Ouch that hurts and delays the completion. But it is the bit of "sweat equity" for working on the shed. And he gets to tell a story!
He said it never hurt but the ED doc numbed it up before he started sewing. Doc gave me a suture removal kit and more "super glue" to take the stitches out in about 10 days. Before I grabbed them, I also got s few sets of hemostats that came in the laceration kit. Stuff that would have just got tossed in a Sharps container. . . free tools.
Shed look great!!! That's no fun with the ED.. I think I'd load up the JD and use it to hold up the door.
Step-dad asked if I was going to bring the JD over to raise the door. Probably not, but it's a thought.
Full disclosure here. The building may look great but I truly screwed up in the beginning. I tossed a level on the RR ties when I started, they didn't look bad. Let me tell you, they are unlevel and out of whack. It shows in the finished build. I'm not proud of the finished project but I made do with what I had to work with.
I wish they would have talked concrete in the very beginning. I could have pulled the ties away, formed up and poured a small monolithic pour. It would have been flat and square rather than working off a 40 year RR tie foundation. However, I'm positive it'll last as long as the old one if not a few decades more. It just needs the ties to last and if they need replaced, I'll be doing that if we buy my parents place if/when the time comes.