Our massive building project, Part Two
Shortly after we had our trenches (for water and electric lines) backfilled to the depth needed for the underground electric wire, the electrician we'd hired to run a new electric line from the box on the front of our house--where service comes in, underground, from the utility pole out in the field--to my barn came. In one afternoon he and his crew of two other people installed an electric panel (aka breaker box) in my barn, then ran the electric wire through conduit laid in the trench DH and I had dug. DH watched carefully how the electrician pulled the wire through all that conduit (more than 100'), so that later, when his barn was built, we could DIY an underground electric line from the panel in my barn over to a panel he would install in his barn. It involved string, a plastic grocery bag, and a shop vac. (More on that in a future post about his barn/shop).
Then the electrician put a breaker into the panel in my barn, hooked in the new electric line, installed an outlet next to the panel, and voila! I now had electricity in my barn. That outlet was put to use later that week, when the builder we'd hired to do the setting of the poles, trusses and sheeting the roof of DH's barn/shop arrived and got to work.
DH was super excited the day the builder arrived to mark the corners square and drill the holes for setting the posts. Being as we were hiring out only some of the construction, and doing the rest ourselves, DH was the one who had dealt with the local lumber company and had ordered all the lumber, steel sheeting, etc from them. They had made a large delivery the day before our builder was scheduled to begin. This would be the quick part: having someone else get the frame up. Once the bones of the building were done, it would be our turn to do the rest (except concrete) and we knew that would take quite a bit longer as we are a) older and b) have other daytime jobs we have to do.
Well, the first few holes went fairly well. The ground was really hard and dry (and clay, ugh the clay), but the builder was able to drill them out with a very large auger attached to his skid steer. The rest, though, needed to be well watered and soaked overnight because the clay was just too dang hard.
That happened to be an afternoon that I was babysitting Faline, and after making a run to the processor to pick up the batch of broilers I'd had processed that morning, I just brought her back to my house for the rest of the day. After the builder left early -- once he'd watered all those holes there wasn't anything else he could work on--DH took Faline over to check them out.