Tuesday, November 30, 2010

The SP Tiles

So last night Eduardo sent the first photo of the day:



It's the kitchen wall behind where the stove will be. With the newly re-arrived tiles from Sao Paulo. This morning the rest of the kitchen wall tiles will be installed, and then the floor will start to go in.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

More tiles!

Today was pretty busy, and full of progress. I picked up my Brazilian driver's license (without having to give up my American license), Eduardo fixed the roof of the clinic, the kitchen accent tiles arrived from sao paulo (again...), we picked up two granite base boards, and another room and a half has been tiled! This is all good, because tomorrow morning we head to Sao Paulo, and I head to the US from there and won't be back until the end of December. Eduardo's promised daily photos of the construction while I'm gone, so I won't be left behind.

So our bags our packed, and it's bed time. I'll post pictures soon.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Tiles and Pruning

So, last Monday, the tile guy was supposed to arrive. Unfortunately, he never showed up. No word and no sighting all week. So off we went to find another person who could install the tiles. Clovis hunted down Option #1, but he wouldn't have been able to get it done until the end of the year, and was going to cover about R20 / m-sq. Luckily, through a patient of Evelyn's we found option #2 -- and he started yesterday. And should likely finish by the end of next week.

José, the tile guy, is fantastic. He does good work, he understands what we want, and he's good humoured. So the floor for the guest room is laid as of today, as is a bathroom wall. As it turns out the other bathroom wall needed to have a pipe moved so it would line up right with the toilet. Eduardo and Cosme took care of that little issue today.

newly installed tiles!

bathroom tiles with reflection

Eduardo also did a little pruning in the back yard today. There's a jabuticaba tree that wasn't getting enough light to bear fruit, so Eduardo cleared some of the branches of the mango tree that was shading it. He also pruned some more of the low branches of the mango tree to open up the view. It means it'll be a little trickier to pick mangoes, but we'll have more shady space to enjoy. The branch he's sitting on is slated to go tomorrow.

pruning in the yard

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Granite finalists!

... the three finalists (for type of granite to use for the counter tops and possibly base tile) are:

Branco Kashmir (Silver White)



Ornamental Yellow

and Ceará White

Historically I've favored Branco Ceará, but currently I'm leaning toward Amarelo Ornamental. It both looks better with the floor tiles and is less expensive. But really, I'm just glad that Eduardo has realized that Salmão Tropical is *really* pink.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Tiú: the dirty ol' egg sucking lizard

Monday, while hanging out, enjoying the holiday, making sushi and chocolate mousse, we heard the dogs going crazy inside the casinha. Eduardo heard the ruckus over the mixer. We both went over to check it out, and found the dogs had cornered a huge lizard behind the door propped up against the back of the house. And this is the kind of lizard that eats chicken's eggs, and chicks as well when it has the chance. Therefore, its not particularly welcome on the farm. Eduardo managed to grab its tail, but it just shed that section of tail. Eduardo got a hold of it once more, but it just shed more tail. So it was left to fend for itself against the dogs.

I didn't manage to get a photo of that particular Tiú, but I did manage to get a photo of a smaller one that Eduardo and his dad caught last week.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Two steps forward...

... and one step back.

Friday Evelyn noticed that the door frame to the kids' room was facing the wrong direction. doh! Originally this placement made sense as there were two doors. One coming in from what was Clovinho's room, and the other going through to what was their parent's room. However, in the current incarnation of the house, what had been Clovinho's room is now a hall that opens up to the back porch. The guest room has been made a bit smaller, and there are now doors to both of the back bedrooms that don't involve going through someone else's room. So the door between the two back bedrooms was bricked up, and we were left with one door between the kids' room and the hall. The problem being, this door was set to open into the hall as opposed to opening into the bedroom.

So it was decided-- better to deal with a week of annoyance now as opposed to a life time of annoyance later. I.e. better to fix the door frame. Luckily, it's gone faster than we expected. Friday morning, Eduardo cut out the door frame. Friday afternoon, Cosme smoothed out the hole in the wall. And today, Eduardo will reinstall the door frame (facing the correct direction) with foam. To reinstall it with cement would have required making a significantly bigger hole.



