DIY: It’s time to fix my kitchen floor

Different type of DIY post today, because today I finally decided that I have to put my kitchen floor back in. The shower I installed is directly under the 1st floors kitchen. All of the pipework I had to do to get cold/hot water to the shower also goes to the kitchen.  The drain line will be routed around the back of the shower and once complete, I’ll have not only a kitchen floor, I’ll have the beginnings of “utilities”.  Electrical wiring is mostly up at this point, but nothing is tied in until rough inspections come around.

Panorama of kitchenThe kitchen floor is mostly removed and you can see my shower down and to the left. There is lighting installed above, 5 recessed lamps, enough receptacles to meet code though they need their wiring cleaned up.

Kitchen floor write-up

 

I wanted to make sure I would get enough flooring to both raise and level the floor the 2″ that it’s off from edge to edge, which we made better? by leveling portions of the house. Overall, the leveling helped out and the extra support is nice to have. Anyway, boards have to be laid east/west since rafters run north/south, going to use some decent T&G stuff, which we already used in the bathroom and that was lovely to use. One note, only need 4 sheets since I have enough material left over from the bathroom to finish this up.

Need to level floor

 

Two important things of note here. 1) Drainline from the 2nd floor bathroom runs through this wall. It’s no longer the cast iron pipe that used to hold the house up (joking), but if you look at the lower left, you’ll notice that the framing sticks out a little. The ones to the right (on the left wall) also have shims on the front. Those are being taken out, the beams are fine without them. I will have to bump out the 3 other studs to the left of the 2nd floor drain however, to make a level surface. This will give me a soffit somewhere, which I’m not sure I want, since I’ll then have to have another couple soffits.

Oh, you don’t know what a soffit is? I didn’t either when I was having our break room constructed at work and all they kept talking about were these damn soffits. I stopped the meeting and jumped in, “What’s a soffit?” You’d swear I’d run over their damn dogs. A couple drawings later, I found out its just something that sticks out and serves no real purpose other than to look pretty. Here’s a picture of a soffit for reference:

soffit, for example

See that curved piece of sheetrock at the top of this machine guarding computer desk? That’s a soffit. That’s also a computer desk that was installed at my place of work.

Other side

 

One side of the room is water leveled to 63-3/4 and the other side (above) is 65-7/8. Not great.  A couple of the floor joists need to be taller and since I am completely removing the floor, I have two options: accept the floor slopes to one side of the room, or sister in new joists. I’m going to sister in some additional joists and give the floor that 2″ it needs to be level.

Oh, water levels, awesome inventions. They allow you to find a common mark across every stud. Measure down to one of these bad boys:

exposed joist

The floor joist being referenced is to the 1 o’clock of the trash bag box, where I tore up a couple floor boards to expose the basement.

 

and you know how much height needs to be added to one end of the room.  My marks are the black marks for the floor, my father used red marks to level the ceiling, which I can take pictures of next time I stop by the house.  But first, trash day is Wednesday and I have a small problem that you may have noticed from the shower install: I have a trash pile of wood, doors and boxes of crappy old books that need to be thrown out. I’ve already cleaned this corner out twice, and this will be my third…

Trash Pile

 

Be proud of your accomplishments

Be proud of your accomplishments, I know I am.

First, a graph.

Weight since 2009

So I’ve been tracking my weight since 2009 using Myplate, now a livestrong.com tool. I added a bunch of life events that influenced my eating behaviors to add some logic behind each swing in weight.

What I’m proud of is the right side of this graph.  In 2014 my pants were getting too tight in the waist.  This was troubling.  So I did what any self-respecting person would do and decided it was time for the Subway diet. What’s that? Not sure what the Subway diet is? Purposefully limiting calories and meal size in order to change eating behaviors and thus reducing caloric intake.

In three weeks I lost 15 pounds.  Fifteen pounds! And I went to Vegas during this weight loss stint! Today is 3 days shy of one month of dieting and I’ve hit a limit. I’ve been 175.8 lbs for 5 straight mornings. Unfortunately, I don’t have time to go back to the gym right now.

And that’s because of my second accomplishment, yay!

Final Video: Basement Shower – 2 seconds long because it’s a shower, we all know what they look like when they’re working.

And here is the testing video that I put on youtube, because that’s what you do, right?

Yes, my bucket is dirty. Yes, I’m flipping a house and that was the nearest bucket. It’s hanging up there because it’s zip tied to a heating pipe that I have to replace.  The shower will be written up in it’s own post that I may throw up on this blog today as well and post date it to yesterday, when I finished it at halftime during the Philadelphia Eagles game.

Why be proud of such meager accomplishments though? Because I learned something while achieving each of them.  My sudden weight loss reinforced the idea that I am in control of my weight and thus in control of how I portray my public self (besides the mustache and out-going, overly friendly personality, see the following picture). And 15 pounds in 3 weeks is pretty impressive, considering all I did was eat 1700 calories a day.

This cute girl in the Monte Carlo's food court wanted a picture of my mustache. I demanded a picture with her. I told her to put her shades on, so we'd look super cool.

This cute girl in the Monte Carlo’s food court wanted a picture of my mustache. I demanded a picture with her. I told her to put her shades on so we’d look super cool.

Building a shower taught me how to build a shower, duh! To build a shower I had to build a wooden base. To build a wooden base I had to build a table saw. To build a table saw I had to clean up all my tools (okay, my father’s tool that are in my house) and organize them.

And as a final aside: no offense was meant when I added your name to my graph, I lost weight because I was depressed and the graph shows what affect it you had on me.

 

Today’s Take Away: Spiced Chai Black Tea with Honey and Coffee-mate

Directions

Combine using hot, but not boiling water:

1 – Bag of Bigelow Spiced Chai Black Tea
1/2 tbsp – Honey, any kind, preferably local
1 squirt or 2 tsp – Coffee-mate, which I use instead of milk due to lactose

Steep time varies, but 4 minutes results in a very smooth flavor that gives off a vanilla aroma. Thought the title has “Spiced” in it, the tea is not as spicy as other spiced chai tea such as Twinings “Ultra Spice” Chai Tea.