As you may remember, in our last episode, our hero was a battered, broken old man - sore and cranky from having to take his stonework apart and rebuild it.
Now, he is considerably less sore, but his feet are much dirtier.
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This is the new, improved stone base. |
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Top view. With any luck, this one won't collapse. |
Now that the base was finished, Kerri and I zipped up to Portland, Maine to get 300 pounds of fire clay. Fire clay, as the name implies, will send a burning hot shot of pain through your back, like fire, when you schlep 300 pound of it around.
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But don't worry. I know how to fix that. |
The next step is to drink away the pain so you have enough bottles to insulate the bottom of the oven. Of course, I am kidding. I enlisted many, many friends to help with this painstaking process, and, after months and months of sensible consumption, I had the small number of glass bottles I needed to proceed.
Now, all I needed was about 600 pounds of screened sand. Fortunately, because of the digging I did earlier, I had the sand. Also, I tore up the kids' old sandbox from the yard. They don't know yet, so please don't tell them.
I used a hunk of old window screen and sifted several hundred pounds of sand into a big, blue bin.
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That is a LOT more sand than it looks like. |
Now comes the fun part.*
*Your levels of fun may vary, Results not guaranteed.
I have to build a flat, insulated cap to cover the stone base.
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Chicken comes around for the fun parts. Where was she when I was schlepping 300 pounds of clay? |
We mixed sand, clay, water, and straw to make a building material called cob. Tori was giddy with excitement at the prospect of helping with this part. But where was she when I was schlepping clay? Probably with the chicken. Hiding in the bushes.
Cob is traditionally mixed by foot. And, I'm not going to lie. This was a lot of work, but it was a lot of fun.
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Sand and clay. Tori still hasn't figured out that this is her old sandbox. Shhhh. |
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Add some water. |
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Mix it on the traditional plastic tarp, just like they did hundreds of years ago. |
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Tori really, really liked this. |
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A lot. |
After the clay and sand and water are mixed, you incorporate some straw for structural stability.
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The chickens were helping. |
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By spreading the straw all over the lawn when we weren't looking. Our first pizza may be a chicken pizza. |
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HA! Nice try, chickens. We got the straw back! |
The straw gets stomped in by foot, too.
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You can turn this into a fun dance party with your daughter. Or, like me, you can tell her it is a fun dance party as you lean on her for support because you are so tired from all this darned stomping. |
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And you keep stomping. Or, rather, your daughter does. I was watching those sneaky chickens. |
After you have a nice pile of cob, you start building the insulated base with a wall.
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Tori seriously loved this part. |
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And she did a great job helping. |
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I did a great job micro-managing. |
This wall is then filled with insulating material.
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See? And you thought they were just for fun? Nope. |
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You cover the bottles with pearlite so nobody can see what you drink. |
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It looks like a fancy cake. Depending on your idea of fancy. |
After you add the pearlite, you chase the chickens out of the straw again and make another batch of cob to cap everything off.
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Goodbye bottles. You served us well. |
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I'll never forget you! |
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Tori is less emotional about the bottles than I am. |
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Flatten out the cap. |
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Have your daughter get all weird on you as you work. |
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And then pose for the obligatory thumbs-up picture when you're done. |
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Rather than signing it, Tori requested the we press our toes in the wet cob. It was rather satisfying. |
Now the cap has to dry for a while. The next step will be to drag my buddy Ben over to build the actual dome of the oven. We'll probably do that in a few weeks.
Stay tuned!
1 comment:
Wow, impressive. Can you explain the purpose of the glass bottles and why they won't explode inside that sandwich later when hot. I'm no scientist, but that is my first thought.
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