Earthbag Blitz
I took the weekend off from the T-brick shed because:
A) I wanted to give the footer/grade beam a little more time to dry out.
B) There was an Earthbag blitz this weekend!
Earthbag uses the same adobe mix as T-brick but rather than using a rigid wooden form to build the walls it uses raschel bags. Raschel are the mesh bags that onions and potatoes from the supermarket come in. In this workshop we continued work on the Earthbag house that Jean and I worked on in June/July.
Here's a brief summary of what happened in June/July workshop:
A couple of weeks after our course in July a group came out and did course and put in the window bucks. Over the summer I did some intensive reading of earth bag building literature and feel like I got a handle on proper moisture content.
A) I wanted to give the footer/grade beam a little more time to dry out.
B) There was an Earthbag blitz this weekend!
Earthbag uses the same adobe mix as T-brick but rather than using a rigid wooden form to build the walls it uses raschel bags. Raschel are the mesh bags that onions and potatoes from the supermarket come in. In this workshop we continued work on the Earthbag house that Jean and I worked on in June/July.
Here's a brief summary of what happened in June/July workshop:
The foundation trench |
The rubble filled foundation trench |
The concrete grade beam/footer |
The first course |
Several courses later we were realizing that our mix was too wet |
We made some corrections to the wall and tried using a drier mix. |
This about where we finished in July. Note how the upper courses are looking a lot better than the lower courses. |
Beginning of Day 2 of the the October workshop. We did two courses yesterday. They're looking a much better. |
Thea leading some of the talk session of the workshop |
We did another two courses on day 2. |
Meanwhile Thea lead a plaster demonstration |
Looking good. |
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