You know, they way you two deal with and talk about mistakes is the main reason why I like your content. The approach you take to most things on this channel is a bit unconventional, that means you are inevitable going to run into problems, sometimes things can be "patched", sometimes you're gonna have to dig things up and start something over again. To me, the biggest challenge would be to figure out what advice to take and what advice, although well meaning, to question. That relates to one suggestion: Could you maybe go into more detail on how you even start to figure a project like the floor out? What does the planning look like? Like, where do you even start? Do you just google "how to lay a new ground floor in an old portuguese house?" :D
That’s an excellent question, and has made me really think about how we do it (for me it’s so natural it’s just normal). I think the simplest answer is : I have an insanely curious mind and I tend to question everything (I’m always googling stuff). I spend a lot of time just absorbing info/content, particularly around things that interest me, even if it’s of no relevance to something I need to know. I don’t remember how I first heard about limecrete floors ... Guy thinks we saw it on an episode of Grand Designs (UK version). But I’ve always been interested in older, and natural, building techniques. But for something I don’t know how to solve I pretty much start as you’ve suggested ... googling, reading in forums and blog posts, and doing the same search in TH-cam. Facebook groups are also great for being exposed to new ideas and solutions ... you just have to take all the ‘advice’ with a large pinch of salt and never trust a single opinion as truth. Context is everything
I don’t get the rubber seals? PVC glue welds the pipe together and creates an air tight connection. Are you worried about a lot of movement concerning the pipe?
@@MAKEDOGROW Thanks for the detailed answer Kylie. I really appreciate it. See, the part that's just natural to you, that's the part I find interesting. Specifically, how do you decide what approach to take, especially when it comes to the more structural/building projects. The garden, in contrast, I think I understand, you just have to experiment, do some dig, some no-dig, some Hügelkultur, see what works, figuring that out is a lot of fun. But for the construction projects, even if you want to go for more natural techniques, there are undoubtedly many, many viable options. How do you go about deciding what route to take and which avenues not to explore? Sure you CAN also try different things there, maybe even do things over, but my guess is you are not going to just dig the whole limecrete floor out again and just try something else unless you absolutely have to, no one enjoys physical labor THAT much ^^ There just seems to be less room for experimentation when comes to the structural stuff and you two seem way too smart to just yolo it. That would be my suggestion for videos on future building related projects, talk some more about the thought process, what goes into the decision making, you're already doing that, just expand on it some more, I'm sure a lot of people would find that interesting
I believe there is an early video, about the digging out of the rooms, that they go over the plan. I agree, I would love to see a episode with bits of previously shot footage going over start (planning, digging etc.) to laying of floor.
If anyone wants to see a true sweat labor project yours is in the top two in the world. Nothing that you have undertaken has been easy and you have accomplished all with the camera running. All of us want to thank you for letting us watch. It is a great journey that we all want to see through to completion.
EXCELLENT. I've been reading some of the other comments, and it seems to be that not only do people really like and admire the storytelling in your films, they find something else: inspiration. It is unfortunately all-too-rare to find a couple who are habitually unafraid to try new things, who work impressively hard (much of the time doing difficult, really-physical labor), are continually striving for excellence, and are honest and forthcoming enough to admit their mistakes. As much as I enjoyed this entire film, maybe the best part of it was the end - where you candidly admitted what had gone sideways. But your attitude about correcting your mistake! That, was GREAT - "ah, we got a bum steer - we'll just correct it, no biggie." You two are the best of us. Thank you!!
Chikens at 25:03: "wow! well done!" 💪 The cat loves it as well (28:45). I am going to learn with you guys on how to do this so I can do it in a small house in the south of Portugal. I am loving the videos!
You two are going to be so full of wisdom when this whole project is finished. I hope that you might consider putting a coffee table book together for when it’s all done. Your videos are so good, enjoyable and we get to live through your adventure. It’s old school but its so nice to pick up a good hard cover, leaf through the pages, gaze at the photos and remember.
I agree with a previous writer, as a DIYer, I love watching the way you tackle your jobs, but you also narrate so well. It's just easy and a lot of fun to watch.
We all make mistakes when we're learning how to do something new. They key is to learn from it and avoid making the same mistakes in the future. You guys are doing a great job.
If only politicians were as transparent about their mistakes. The plumbing fbi, won’t be raiding your place any time soon. Congrats on the epic effort, such a good result despite setback. I will probably be doing this myself at some point, very inspiring, thank you 🙏 all the best to you
Yeah sure it's a good laugh when people cock things up but that's how you learn. This is the reason so many of us prefer your channel. You show the mistakes and own up to them. It's part of life and sure as sh't part of renovating. Keep the amazing work up!
You were talking in a previous video about using bags from soil to plant in for extra raised bed space. The giant bags the Clay balls come in make excellent raised beds we’ve been growing root vegetables in a couple in our drive way with great results. We’ve also used a couple to collect leaves and yard waist to start some static compost piles in with good results. Thanks for sharing the mistakes a lot can be learned from these problems. When and if they arise and learning to deal with those is so important for Home Owner Builders.
