
All the way through my grandfather taught me heaps of helpful hints and tips that I will be able to apply to any other buildings in the future.
Almost completed project - structurally finished with gate latched back against wall. Now we just need to find some stone coloured paint and set about adding the finishing touches.
Below: The old pig sty, with the brook swollen with water due to all the rain we have had.
I'll post an update once we've painted it. Now I've learnt how to build a gabled animal shelter, my next project is going to be a potting shed for the middle of the potager garden.
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