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Hmm, what to get on with…?


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Did a little bit of working from home this morning. Doing some pricing on an electrical mod. Amazing how many things RS discontinue and you have to find alternatives. Waiting for quotes too for specialist parts from the States. Answered a few works emails. Had lunch. Had a beer. Bent up the steel for my lawnmower deck repair. 

 

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@Russell griffiths, thanks again. Yes I have my quote from Anglian Water. Here it is (excluding the infrastructure costs). As they say, its for "approximately 3m x 20mm nbPE (25mm OD) with a 15mm meter connecting on a 5" CI" main pipe.

 

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The access-road surface: yes, a concrete surface (opened once already this year for my electric connection by UKPN).

 

I have in mind to use a local digger and driver from a small family-owned  groundworks company, with a breaker attachment for his digger. I am hoping he will charge me on a day-rate basis for the work.

 

Here's the "GIS", whatever that is, from Anglian Water. It looks like a map for the work to me. I am proposing to do the black dotted-line section, the bit that says "to be laid by customer" now, before getting Cambridge Water to do their bit in the proper road later, the actual connection.

 

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Edited by Dreadnaught
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Well - today I spent a couple of hours fighting the Ivy Monster that is trying to invade through the old wall from next door. That wall is lovely, and full of bees every spring. 

 

(I once had a pile of insulation there removed from a house attic so that we could get 250mm new put in by the Energy Company,  and when the handyman came to collect it to use as Underfloor Insulation in another house he discovered that some bees had moved from the wall to the insulation.).

 

Fortunately a flower lady came past in her van and asked for some of the cuttings - not enough though. Unfortunately her business is going into abeyance from next week.

 

I have enough clippings left for about 2 months of Council Garden bins.

 

What I need now is a systemic weedkiller to put on the new growth in a month's time.

 

And the front border of contrasting shapes and colours planted by mum 6 years ago is developing nicely. 

 

Ferdinand

 

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Edited by Ferdinand
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7 minutes ago, Ferdinand said:

By the way, how does one dispose of a huge pile of ivy clippings?

 

The quantity would probably fill a 3m trailer.


Ferdinand

 

 

I'm with you on that problem. I started pulling ivy out of our neighbouring hedge as it had got top heavy with growth but little on the sides. Managed to get 4 builders bags to the green waste dump before it closed on Monday.

 

Have now filled another 4 bags  - don't really want to burn it but may do in a few months if dump does not re-open.

 

H

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29 minutes ago, Bitpipe said:

 

I'm with you on that problem. I started pulling ivy out of our neighbouring hedge as it had got top heavy with growth but little on the sides. Managed to get 4 builders bags to the green waste dump before it closed on Monday.

 

Have now filled another 4 bags  - don't really want to burn it but may do in a few months if dump does not re-open.

 

H

 

Our council recycling centre is closed, of course.

 

But all of our bin collections, including the garden waste, are still running. Impressed.

Edited by Ferdinand
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Thanks @Russell griffiths. Yes, having the meter some 40m from my plot did seem a bit odd, but the water company doesn't seem mind so I guess its OK.

 

Do you think I can proceed as I described, with the pipe capped pipe buried on the road end, or should the pipe be left protruding above ground?

 

At the plot end, I presume I would just leave a coiled pipe of 20m+ above ground until I get the clearance from the council to start work on site and can dig trenches across the plot.

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8 hours ago, Dreadnaught said:

Scratching my head about what to get on with now that the World has stopped. My timber frame and foundations are being designed as I write. All well there. The council, slow even before Covid-19, has basically now stopped altogether so my submission for discharging-of-planning-conditions has not even been validated after a week. And I don't have permission to start anything as some of the conditions were prior-to-commencement-style conditions.

 

What about digging the service trenches in the access road? It is an ideal time with no traffic. It is a 40-metre water pipe. And two sewer connections (storm and foul). Can I at least get on with those?

 

By the way, is trenching in the access road any concern of building control? The access road is not my property and is not an adopted road. Its not owned by anyone.

(I have not appointed building control as yet as I haven't got my building regs drawings.)

 

Besides trying to move on with some minor works like you mention, I’d be inclined to do full internal design specs and sketches of everything you can., unless it’s already done of corse. 
I do room data sheets for builds. It comprises an A4 size plan layout of every room together with all the wall elevations and EVERYTING you want to build and fit incl furniture is to be shown and detailed, on the plans and elevations.  Even down to paint colours if you can or at least type of paint. I normally draw by hand using graph paper so it’s roughly to scale and doesn’t take too long.
The data sheet Itself ( I do excel spreadsheet) lists walls, floors, ceilings, joinery, M&E and lastly furniture fixtures and equipment (ff&e)  These are used as spec’s, needs and quantities per room. These become “the bible” for your build and will be time well spent during this C19  ‘shut down period’. I’m a couple of months behind you so I’m still value engineering the watertight box and then I’ll move on to my room data sheets. 

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1 hour ago, scottishjohn said:

my favorite addative is old engine oil --burns with very little smoke -

I must try that as every time I go to the local tip, the engine oil recycling tank is perpetually full so I bring it back again.  I have several gallons of the stuff going begging.

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9 minutes ago, ProDave said:

I must try that as every time I go to the local tip, the engine oil recycling tank is perpetually full so I bring it back again.  I have several gallons of the stuff going begging.

used to be  that we got paid for the old oil 

but now they charge us to take it away ,so its quite useful to have a purpose for it now

 

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19 minutes ago, scottishjohn said:

used to be  that we got paid for the old oil 

but now they charge us to take it away ,so its quite useful to have a purpose for it now

 

 

Waste oil burner for the workshop surely? ?

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