I've read some sad tales of other folks who have moved to Portugal to live a simpler, more satisfying life and have failed. Your venture will succeed because you have past experiences and are doing careful research before you take each step, you have sufficient financial resources to buy what you need, and you pace yourself with all the hard physical labor involved. This house will be comfortably habitable for the next 100 years because you are doing it "right".
Make - Fail - Make again. I love your attitude. "If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two impostors just the same; If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools, Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken, And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:"
I love watching the progress on your farm - everything you do is well thought out and excellently done. It's going to be a spectacular homestead when finished.
What a shame about your pipes. A big thank you for sharing your highs and lows of renovating your home. It’s the real world and annoying stuff happens to us all, and it’s important to see you tubers acknowledge issues and then get on with the fixes. Take super care, Laura 🍻🍻🍻
I think you guys are amazing! It’s always good to see how you arrive at solutions and even when things go wrong, the way you resolve them and share the resolution with us is admirable! Keep going!
My oh my you have both worked sooo hard and deserve your days if respite.. especially in the hot weather. I love to see the chickens checking out what you have done lols
You two are just amazing. I would never have understood the flooring process, if I had not seen it step by step. Your strength and stick to it is amazing. Have so much more to learn. Blessings.💕
Complex projects like yours have a lot of complex decisions and solutions. Most you get right some you don’t. Love you attitude and willingness to share the good the bad and the ugly! My favorite Portugal rehab channel. Keep up the great work and remember it’s the journey not the destination that brings the most joy!
*Kylie & Guy, To admit to & to learn better is to learn from one's own mistakes... & you both are always willing to do this on video, when a cockup is made.*
This is only a comment how im used to doing it,im a digger driver/groundsworker,and when we dig for houses,we put down 110mm pipe for waste along with 32mm pipe for water from outside into the gravel underneath the utility room,and the plumber then comes and connects his pipes to that 110mm and 32mm and spreds his pipes around,when he is done the floor is poured.great work as always guys
I don’t recall if I commented on it but I was quit concerned when I watch the waste pipe episode. Glad you are going to be able to check it properly when you lay the new pipe.
I could listen to Kylie explain anything. I love her accent. As someone who lives in a basement in Canada I remember when they were building my place the amount of moisture repellent and French drains and Tara wrap they put around the concrete just to protect the basement from moisture for which I am eternally grateful because I’m allergic to mould
It's a breathable lime mortar version of a damp proof course. I am watching this cheering you guys on because its one step closer to finishing the house.you guys deserve any and every bit of comfort.
Never laugh at…but laugh with you…when and if you do😉 and I love that you share everything good and not so good…and on this video awesome work again… a long day..but they pay off ❤️👏🏻🙋🏻♀️🇬🇧💕jane
I did watch a French man create a French drain. He had a lot of damp in his kitchen. Like all French countryside properties they did not have damp proof courses. He dug out the ditch which ran alongside of his kitchen / house to about 1.5 meter depth then filled it up with gravel.
Might you think about adding some text with the pipe cement correction on the previous video? Not that I’ll ever lay this type of floor, but for those whom sought out the advice you were giving. Love your content and your humor!!!!💗💗💗
Flabbergasted to see how thick the entire floor is and more needs to come on top of it. I know the final layer isn't that thick but I can imagine the layers down below will do there job 100%. Looking awesome guys and keep up the great work you're doing.
Impressed as ever. I was always told "Kylie" was an Aboriginal word for a kind of boomerang - but it turns out it means "machine"!! 😉I know you stress these are not 'how to' videos, but I reckon there'd be merit in putting together a step-by-step edit once the whole cake/floor is baked (remember VideoJug?).
Yay!! Laying the limecrete floor!! I love your videos, just to see what all you are up to and listen to you talk about it. Why this is wonderful and fascinating, I don't know but it most definitely is.
I think you guys are doing fine. Pretty sure the solvent joint would be fine but I understand your concern. You need to do what makes you feel the most at ease. This is all so labor intensive....I do not envy you. After wracking my brain, the only labor easing suggestion would be a farm screw conveyor to move the expanded clay. Farmers use them to move corn into silos. But....finding one and using it for building materials might be iffy at best. Thanks for including us and all the work that goes into the videos!
I used a product called glapor under my limecrete floor . Very similar to the clay product you used but basically the same principle . I can empathise with the exhaustion! That particular part of my project absolutely flattened me for a few days
HELLO KYLIE & GUY...WHAT A COUPLE OF TROOPERS!...WELL DONE...AND SOME EPIC MUSIC IN THE BACKGROUND DURING TIME LAPSE TO BOOT!...KEEP IT GOING...YOU'RE MAKING BIG PROGRESS...ALL THE BEST...🙏;)
Thanks for all your hard work making these videos. The restoration is entertaining and I look forward to seeing a first-class but sympathetic quinta renovation. You've shown your hand now on previous renovations, you've got something unique going on ... watch the viewings grow. Come on Guy, dream up some click bait titles! Not every quinto is as beautiful as yours or progressing with the style yours is, including the garden. Two videos a week with curated content, you are ready to take off - please keep at it.
