Monday, May 4, 2009

SNOW HAS GONE AND SPRING HAS SPRUNG

The porches have railings - posts will be painted next year

Railings from the driveway and an uncovered porch added for the BBQ and laundry line

Another week and lots more accomplished; but Tassy is right that we have to look more closely for the progress – changes are tending to be subtler.

The most obvious additions this week were the porch railings - Jean-Marc built and painted them in his garage and brought them over ready to install. He is now working on the porch screens – none too early as you’ll see from the last picture of this blog edition! FYI - the support posts have been treated so we can’t paint them until next year, and we think we’ll leave the cedar beams ‘au naturel’.

The Duval team have continued to mount window and door moldings as well as many of the baseboards and have laid more flooring as well. The back kitchen door has been installed, and now that the snow is gone, Gilles has been doing a great job cleaning up the site.

The tile is to be delivered this week, and Jean-Marc and I are hoping to make the final choice of stones for the fireplace. Hopefully the rest of the plumbing fixtures will be chosen on Wednesday morning – so we are beginning to really believe we’ll be in residence for the summer.

All quite amazing!

And if this wasn’t all enough – we’ve just sold the house in Montreal to a lovely young couple (occupancy at the beginning of August), so the hunt for duplex-type apartment is on.

We have a real door into the back hall

The second floor hall and stairs are flooded with morning light

Sue and Ric check the view from Kath's bedroom (note the baseboards and moldings around windows and cupboard!)

A nook for a bureau in Mel's bedroom

Screens needed on May 2?

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

SPRING IS COMING!

A great visit and lots of help from Mary Wemp, Jim's wonderful sister

Spring is really coming to Lac des Iles – there are early flowers blooming here and there and the patches of snow are fewer and smaller. In fact, on Sunday, April 26th, the ice was black and into its last gasps with large patches of open water. It was too inviting even on Saturday for our son David, so he had our compound's first swim of the year between the ice floes!

As for the cottage – it was a week of floors, windows and window mouldings – most of which are now stained, installed and looking wonderful. It’s amazing what a difference they make in helping the house feel like a home (in fact, like our home) and it was surprisingly emotional - “an ambush” as Sam Burstein would say.

It was wonderful to have Mary, Jim’s sister, along to help Chantal and me choose tiles for the front hall and basement and to finalize the kitchen design, when we went up at the end of last week to meet with Jean-Marc.

We stopped at Céramique Ital-Nord in Piedmont on our way up and chose sample tiles for the basement and the front entrance. The ground floor ones were a success, but the three basement samples we'd chosen were not. However, when we returned them to the store en route back to Montreal, Chantal found another one that Mary and I agreed might be better. So David, Tassy and I returned to the cottage on Sunday with it, and we all felt that it was the one.

I continued on Sunday to Lac Brule to pick up my dear friend Joy Tutsch who was visiting from Vancouver. She came with me to Barbeau & Garceau in St-Donat. It’s a great family-owned and run home furnishings store with appliances, and had been recommended by Jean-Marc and the Blacks. Having done a ton of research in Montreal and through Consumer Reports, I was ready to order the kitchen appliances, washer and dryer, and all the beds … a fairly overwhelming experience for me and pretty exciting for Pascal, the son of the owner! The appliance prices were better than any I had been offered in Montreal, and B&G will work with Jean-Marc to deliver things when he’s ready for them, which will certainly be helpful for him. The other bonus is that B&G is local, so if and when we need anything serviced, they will be there too make sure it gets done.

View from the tennis court

Sunday, April 26 - The ice is going out - while the back door is in!

Nancy and Mary in front of the newly stained and framed windows in the upstairs hall

Some members of "Team Cottage" showing off the new floors

Tassy checking out a bedroom cupboard with floors and windows done

The bath is ready to be hooked up

Jean-Marc and Chantal discussing the final kitchen plans

Boards for the ground floor are stained and ready to lay

A sign that the end is within reach - the thermostats are in!

