Now we have demolished and removed the top layer of flooring in the living room and got down to the real the floor. And now we're talking real floorboards! In the past, things were done properly, you could say.
Real things
About the insulation in the roof was the thinnest we have seen, then this is probably the thickest floor we have seen. Not the kind you usually buy at Bauhaus when you want to lay a new floor right away ...
Old boat
It's cool to work on an old boat. With each layer you remove, you get closer to the history of the boat.
Deciree says:
That's quite a lot of dough:-) I've never seen such a thick floor:-))
27 May 2014 - 21:21
BP says:
Glad you showed the thickness with a spice jar. Now I'm a bit stupid, but I still have to ask - do you take out the nice wooden floor? I mean if it's that thick, it should be "warm" on the floor or...?
I think it's really beautiful and a bit cult-like in its authenticity. But I know nothing about such things.
PS. Assuming that you have worked really warmly in the prevailing cold;-) DS.
27 May 2014 - 21:38
admin says:
Deciree, no we don't either...!
😉
BP, the floor is fine, but since we are going to both widen and extend the room, it doesn't work to keep it. So yes, we will remove it. And yep, we were warm a while ago, but now it's getting cold again... huh?
😉
27 May 2014 - 21:48
Mr Steve says:
Real floorboards, that's the stuff.
27 May 2014 - 22:11
Yvonné says:
Extremes can be said about both the floor and the insulation hihihi
Hugs
27 May 2014 - 23:29
Marina says:
Some serious doughnuts, indeed!!!
28 May 2014 - 3:00
Henny says:
I recognise it from the old Norrbotten farm from the 18th century that we renovated. Hefty donations, but they also last for at least a few more generations.
28 May 2014 - 14:28
admin says:
Henny, that's what's so cool about old stuff. There's no wear and tear.
😉
28 May 2014 - 16:06
Ama de casa says:
Haha! You usually use matchboxes as a comparison, but a spice jar works just as well.
🙂
28 May 2014 - 17:30