I realize that Friday and Tuesday are not contiguous days of the week. But we had a wedding in Campo Grande this weekend, and yesterday was a holiday. We spent it making (and eating) a ridiculous amount of sushi.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Tile Massacre: Update

In a stunning twist, I don't have to redesign the kitchen! We went to the store to return the tiles this afternoon and discovered that the tiles that arrived were not the tiles we ordered. The surface design was the same, but the ones that arrived were terra cotta tiles with glaze as opposed to normal porcelain tiles. So the correct tiles will be arriving at the end of next week. And should survive the ride from Sao Paulo far better.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Tile Massacre

In general, things are going really well. Progress is being made every day, and I love watching little things change over time. The bathroom is finally coming together, and Eduardo has put up 4 of 6 of the screened windows, and 2 of 6 of the accompanying storm windows. And they look gorgeous!

And today, we got the call that our (my!) accent tiles for the kitchen had arrived from Sao Paulo. I hadn't realized how attached I can get to little things. For example, gorgeous artesenal tiles that are hand painted and add just the splash of color I was hoping for. I had obsessed over these tiles. I looked at all the options on the website, I added each of my favorite patterns in the model to see how each one would look. And yes-- I have a 3D model of the house which I obsess over on a daily basis. And I gradually narrowed it down to my favorite. I counted up the exact number that we would need for the space; 54 center tiles, 52 edge tiles and 2 corner tile. 108 tiles at about R$10 per tile wasn't going to come cheap. But they're amazing!



And today, they arrived! Eduardo brought them home and laid them out on the floor. And apparently, the trip was a tile massacre. Eight of the tiles arrived chipped or broken, and of the ones that were whole over 3/4's were damaged. The glaze that protects the surface was completely chipped. No pieces had fallen off, but on many the glaze was essentially shattered.

So now our option is to either send back the vast majority of the tiles and have them replaced, or to just send them back and start obsessing over tiles all over again. The likelihood that a second shipment will magically arrive unblemished has p<<<0.05. Unless they're shipped better than 50 tiles / box with no protection at all stuck in the back of a truck traversing half of Brasil. Needless to say, I'm pretty bummed. Back to the drawing board...

Big Red

So the original floor to the house was 'vermelhão', which I like to translate as Big Red. As far as I can tell, it's a sealed cement that then has to be waxed. And the wax is a red color. From everything I've heard, it takes a lot of maintenance, and is terrible to clean. Knowing Eduardo and I, you can see why this might be a problem. I have never waxed a floor in my life, and don't really have any intention of starting, especially not on a weekly basis!


Big Red, the original vermelhão

So the plan was to put down tile on top of the existing floor. Far less expensive, and easier than breaking up the floor and then having to re-pour the sub-floor. But before finalizing this plan, we needed to know if the floor was any good. The original house was just the front rooms, and was built in a hurry with no intention of staying for 15 years! So Eduardo tested the thickness, and what he found was "a hole that you could fit two pigs in".



This giant hole was a termite nest, and as we later discovered, it wasn't the only one. There were two holes of about a cubic meter, and a few other smaller ones. Apparently, the termites that had eaten my in-laws library when they lived in the house had carved out a nest in the earth underneath the floor, and were still there! To paraphrase Eduardo, "in the interest of not waking up one morning and stepping through the floor to find ourselves in China, I think we should replace the floor".




So that's what happened. The entire floor (minus the back two bedrooms) was broken, the termites were killed off, their holes were filled in, and Eduardo re-poured the entire floor. He placed tiles to level the whole thing, and sloped the floor slightly so that water will drain. And next week the tile should start to go in!

Monday, November 8, 2010

Backstory

The house that my husband grew up in. The house that my in-laws started their family in. That house, is now our house. The first time I visited my husband's parent's farm, I barely noticed it even though it's only a couple hundred meters from their current house. Now I visit multiple times a day to see what's happening in the grand remodeling project.

Eduardo and I are the architects. And he, single-handedly (or just about) is the construction crew, engineer, electrician and plumber. We started this project when he moved back to Brasil (and the farm) at the end of 2009. When I arrived in June there was still more destruction happening than construction, and hopefully, within the next couple of months it will be complete.


Looking from the kitchen to the living room in March.


Just about the same view in October.