Terrick down Under
Well-known member
I said it before, and I'll say it again...."you are doing a great job, keep it up!"

Just a gentle safety note...watch the horse shoes with your extension leads, a friend of mine had a real heart starter when he plugged his in after the horse had turned on its hoof.
Few days off, so will get some strapping done, before I put the sheets on the office side. Was up at 0500, and watched the sunrise from my lounge. Fantastic weather at the moment compared to the storms happening down south. Hope all is well with those caught in the storms. Just a reminder why we love it up here in paradise!
Cheers,
Ken
Although I have met Australians all over the world my only hands on, so to speak, experience with Australia proper was a ten day Sidney R&R from Vietnam 48 years ago. So, other than King's Cross, which is fuzzy in my mind, my perception of Australia is mostly that big monolithic rock in the middle of nowhere, a picture of which seems to be on the cover of everything written about the place.
So, when you said you live north of Cairns and south of Port Douglas I felt compelled to check that out on Google Maps. That stretch of your coast actually looks quite "lovely" in the satellite photographic overlays. "Lovely" being an adjective Australians in my presence have used to describe everything from a flat tire to a slice of toast with jam and butter (I hope I have used it properly here).
More seriously, you really live in a special place. Gold Coast, Great Barrier Reef, semi-tropical climate and access to the best that modern society has to offer. A destination for more ordinary people who want to get away from it all without going to far from a cell phone tower.
I've drifted a bit from the brain fart that triggered this post. But I want you and the other Aussies here to know that I really enjoy your posts and threads about your garages, shops, and life in that upside down place called Oz.

Good morning Ken. I'm sure you are not getting the weather we are here as you are about to begin winter. But in the last photo, it doesn't look like it too cold there. What breed of horses do you have? It's hard to tell from the head shots.

It has been a while since I updated. Have been working a lot of overtimes, which has worked out, as the rain has not stopped for the dry season. Would have been much simpler and quicker if I did not apply insulation under the iron. Any breeze and it was a nightmare to hold in place.
Working by myself takes exponentially longer as everything has to be done to my pace. Even moving (taking down, and re erecting) scaffolding is difficult by myself.
Just this morning I finished the roof on the office side of the shed. All roofing is now done!! Still have guttering, and fascia's to install, but will enclose before that happens.
Plan on welding on cleats today for the floor joists on the mezzanine level today and tomorrow. Have some other welds to do before I start on timber framing between the steel for the walls.
Need to order doors, and windows yet, but will get them ordered soon.
Cheers,
Ken
Ken, prospecting is another thing that I can really enjoy there is just something about it that you can't explain in words.
Great progress on the shed.
Regards
Hey 1/2 Cup,
Just love getting away and having a scratch around. Some good gold fields not too far from me. My wife is from Castlemaine, and still has family there and in Bendigo. Her father even worked in the Long Gully gold mine for 30+ years.
Have never had a chance to take the detector down and have a look in Victoria.
Lived in Melbourne for over 20 years, but never found the time to head to the gold fields down there.
Cheers,
Ken
Progressing nicely Ken, can visualise the layout more now that floors and walls are going in.
My 2 cents is to keep the yellow tongue dry from rain blowing in if you can so the edges don't swell up on it. If they do it's no biggie as a belt sander will sort it but is just a pain to have to do it.
Cheers GB.
Not to mention the cross bracing. Yes that is what the engineer designed!!