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

DRIVEWAY FACADE IS ALMOST FINISHED

Note that Di is back in training!


It's been another busy week for the Duval crew at the cottage.

The Blakelies joined Dave, Tassy and Nancy last Sunday for a "Jean-Marc" guided tour of the progress. The clapboard is up on the driveway side of the house and the front door porch is close to being finished. They've painted and installed the tongue and groove ceiling in the living room and dining room, and the electricity and furnace are in and ready to go.

But almost best of all is that the sun been shining, the snow is melting and the sap is flowing - so it won't be long until we'll all be back at the Lake and visiting on each other's docks.

Tongue and groove ceiling is up - beams to come

Floor boards for the downstairs waiting to be stained

Some of the 2nd story floor boards ready for staining in Nancy's room

The chimney for the hybrid electric/wood furnace is ready for clapboard

Monday, April 13, 2009

THE CLAPBOARD IS ALMOST ALL UP

Easter Saturday - the perfect moment for a sense of back to the future

Kath and Nancy went to the Lake on Easter Saturday and were thrilled to find that most of the clapboard is up. All that is left to finish is the driveway side of the cottage, and as you can see from the pictures, the Duval crew is currently hard at work doing that. It is complicated somewhat by the fact that it involves building a small covered porch at the front door. That door, by the by, is where the dining room table used to be. There is now a small vestibule with access to the basement stairs.

Meanwhile, all the flooring planks are stacked here and there throughout the house and are ready to be stained and installed. We’ve included a picture with a sample stain colour which gives a pretty true idea of the colour.

I will be meeting with Jean-Marc in Mirabel on Thursday to look at more fireplace stones and then going to a tile place in St-Jerome where we’ll hopefully find the flooring for the vestibule and kitchen hallway. Bathroom fixtures are pretty much decided upon as is the design for the kitchen – so great progress as we head into Spring.

Belated happy Easter and Passover wishes to everyone from all the Wrights.















Clapboard going up on the driveway side

Jean-Marc helping us visualize the roof over the small front door porch

Stacks of flooring boards everywhere

An idea of the colour of the stain for the floors, doors, windows and moldings

Monday, April 6, 2009

MORE AND MORE LIKE HOME


Waiting for the field stone

Friday, in the pours of rain, Nancy drove up to Ste-Agathe to choose the type of stones to be used for the fireplace. She met the fireplace mason and Jean-Marc (who had brought Sue Garland along to provide support and a second opinion) at the stone supplier. After much scrambling through slush and climbing over snow banks we decided on just the “right” sort of stone – not too grey, not too dark and properly bumpy – in short, as much like the stones of the old fireplace as possible. Unfortunately I did not have my camera along on the stone hunt, but at least there's a picture of my fellow stone hunter with the fireplace skeleton.

CLAPBOARD IS GOING ON

View from the McEntyre's road

Sue and I drove back to her house via the cottage. With the black trim all on and the siding going up at a great rate, the house is looking more and more like home. As you can see from the top picture, the mason has built the fireplace skeleton, and the tongue-and-groove is up in the kitchen and bathrooms, so it is getting easier to imagine what the finished house will look like.

Bless Sue, when she discovered I hadn’t had lunch, she insisted on giving me a quick cup of soup, and then packed a bagel with cream cheese to go, as I had to rush back to town to show the Kensington house to a prospective buyer. It is on the market privately until next Friday, and if it hasn’t sold by then (though there are three couples interested), it will be listed by Re/Max the following Tuesday. So please keep your fingers crossed!


Clapboard and trim outside the dining room


Tongue-and-groove in the kitchen

Thursday, March 26, 2009

ECHOES OF THE PAST


Driveway view-March 22


Lake view-March 22

The pictures say it all: the outside of the cottage (with the black trim and the roofing detail on) is emitting stronger-than-ever echoes of the old house. The white clapboard has arrived and will be added over the next week or two and then it will likely resonate even more.




