We have been thinking about getting a dog for some time now, this week we did it.
Our new baby is a two and a half year old Catahoula Leopard x named Ash, she came to us from the SPCA.
We know very little about her background, but she is very well behaved, obeys instructions and doesn't bark. She responds very well to June and our grandson Jordan but is quite timid with me suggesting she may have had some bad experiences at the hands of males in the past. After just two days she is beginning to warm to me.
We had never heard of the Catahoula Leopard before; they are from the Catahoula Parish of Louisiana, and are dogs descended from Native American-created breeds. They are one of the longest surviving North American breeds.
We are very happy to give Ash a new home, after only 2 days she is very much at home with us.
Friday, August 13, 2010
Friday, August 6, 2010
Attacking the rodents
We have begun poisioning the rodents around the house, We have not had any problems but we want to reduce the rat population to improve the chances of birds nesting over the next few months.
We have manufactured 11 bait stations using 100mm drain flow left over from the house build. I cut 500mm sections then used a hole saw to cut a 80mm hole near the centre. A further 11 100mm lengths were cut and about 1/4 cut from the side to make lids that clip easily over the centre hole.
We have placed 6 bait stations on the other side of the stream spaced out between the container thru to the quarry, the remaining 5 are spaced evenly along the south boundary.
Bait station with the lid removed before adding more bait.
Bait station nestled in the bush.
We went through $65 of rat bait in the first week, since then we have started using possum bait which has the same active ingredient but is 1/3 the cost. The rats didn't seem to mind the difference.
Three weeks on, the consumption of bait is starting to reduce so we must be having an impact on the rat population. We will need to keep up poisening the rats because all we are creating is a small vacuum in the rat population which will continue to be replenished by the surrounding rat populations.
We have manufactured 11 bait stations using 100mm drain flow left over from the house build. I cut 500mm sections then used a hole saw to cut a 80mm hole near the centre. A further 11 100mm lengths were cut and about 1/4 cut from the side to make lids that clip easily over the centre hole.
We have placed 6 bait stations on the other side of the stream spaced out between the container thru to the quarry, the remaining 5 are spaced evenly along the south boundary.
Bait station with the lid removed before adding more bait.
Bait station nestled in the bush.
We went through $65 of rat bait in the first week, since then we have started using possum bait which has the same active ingredient but is 1/3 the cost. The rats didn't seem to mind the difference.
Three weeks on, the consumption of bait is starting to reduce so we must be having an impact on the rat population. We will need to keep up poisening the rats because all we are creating is a small vacuum in the rat population which will continue to be replenished by the surrounding rat populations.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Warm as toast
So far the house has been cosy warm, an early indication that having lots of north facing windows and good insulation makes a big difference. The picture shows the midday sun streaming into the family room heating the insulated floor slab.
We haven't had any really cold days yet but early indications are we will be very comfortable.
We have added another couple of channels to the temperature data logging; the floor slab and the roof space.
Above is the graph of the past 7 days.
Blue is the inside temp; averaging about 21, max about 24 and min about 18 deg.
Green is the floor slab, hovering around 19 to 20 deg.
Cyan in the temperature in the roof space; peaking at almost 35 deg on the sunniest day the dropping to the same as the outside temp (red) during the night.
The green green grass of home
The new grass has really got established thanks to the mild wet weather we have been having. June mowed it last weekend for the first time.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
The logging has begun
No, not with a chainsaw.
We have begun recording temperatures, two sensors to begin with; inside and outside, but there are many more to come. Future sensors will record the temperature of the floor slab, attic, solar hot water collectors, under floor water heating system, wetback etc.
The underfloor heating won't be commissioned this winter so we will have a base year of data to compare the improvements it makes
The top line is the inside temp; the peaks near 30 deg were sunny days with the house closed up; lots of yummy solar gain.
For the technically minded: I am using the Maxim 1-Wire devices to record the temperature. These sensors are connected together using 1 wire plus a return wire, so 2 wires really. Each sensor has its own unique address allowing them all to be connected in parallel so wiring is easy.
