Becky's plans wouldn't build this barn |
A quick run-through of the post suggests that Boardman had managed to find some plans, somewhere, that in the hands of a competent builder would have made sense. Rebecca's problem was that she could not lay claim to being a competent builder.
When building something, be it a stool, a table, or a house – or, for that matter, a barn – dimensions are crucially important. Other than specifying a pad of sand 18 inches deep (which seems to us rather... thick), Boardman's instructions include exactly one building dimension:
"Remember to make the walls solid lumber to a minimum of 4 feet in height..."Uh, sure. So how high should the walls be in total? She never said... Boardman's instructions are replete with general statements such as,
- "Cement your 4-x-4 posts to a depth of 24 inches in the corners and at every 12 feet of length for of [sic] the shed."
- "Frame your shed [sic] with the lumber."
- "When framing the roof, place the lumber every 12 inches [!!!] to make the strongest roof possible"
- "Use roofing nails when securing the roof."
OK, Becky, here's what we'd really want to know if we wanted to build a barn (which, we would like to point out, is not the same thing as a "shed"):
- How long, wide, and high?
- Do we need any enclosures, such as a stall or a space for feed and tack?
- Should there be a door [duh]? If so; where, how high, and how wide?
- How about light: windows? skylights? electricity?
- Do you really mean for that poor horse to stand around in 18 inches of sand, or is there supposed to be a floor?
¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was ehow.com/how_4809959_build-simple-one-horse-barn.html
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DDIY - CONSTRUCTION
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