Enough of COVID...what are you doing to the house?

Want to get rid of the wood panels at the cottage….either paint them or rip them out to replace with drywall….

Thoughts? If painting how to paint properly? There are ridges on the panels which may not paint well…

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Just remember it’s jamb extensions on all window and door frames to accommodate the half inch of gypsum instead of quarter inch panels . Sure would update the interior


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Want to get rid of the wood panels at the cottage….either paint them or rip them out to replace with drywall….

Thoughts? If painting how to paint properly? There are ridges on the panels which may not paint well…

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Zero percent chance I would paint them. They won't be remotely flat and would look terrible imo. I'd pull it down and use drywall. Good time to add receptacles or insulate bedroom walls too.
 
Zero percent chance I would paint them. They won't be remotely flat and would look terrible imo. I'd pull it down and use drywall. Good time to add receptacles or insulate bedroom walls too.
I was almost thinking I’d like the texture.

Still deciding but need something to ‘open’ up the cottage a bit and update it a bit.
 
I'm not just talking about the grooves. The panels will be wavy. Once you remove the wood grain, you will see the ripples and probably every nail dimple.
Brown furniture is out and probably walls as well. Painting will make a change but I'd be afraid of warping and flaw enhancement as noted by GG.

Drywall adds thickness so all trim needs adjusting including receptacles and switches.
 
Brown furniture is out and probably walls as well. Painting will make a change but I'd be afraid of warping and flaw enhancement as noted by GG.

Drywall adds thickness so all trim needs adjusting including receptacles and switches.
I’m thinking of doing 1 room just to see. If it’s bad then I’ll just rip it all out.

Ceiling is tougher as the minute I remove it all the insulation is coming down.
 
Took down a small chain link fence. Left with six metal posts. Anyone have experience with post pullers?

Good, bad etc.
 
Took down a small chain link fence. Left with six metal posts. Anyone have experience with post pullers?

Good, bad etc.
Don't you have a tractor? I used to use 3 point hitch to lift as it had a lot more jam than the bucket. Are they in concrete or just pounded in? If just pounded in, wobble wobble wobble, pull. A piece of chain and hydraulic jack gives you thousands of pounds of lift for zero additional cost (or storage).
 
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I was almost thinking I’d like the texture.

Still deciding but need something to ‘open’ up the cottage a bit and update it a bit.
Oh ya, capital improvements. Make sure you take pics before and after, bill your dad $100k for the work so he can adjust the cost base, thereby reducing capital gains for the ones who might inherit the place.
 
Oh ya, capital improvements. Make sure you take pics before and after, bill your dad $100k for the work so he can adjust the cost base, thereby reducing capital gains for the ones who might inherit the place.
Wait a second…that may not be a bad idea. Tell me more!
 
Took down a small chain link fence. Left with six metal posts. Anyone have experience with post pullers?

Good, bad etc.

When we first moved into our house we needed a fence for the dog and needed to remove the existing ratty looking chain link fence. To save some cash the fence guy said if I removed the posts it would be a bit cheaper so he lent me a post jack. They were all set in concrete and this thing worked a treat once I had the hang of it. It’s sweaty work but the post jacks work well.
 
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Took down a small chain link fence. Left with six metal posts. Anyone have experience with post pullers?

Good, bad etc.
I used a car jack as mine were pounded in. Just pull out the part that would normally lift the car frame. Mine was held together by spring clips. Lift the jack over the top of the post and clamp something around the post for the jack to lift against.

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If the posts are in concrete drill a hole in them and put a bolt through with some 2X4s either side Have the jack on one side and a suitable block on the the other. Wetting the ground helps.
 
Don't you have a tractor? I used to use 3 point hitch to lift as it had a lot more jam than the bucket. Are they in concrete or just pounded in? If just pounded in, wobble wobble wobble, pull. A piece of chain and hydraulic jack gives you thousands of pounds of lift for zero additional cost (or storage).
Yup was going to use the tractor, but was curious about post pullers as there are areas the tractor won’t work on my property.
 
Want to get rid of the wood panels at the cottage….either paint them or rip them out to replace with drywall….

Thoughts? If painting how to paint properly? There are ridges on the panels which may not paint well…

Do you know what is under the panelling? More times than not panelling like that is covering plaster walls that were in rough shape and of course they are also full of little nail holes now...
 
Do you know what is under the panelling? More times than not panelling like that is covering plaster walls that were in rough shape and of course they are also full of little nail holes now...
Pretty sure it's just the framing and insulation...that's what my dad said anyway. I haven't opened it up.
 
My guess , knowing the build era and that part of wasaga , it’s actual cottage build , studs , wood paneling , minimum insulation.


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I think you're correct.

The insulation is actually damn good within the cottage. Only issue is that the unfinished basement (with warm air going in) doesn't have insulation b/w the basement and the main floor...so the cold permeates into the living space and furnace needs to keep turning on during the winter.

One of my first plans is to insulate the space b/w the joists under the floor to prevent that cold entering in.

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Still debating what to do down there as putting in a bathroom and a place to sleep would do wonders for cottage capacity. But I know it's too low of a ceiling.
 
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