Sunday, February 1, 2009

Fence Destruction 101

Since a picture is worth a thousand words, here is the photo essay of Paco's fence tear down/rebuild wake. We began Friday afternoon. Linda, her husband Bill, and Donyale came over to tear down the fence and put in the posts.

The fence before:

before



This is the view looking out from the house. The other side is the really disturbing one, as you can clearly see Paco's pre-death struggle, but I will refrain from posting pictures of it. I've had over a week to get used to it, you haven't.

The tear down took about 5 minutes. Here I am getting aggro:

agro



And this is what our yard looks like without a fence:

yard sans fence



We had to break up the cement so we could dig the post holes down far enough. Linda, who was initially scared of the sledge, learned to really like it:

sledging



We mixed cement in a wheelbarrow and set the posts:

setting the posts



Admiring the work:

admiring the work



Paco managed to leave his mark:

ode to the brown guy



The job ended up going way faster than we expected, but we had to halt work and let the cement dry overnight before we could go any farther. So we took "Soche the Roach" out to the bar.

The next day we got an early start. Volunteer labor began showing up. Even my parents made a guest appearance:

los parentals



We measured twice and cut once...

calculating



... put the planks in place...

supervising



... and trimmed off the excess...

cutting the planks



... bam!

bam!



Everyone had a job. This was the puppy brigade (see if you can spot a sleeping Xolo):

puppy brigade



The fence was topped off with a 2"x6" and a 1" trim. Everyone grabbed a paintbrush, battled the insane fumes, and the fence was sealed and complete in no time. The results:

new view



You can see the puddles of sealant:

freshly sealed



By the light of day:

after



Already the change is profound. Just to not have to look at that fence makes a huge difference. And it was quite touching to see everyone who came out to help celebrate Paco's life.

His ashes arrived Thursday, so he was able to attend as well. His kitchen table shrine kept getting bigger and bigger as people added to the cards and gifts that have been arriving all week. More than a few tears were shed, but overall the mood was positive, which is how Paco would have wanted it. In fact, I think he would have rated it a "two-bowl" party.

And it's a good thing so many folks showed up to help as our in-house Mexican labor was not up for the task.

lazy mexican labor

2 comments:

Home2K9 Pack Leader said...

I'm so excited about this! Your new fence looks AWESOME!! Thanks for posting so many great pictures and may you have many happy memories inside that pretty wall...

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad you have so many people around you who love you and came to help. With so much love in its creation, the new fence is sure to keep only good things inside of it.