It may seem that we haven't been doing much on the house for the last couple of months. Truth is we've been working on the same thing for what seems like an eternity. We had this grand plan for the master bathroom floor that has been difficult to make happen, to say the least. The vision was to have a stream (complete with fish) running through the bathroom and into the shower. The rest of the floor is flagstone, as you've seen in previous posts. That was easy.
First I'll show the pictures of the finished product and then I'll explain what went into it.
After watching countless videos on YouTube and asking everyone we could think to ask via email and in person we were told it just wasn't going to work. But we just couldn't let it go. Two main problems, the clear epoxy that looks like water in the stream was going to a) try to run down the drain when we poured it and would be b) very slippery when wet.
After multiple attempts with multiple tactics we solved the problem with the epoxy running down the drain by putting a collar around the drain and pouring the epoxy right up to it level with the flagstone. In order for the shower to drain properly the floor has to slope. Hence the problem with the epoxy running down the drain. A sawzall (recipricating saw) and belt sander removed all the excess epoxy and created a slope down to the drain. Fortunately a thin coat of fresh epoxy fills in all the sanding marks and makes the epoxy clear again.
Slippery? Oh baby was it slippery. One shower told us it was a major medical expense waiting to happen. Early on in the project our stone mason had suggested some grit that is made for mixing in floor sealers to make floors less slippery. We had tried it a couple of different ways in some tests we did. It always made the epoxy cloudy to the point we lost the effect of water in a stream. We had to come up with something so we tried again. One teaspoon of grit in 100 ml of epoxy ended up being just right when applied with a paint brush. The epoxy was still clear enough to appear as water and there was enough texture so as not to feel as though you were taking a shower on an ice skating rink. Actually it feels very safe.
Now we can get back to other house projects that will hopefully move much faster than the bathroom floor did.
An update on livestock. Chickens are doing fine. We get between 3 and 5 eggs a day. Of our two turkeys, only one made it. We really wanted more than one, so we bought two more at about the same age as the lone survivor. We set about making a shelter / roost for the turkeys and put them in a fenced enclosure right next to the chickens.
The Turkey's new home |
Set up in the pasture next to the chickens |
Thats all for now.
Take care.
Brian
No comments:
Post a Comment