I'm using DS18S20: 1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital Thermometer sensors connected to a DS9490: USB to 1-Wire/iButton Adapter which interfaces the sensors to the old PC I'm using to record the data. I chose 1-Wire products because they are cheap and easy to use. The sensors cost about $8 each and the USB interface about $60. More data on these devices can be found at http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/1-wire/
The best program I could find was LogTemp, although there are numerous others available and best of all most of them are free. I chose LogTemp because it was simple, does everything I require and much much more and runs in windows (many are for Linux). The setup was very sinple connect sensor to USB interface, load drivers for the USB interface from here http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/ibutton/software/tmex/index.cfm and down load LogTemp from here http://www.mrsoft.fi/ohj01en.htm.
The power consumption of the computer used to record the data is a consideration because it needs to run 24/7. Ideally I would use an old laptop set to its lowest power settings but in the meantime I'm using an old 500MHz Pentium II running Windows98. This consumes about 45W normally but by turning off the hard drive this reduces to more respectable 21W. The shortest delay to turn off the hard drive is 3 minuits, I'm making measurements at 15 minuite intervals, so the average is about 26W. I plan to try logging to a USB memory stick so the hard drive will never need to run.
If any one is interested in setting up their own data logger I'm happy to talk you through what I've done, contact me at m.fendall@xtra.co.nz.
Post script 10/5/10
Running the logging software and logging to a USB drive does not prevent the hard disk from starting as I had hoped. If anyone out there has an old laptop, even one with a stuffed battery, screen or keyboard, I would be pleased to put it into service as a data logger.
Cheers Mark
We have begun recording temperatures, two sensors to begin with; inside and outside, but there are many more to come. Future sensors will record the temperature of the floor slab, attic, solar hot water collectors, under floor water heating system, wetback etc.
The underfloor heating won't be commissioned this winter so we will have a base year of data to compare the improvements it makes
The top line is the inside temp; the peaks near 30 deg were sunny days with the house closed up; lots of yummy solar gain.
For the technically minded: I am using the Maxim 1-Wire devices to record the temperature. These sensors are connected together using 1 wire plus a return wire, so 2 wires really. Each sensor has its own unique address allowing them all to be connected in parallel so wiring is easy.
I'm using DS18S20: 1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital Thermometer sensors connected to a DS9490: USB to 1-Wire/iButton Adapter which interfaces the sensors to the old PC I'm using to record the data. I chose 1-Wire products because they are cheap and easy to use. The sensors cost about $8 each and the USB interface about $60. More data on these devices can be found at http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/1-wire/
The best program I could find was LogTemp, although there are numerous others available and best of all most of them are free. I chose LogTemp because it was simple, does everything I require and much much more and runs in windows (many are for Linux). The setup was very sinple connect sensor to USB interface, load drivers for the USB interface from here http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/ibutton/software/tmex/index.cfm and down load LogTemp from here http://www.mrsoft.fi/ohj01en.htm.
The power consumption of the computer used to record the data is a consideration because it needs to run 24/7. Ideally I would use an old laptop set to its lowest power settings but in the meantime I'm using an old 500MHz Pentium II running Windows98. This consumes about 45W normally but by turning off the hard drive this reduces to more respectable 21W. The shortest delay to turn off the hard drive is 3 minuits, I'm making measurements at 15 minuite intervals, so the average is about 26W. I plan to try logging to a USB memory stick so the hard drive will never need to run.
If any one is interested in setting up their own data logger I'm happy to talk you through what I've done, contact me at m.fendall@xtra.co.nz.
Post script 10/5/10
Running the logging software and logging to a USB drive does not prevent the hard disk from starting as I had hoped. If anyone out there has an old laptop, even one with a stuffed battery, screen or keyboard, I would be pleased to put it into service as a data logger.
Cheers Mark
Monday, April 26, 2010
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Friday, April 16, 2010
Play tme

Me having a go on the neighbour's 20 tonne digger last Sunday.
It was fun, could do better with practise, I'll stick to my normal job in the meantime.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
More fill for the quarry
Before we finished the front lawn we had 7 truckloads of clay delivered to the quarry courtesy of our generous neighbour, Rodney. He spread the bulk of the fill and I finished it off with the tractor. June seen here inspecting my handiwork. I only got the tractor stuck once.
The extra fill will give us a firm base over the entire area, up untill now we couldn't mow anywhere near the stream without getting bogged down. If the whole area is mowable it will be much easier to look after.
