Calling It a Day

I feel like I didn’t get anything done today because the flooring in the dressing room still isn’t in. That said, I haven’t be sitting around!

The weather was beautiful so I took everything out of my large pass-through compartment, set aside things I want to donate, and then loaded up one of my large RubberMaid tubs with all my cold weather gear. While gathering all of that together, I made up another bag of things to donate. I then reloaded the pass-through and came inside to tackled the floors.

This project has officially turned into a nightmare. πŸ™‚ It is a huge job to get as neat an edge as possible near the walls. I have to pry up a board, snap it as close to the wall as possible, and then use a hammer and chisel to reduce the protruding edge to splinters that I pull out with pliers. It’s a small and awkward space to work in and I am so sore from twisting my body into a position from which to inflict maximum damage on the wood. My dad’s chisels are getting quite a workout!

did you know that in French chisels are called ‘wood scissors’?

Tomorrow, I will focus on getting that floor done and then move on to finishing up my study.

I also have some furniture shopping to do, but I think I will need to go to Nanaimo for that. Do you have any idea how hard it is to find an affordable lingerie chest in Campbell River? And how many people don’t know what such a thing is? It’s a tall, skinny dresser. Guess where I’m going to be putting it.

New Allure Flooring in the Study

What. A. Day.

Laying floor is a lot easier when your home is empty. I tried to pile stuff as out of the way as I could, but it was really hard. I don’t have that much stuff, but it didn’t feel like that at all today!

First thing I did was move everything to the passenger side of the study. I laid two planks and then reality hit me like a ton of bricks. I couldn’t do the floor in the study without pulling up the flooring in the dressing room. That’s what took the better part of the day. The middle planks came up easily, but the edges were a nightmare to deal with since they went under walls, the vanity, the shower… My strategy ended up being using a chisel to score the wood, a pry bar to snap the board as close to the edge as possible, and then a combination of the chisel and pliers to get as smooth an edge as possible. I pulled up only as much floor as I needed to get the study done and will continue tomorrow.

Even with all that effort, I’m glad I pulled up that wood floor. It had reached its peak. There was water damage right through to the subfloor near the shower. Nothing major, but I could see how water had infiltrated. I also found a speckling of mould behind the trim along the base of the shower. Yup, this was one major project that I can completely justify.

Once the floor in the study was done, I had the desk left. My initial idea isn’t going to work. I had wanted to simply cut out a notch in the top to accommodate the little pop out in the corner, but the way the desk is built won’t allow that without major work on my part. For that much effort, I’d rather go out and buy a little secretary or something. I decided to just reassemble the desk with a gap between it and the wall and then sleep on the problem since I have to do a couple of hours of work tonight.

Allure is incredibly easy to install. What I love most about it is that all you need to cut it is a sharp knife and a metal straight edge. You can get down on your hands and knees with a plank and a piece of paper to use a as a template (see below) and do all your cutting and fitting right there.

The only thing that’s really finicky about it is that it attracts dust since the planks are held together with a glue strip. Since I left the dressing room half done, I had to lay down wax paper (provided in the the box) to cover all the glue strips and then weigh that all down to keep the cats off it.

I’m pretty pleased with how the installation turned out. The wood look wound up being more forgiving than the tile. I found some edges aren’t quite tight enough, but I’ve never seen a wood floor without gaps so I figure the small imperfections make the vinyl look even more like real wood.

Tomorrow, I’m going to focus on getting the computer area buttoned up and then take advantage of the promised sunshine to get a mountain of stuff out of the rig. That should free up enough space for me to finish up the dressing room floor on Thursday and start on the kitchen. Having used a box and a half already, I can tell that my flooring budget is going to go through the roof (my estimates are now seven boxes), so I’ve decided that painting is definitely not going to happen in Campbell River. That’s okay, the climate’s not right for it anyway.

All you need is Allure flooring, a metal straight edge, a sharp knife (with lots of blades), and pliers (not shown). Kneepads are a nice luxury. :)

All you need is Allure flooring, a metal straight edge, a sharp knife (with lots of blades), and pliers (not shown). Kneepads are a nice luxury. πŸ™‚

First strip. I made the right choice. :)

First strip. I made the right choice. πŸ™‚

Getting the measurements for a short strip.

Getting the measurements for a short strip.

Using the template and straight edge to ensure a straight cut.

Using the template and straight edge to ensure a straight cut.

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The planks were held with these little tacks. I didn't even need tools to rip up the middle ones.

The planks were held with these little tacks. I didn’t even need tools to rip up the middle ones.

Pulling up the middle part was easy.

Pulling up the middle part was easy.

Good shot of the gap between the floor and the bottom of the wall.

Good shot of the gap between the floor and the bottom of the wall.

Crossing into the dressing room.

Crossing into the dressing room.

ALL DONE!!! Well, in the study.

