Handyman Summer Camp

Handyman Summer Camp

Things just never turn out the way you think they will. I planned a nice 10-day vacation on the Outer Banks of North Carolina; walking, bike riding, swimming, sitting on the beach, watching movies, and eating seafood with a few friends.

But when I arrived at Annabelle’s cottage in Southern Shores and I found this reminder of Hurricane Dorian blocking my way to the back door.

Privacy fence blown down by Hurricane Dorian. Posts were snapped off.
The second privacy fence is leaning.

I bought a large crowbar at Home Depot and with the help of Milton removed all the boards so we could enter the cottage normally. I notified Annabelle and thought my job was done.

Lots of boards from the old fence. We use about half for the replacement fence.

Enter Jeff.

The next day Jeff was digging out the post remnants so no one would trip on them. Little did I know that they were 3 1/2 feet in the ground in concrete.

Big blob of concrete leftover from the snapped post.

Thus began Handyman Summer Camp, the replacement for a lazy week at the beach. There is a joke about the definition of sailboat cruising, what should be sailing to great locations, lounging on the fantail drinking beer, and enjoying life is actually “boat repair in exotic places”.

This was home repair in exotic places. Jeff convinced me we could rebuild the fence and mission creep began.

Bought new posts and concrete. I love my minivan!
Dug new holes
Took longer to align and set the poles than I thought.
Do it right at the start or the fence will look bad.
After another day we got the sideboards on and then went on to straighten up the older fence.

Mission creep set in. One thing led to another and we installed a clothesline, a bench, and an area for the refuse and recycling roller cans with patio blocks for safer walking without steeping on the everpresent briars. The bench and clothesline beams add torsional strength for the next hurricane.

Earlier photo before I added a fourth row of 16″ block under the clothesline.

So I learned how to lay patio blocks, build a fence, and build a bench, probably 20 hours time.

But wait there is more Ronco.

I learned roof repair. The roof was damaged in multiple locations.

So learned how to repair a roof.

Wait there is more!

That wasn’t enough so I replaced multiple blown bulbs with new, brighter LED bulbs, installed a new LED light fixture in the upstairs bath to replace the loudly buzzing old style ballast light, stopped a leaky toilet with a new flapper, made the house safer with a new smoke alarm, added a foot-washing hose and nozzle in the outdoor shower, mounted a solar-powered LED motion detection light on the new fence to illuminate both walkways, and painted weathered wood trim under the upper roof.

Wood trim damage way up on the roof. Not something you can see from the ground but I was already on the roof and noticed it. Further to the right is the caulked and painted area for contrast.

So the restful vacation turned into a learning experience with Handyman Summer Camp. I feel proud that we took a storm mess and turned it into a gift of service for Annabelle. The cottage looks much better. I hope she likes it.

Oh, yeah, I did get to go over to the beach on the last day. Water was nice.

One thought on “Handyman Summer Camp

  1. Retirement looks good on you! Hope to see you sometime soon. Let us know when you will be back in town for a get together.

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