Roof detail


Framing on the kitchen-porch door


MORE WONDERFUL VISITORS



It was huge fun for Nancy, David, Tassy and Jean-Marc (Edmond too) to share all the progress with Sue and Bill, who were up from Bermuda for a week and also with Asha Jalan (Nancy’s goddaughter) this last weekend. Asha had come from Ottawa where she’s working with IRDA, while Melanie and Andrew were with Asha’s parents, Ram and Sudha, and her brother Rishi on a weekend road-trip in Ooty, India!


THE INSIDE PROGRESS INCLUDES OUR FIRST OCCUPANT


The first tenant can't wait for Tara Sackett to arrive!

Équipe Duval has been extremely busy at Lac des Iles over the past couple of weeks –inside as well as outside the cottage. There has been an enormous amount of activity indoors too – plastering, adding the wall slats, sanding and generally preparing for and then doing an enormous amount of painting. As you can see from the pictures below, that was pretty much finished this week. Next will come the door and window moldings and baseboards. And also this week, the mason is beginning to work on the fireplace.

The furnace is pretty much installed and ready to go. It’s taken more space than we’d originally thought it would – and is not quite as neatly tucked away as we’d hoped. This means that getting the wood into the house for the wood-burning part of the furnace will be a bit more complicated than planned. No serious worries, though. Jean-Marc is finding ways for us to get around it: he never has problems – merely new challenges! (And talking of new and/or unexpected challenges, we are all delighted to hear that Jean-Marc's surgery last Sunday went without a hitch and we are wishing him a quick recovery.)


Nancy and Asha have subsequently spent hours at Reno, Home Depot and the like, checking out all manner of plumbing supplies. Who knew that there were so many pros and cons around toilets, faucets, basins, showers and baths and that one could end up caring so much? Meanwhile, I'm including a picture of the wonderful salvaged bathtub on claws that has been bought, restored and delivered.



Ground floor details - giving an idea of the wall colour


François preparing the stairwell to the second floor


Jean-Marc's detailed drawing of the molding for the window frames


Edmond inspecting the refurbished salvaged bathtub

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

MORE PROGRESS

A road that will hopefully disappear almost as fast as it was created!

Last week, a 600-pound hybrid electric-wood furnace was delivered – a remarkable feat that involved plowing a special road down the McEntyre side of the house so that it could be delivered to the basement door. We will certainly need some creative landscaping come the spring. There weren't complaints to be heard, though, as the furnace actually made it into the house and is ready to be put into place and hooked up.

Meanwhile, the the inside walls are almost all ready to be painted. We’ve decided on the lighting for the kitchen, and we’re working on detailed kitchen cupboard and counter plans. With Chantale’s help, decisions are being made fast and furiously about what furniture from Montreal will go where and what else we need to find. The fireplace mason is to begin work this week. And, we have chosen a rough spruce white clapboard and black framing for the exterior of the house – it will have very much the same look that it had – and work on that is to start this week too!

All very exciting and totally overwhelming.


The wood loading end of the electric/wood furnace


Jean-Marc and Dave working on the electrical plans for the kitchen


Jean-Marc with his copy of our very efficient front-door key

VIOLET'S ARRIVAL AND NANCY'S BIRTHDAY WEEKEND


On February 27th, Patrick and Daniela blessed our family with another girl, Victoria May, a little sister for Adrian and Juliet, and a playmate for Lac des Iles’ other very recent newborns – Nicolas Rutledge (Jamie and Rossana Rutledge) and Jacob Wright (Caroline Black and Anthony Wright).

KATHLEEN GETS TO VISIT!


David and Tassy graciously waited until March 1st to race off to Toronto to meet Violet because they were hosting a birthday celebration for Nancy on Feb 28th. Kathleen came for the party and the chance to visit the new house for the first time since Thanksgiving. They invited a wonderful group of friends to come for dinner and most (we were missing the Tees) joined us for a tour of the house the next day.


sKate (aka Sue) on the newly built basement stairs


Graeme checking the view from the screened-in/dining porch


Gathering in the living room - with the kitchen beyond