It would be nice to spread some top soil and plant some grass but that will need to wait till the spring now.
It was pleasing to see our earthworks haven't adversly affected the stream life. Looking along the stream last night I saw numerous fresh water crayfish in the area where we have been working.
The extra fill will give us a firm base over the entire area, up untill now we couldn't mow anywhere near the stream without getting bogged down. If the whole area is mowable it will be much easier to look after.
It would be nice to spread some top soil and plant some grass but that will need to wait till the spring now.
It was pleasing to see our earthworks haven't adversly affected the stream life. Looking along the stream last night I saw numerous fresh water crayfish in the area where we have been working.
Wind blown dust and dirt
Aka getting the ground levelled and grass seed planted.Grant the digger driver finished off by leaving around 50-100mm of top soil around the house. All except where we will be laying paving or building decks.
It was our job to level the top soil, rake out any stones and finally plant grass seed.
once again our 45year old international tractor pays for itself.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Finishing the ground work around the house
Finally Grant has been able to come back and finish contouring the ground around the house.
Finally the top soil. We will do the final leveling.
Finally the top soil. We will do the final leveling.
Friday, April 2, 2010
More insulation for the floor slab
I've attached 70mm polystyrene to the outside edge of the floor slab using polystyrene left over from the build.
The majority of heat loss from the floor slab will be through the outside edges, 70mm of poly should reduce this considerably. The poly will be in contact with the ground so won't last indefinately but a couple of coats of sealer (more left overs) should extend its life greatly.
The majority of heat loss from the floor slab will be through the outside edges, 70mm of poly should reduce this considerably. The poly will be in contact with the ground so won't last indefinately but a couple of coats of sealer (more left overs) should extend its life greatly.
Time for a catch up
Since moving in we have been very busy, heres a few pics of what weve been up to.
Dontay helping set the trap
Caught our first rodent
Unfortumately we caught a Hawk as well, thank fully he flew away after taking a while to recover.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
We have moved in......
The lack of posts lately is because we have been so busy finishing the painting and getting things finished.
The plumber finally came last Thursday and fitted all the taps and toilets. On Sunday we moved in, although we still don't have the electrical completed it is amazing how well you can live with multi-outlet boxes and heaps of extiension cords, a bit like luxury camping. We still go back to the other house for hot showers.
Our focus now is finishing off all the electrical. The sooner we have power the better. Luke started sorting out the switch board today and I am concentrating on fitting all the remaining lights and power points. It would be great to have the power connected by the weekend but I'm not holding my breath. Meantime June has been making numerous trips back to the old house sorting and shifting all the remaining stuff.
We had the phone and broadband shifted over today, hence this post. We will take some photos and try to give updates more frequently again.
The plumber finally came last Thursday and fitted all the taps and toilets. On Sunday we moved in, although we still don't have the electrical completed it is amazing how well you can live with multi-outlet boxes and heaps of extiension cords, a bit like luxury camping. We still go back to the other house for hot showers.
Our focus now is finishing off all the electrical. The sooner we have power the better. Luke started sorting out the switch board today and I am concentrating on fitting all the remaining lights and power points. It would be great to have the power connected by the weekend but I'm not holding my breath. Meantime June has been making numerous trips back to the old house sorting and shifting all the remaining stuff.
We had the phone and broadband shifted over today, hence this post. We will take some photos and try to give updates more frequently again.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Floor Coverings
All of the floor coverings are now in place and the house is starting to look complete.
The tiles in front of the kitchen units have been installed to capture the
heat from the winter sun to keep us warm.
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Painting, painting and more painting
Its been a busy time during the xmas break so far, the lack of posts is because the changes are no longer so dramatic.
Since the last post we have been focussed on painting, we are almost there; only the bathrooms, laundry and toilet to complete.
The target is to have everything finished and ready for the carpet on the 8th.
We have also started fitting a few light fittings, I have connected one toilet and the laundry tub, and we have brought up some basic furniture, so we are pretty comfortable.
Since the last post we have been focussed on painting, we are almost there; only the bathrooms, laundry and toilet to complete.
The target is to have everything finished and ready for the carpet on the 8th.
We have also started fitting a few light fittings, I have connected one toilet and the laundry tub, and we have brought up some basic furniture, so we are pretty comfortable.
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