Yea we are ready to get it done, lots of stuff to still get pricing on, doing extras since we are our own GC. Everything cost lots of money.
You’re still doing it right being your own GC though. You’re more in the drivers seat so too speak.Yea we are ready to get it done, lots of stuff to still get pricing on, doing extras since we are our own GC. Everything cost lots of money.
The contractor doing the log dry in was behind, his subs were behind, nothing you can do but wait.
Not knowing anything about home building, but a thing or two about business, is it possible to include service level agreement penalties in contracts? E.g. Material delivered on mm/dd. SLA penalty of -2% total invoice deduction per day thereafter?
I am sure it is possible, but there is so much business and so few contractors, why would a contractor sign such a contract? The builder that is doing our dry in is booked through the end of next year and now beyond. If you don’t want to wait, get out of line, the next person will.
Now this might also be because the he builder we are using only does log cabins, and I am sure there are not many people around with his level of expertise, knowledge, and experience. Sadly there are fewer and fewer craftsmen learning trades today.
Looks GREAT so far! Is that a kit or are they cutting logs on-site?
Here’s a couple of tips that I don’t know if you’re aware of or not: the sun will make the stain on the logs fade, so you’ll need to have them stained every five years or so. They do make a stain that has insecticide in it. However, it won’t help with carpenter bees...you can get carpenter bee traps online. You’ll be surprised how fast the jars fill up. Also, if you decide to caulk, do both the inside and outside...we had a couple of leaks when there was wind driven rain and since we had it caulked, no more leaks. It only takes a small crevice for the water to find its way in. Looks like it’s coming along nicely.
Here’s a couple of tips that I don’t know if you’re aware of or not: the sun will make the stain on the logs fade, so you’ll need to have them stained every five years or so. They do make a stain that has insecticide in it. However, it won’t help with carpenter bees...you can get carpenter bee traps online. You’ll be surprised how fast the jars fill up. Also, if you decide to caulk, do both the inside and outside...we had a couple of leaks when there was wind driven rain and since we had it caulked, no more leaks. It only takes a small crevice for the water to find its way in. Looks like it’s coming along nicely.[/QUOTE
yea we are on a 4-5 year staining plan, only the south wall will need lots of attention, the front and back have porches and trees and the north will not get direct sunlight