Monday, May 2, 2011

Porch and Skirting - Redwood Salvage

April 2011 -- Eel River at Fernbridge

After the earthquake in 2010 we had a foundation put in to replace the old post and pier that was knocked over by the quake.   We salvaged about half of the redwood skirting – we cut off the rot, cleaned and sanded some of the old paint off.    Now its going back up – primed and fresh painted.  

The reclaimed skirting was also used on the new porch. All the redwood needed oil based primer, which we love putting on, only drawback is we were painting inside in the winter and we had to shut the heater off to avoid the huge fiery conflagration.


The end of the rains.   We have had months of regular rainfall on the North Coast.  The rivers were all running high, as you can see the Eel River is big and muddy.  Now that the rain has let up we were able to get out and put some paint on the porch and install more of the skirting around the foundation.
Original redwood skirting cleaned and trimmed - ready to put up on new porch


Here's a warning.  As we cleaned and trimmed the old siding I thought it would be easier to nail the skirting up and then sand them in place --- bad idea --- the belt sander is heavy and designed to be used on a flat surface --- not in a vertical position where the weight just pulls you down.   I also got a face full of paint dust and chips.  

 




2 comments:

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  2. Use oil base primer, zinger was the brand. Make sure wood is prep, no sand scuffs, set nail caulk/bondo nail holes or other items requiring a smooth finish prior to paint.

    To remove paint the old way, heat gun works great but tetitous and may require extra tooling in shaping to get tough angle, rounded areas. wear the correct hepa filter and cartridge mask items. IR guns may be more efficient.

    Patients is a virtue

    Good Luck

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