ALL DONE!!! Well, in the study.

Gap between the wall and the desk.

Gap between the wall and the desk.

Examining the Hardwood

Whew. Tonight’s project took me close to an hour and you’d never know it.

Before going at the floor with a pry bar, I wanted to know what I was dealing with. Was it a floating floor? Was it lying on the same level subfloor as the previously-carpeted rooms? Did it have some sort of underlay?

What I did was use a chisel to carefully remove a top layer of floor, roughly 2″ by 4″ in a discreet corner. I made this piece as neat as possible so that it could be replaced if I got to the subfloor and decided that the hardwood was staying. I then chiseled one thin layer of wood after another until I got to a stiff plastic opaque vapour barrier. Under that, I found the same subfloor as in the study.

I’m therefore good to go for the removal of the hardwood. It still feels SO wrong, but it really is the right decision in the long run.

The biggest difficulty is that motorhome walls are the last thing to be installed, so the hardwood runs under the walls. I will have to use a combination of chisel and pry bar to remove those boards, but the boards in the middle of the room will come apart with a minimum of fuss.

The forecast is for sun all of my weekend (Tuesday through Thursday) and if this holds I will be SO happy!!! I’m going to do like last week and push up my bedtime to get up early enough to add several hours of sunlight to my day. I’d like to have all three boxes of flooring installed by Wednesday night, which should take me to the kitchen. I’ve decided to not go with my usual habit of doing trim last and instead doing the trim as I go along. There’s no point reusing any existing trim as it is all a weird hodgepodge of materials and sizes. I plan to go with a uniform style in wood. Most of the trim now is cardboard, which makes no sense in wet rooms!

There’s no time to waste. I am expected in Dawson three months from today!

Pulling Up the Old Allure Flooring

Tonight, I pulled up the Allure flooring I installed a year and a half ago. It felt horrible to do so in that the flooring was in perfect shape, but I am so sick of it! I remember why I picked it at the time, and still think the reasons were valid, but that floor was not meant to last the ten or so years I intend to spend in Miranda.

The Allure came up easily. It’s a floating floor so I didn’t have to wrestle with tacks or anything, but the tabs joining the slats were as sticky as ever. I ended up pulling them apart with pliers to save my hands. It took me about an hour and a half to lay that floor and ten minutes to throw it in the garbage. Oh, what a consumerist society we live in. Guilty as charged.

The underfloor still looks good, but I need to get rid of the remaining carpet tacks from the left side of the room.

That little bit of carpet, about 1’x2′, took me an hour to remove this morning!

With the bedframe out of the way, I have an almost perfectly rectangular room measuring 37 square feet (not counting the space at the back where the mattress is). It feels huge!!!

I’ve been trying to guess how many boxes of Allure I’m going to need this time around and the answer is going to be ‘more than I thought.’ Shoot. Each box is 24 square feet. Last time, I did both the study and the lounge with three boxes. I calculated that I’d need at most five to compensate for the extra square footage in both rooms and to throw in the kitchen and dressing room. I think I’ll need at least six. At any rate, I have three boxes on hand and will see how far I get with them.

Laying the new floors is going to present me withΒ  new challenges since it won’t be like laying out the tile-type flooring. I’ll need to stagger the planks and I’ll also have to lay them out lengthwise. I remember laying the floor in my house with my dad the same way. We started in one corner of the house and couldn’t do just one room at a time as our planks would eventually reach a door and spill into the next room. It’s much easier to do one room at a time and add thresholds between the rooms, but I also remember how much easier it was to sweep a smooth surface from one end to the other. I’ll therefore have to start pulling up the hardwood in the dressing room before I can start laying out the Allure in the study. I have no idea yet what sort of job that’s going to be.

Another challenge will be that the rig is not empty. A good installation of Allure needs to be dust free and that’s going to be pretty much impossible to achieve this time around. I’m going to make sure the study and dressing room are as clean as I can make them, then kick the cats out into the front part of the rig. Thank goodness for doors!

One thing will make this job easier than laying out the tile look, however: no grout marks to line up. I made a couple of small mistakes with the original floors and they bugged the heck out of me although the casual observer would probably not notice them.

Finally, knowing that the corner I intend to start with is 100% square will greatly help me get a good start on the project since I won’t have to spend time figuring out how to get a straight first row.

Well, it’s already three and instead of doing like yesterday and going to sleep at 6AM (a bit much, even for me!) because I’m so wound up, I’m going to go take a hot bubble bath. Housesitting does have its perks over RV park life. πŸ™‚

No Fear

I hate those blogs that have music playing when you load the page. But if I were ever to fall prey to that sort of insanity, the song that you’d hear would be Terri Clark’s ‘No Fear.’ I discovered this song about a week into my adventure and have been testing it out over that time. Tonight, I’ve decided to declare it the official English anthem of Travels With Miranda and to share it with my readers.