I am always impressed by what a great team you are. You not only accomplish all that hard work on your home and farm, but you also make great teachers. It’s a joy to watch. Thanks. 🌺
Great job on the floor! I really have nothing to add other than working the algorithm. But I always seek out people with a large amount of intellectual curiosity since it makes them very interesting.
Gosh you two work hard! That old gut feeling.....I felt very upset for you hearing about the cement and the pipe and advice given. These things happen with the best of intentions. I'm pleased to hear you had some rest and recovery. All the best. It will be awesome in the end. x
Fantastic job. So hard to push through a whole day of hard labour. We used to have a cabin, and we would call that a "cabin day." Hang in there from New Zealand!
The info you shared on the Leca really made sense why you've done things the way you have! Then I had wondered how you are able to stand to pour the next layer...then the next shot showed your floating standing pads of plywood- mystery solved! BTW, Kylie, your arms are showing the results of your hard physical work- looking fab my dear! Enjoyed this video so much, you both are so fun to listen to and watch as you work on your lovely home.
I'm positively mesmerized😮
I like the epic music you use, it adds to the mood quite a lot.
Spa day for Kylie!! Thumb's -up if you agree.
You know, they way you two deal with and talk about mistakes is the main reason why I like your content.
The approach you take to most things on this channel is a bit unconventional, that means you are inevitable going to run into problems, sometimes things can be "patched", sometimes you're gonna have to dig things up and start something over again.
To me, the biggest challenge would be to figure out what advice to take and what advice, although well meaning, to question.
That relates to one suggestion:
Could you maybe go into more detail on how you even start to figure a project like the floor out? What does the planning look like? Like, where do you even start? Do you just google "how to lay a new ground floor in an old portuguese house?" :D
That’s an excellent question, and has made me really think about how we do it (for me it’s so natural it’s just normal).
I think the simplest answer is : I have an insanely curious mind and I tend to question everything (I’m always googling stuff). I spend a lot of time just absorbing info/content, particularly around things that interest me, even if it’s of no relevance to something I need to know.
I don’t remember how I first heard about limecrete floors ... Guy thinks we saw it on an episode of Grand Designs (UK version). But I’ve always been interested in older, and natural, building techniques.
But for something I don’t know how to solve I pretty much start as you’ve suggested ... googling, reading in forums and blog posts, and doing the same search in TH-cam. Facebook groups are also great for being exposed to new ideas and solutions ... you just have to take all the ‘advice’ with a large pinch of salt and never trust a single opinion as truth. Context is everything
I don’t get the rubber seals? PVC glue welds the pipe together and creates an air tight connection. Are you worried about a lot of movement concerning the pipe?
@@MAKEDOGROW I remember that on Grand Designs and the floor didn't set right, a big hoo haa at the time. Thanks for posting
@@MAKEDOGROW Thanks for the detailed answer Kylie. I really appreciate it.
See, the part that's just natural to you, that's the part I find interesting.
Specifically, how do you decide what approach to take, especially when it comes to the more structural/building projects.
The garden, in contrast, I think I understand, you just have to experiment, do some dig, some no-dig, some Hügelkultur, see what works, figuring that out is a lot of fun.
But for the construction projects, even if you want to go for more natural techniques, there are undoubtedly many, many viable options.
How do you go about deciding what route to take and which avenues not to explore?
Sure you CAN also try different things there, maybe even do things over, but my guess is you are not going to just dig the whole limecrete floor out again and just try something else unless you absolutely have to, no one enjoys physical labor THAT much ^^
There just seems to be less room for experimentation when comes to the structural stuff and you two seem way too smart to just yolo it.
That would be my suggestion for videos on future building related projects, talk some more about the thought process, what goes into the decision making,
you're already doing that, just expand on it some more, I'm sure a lot of people would find that interesting
I believe there is an early video, about the digging out of the rooms, that they go over the plan. I agree, I would love to see a episode with bits of previously shot footage going over start (planning, digging etc.) to laying of floor.
If anyone wants to see a true sweat labor project yours is in the top two in the world. Nothing that you have undertaken has been easy and you have accomplished all with the camera running. All of us want to thank you for letting us watch. It is a great journey that we all want to see through to completion.
very good job on the floor
EXCELLENT. I've been reading some of the other comments, and it seems to be that not only do people really like and admire the storytelling in your films, they find something else: inspiration. It is unfortunately all-too-rare to find a couple who are habitually unafraid to try new things, who work impressively hard (much of the time doing difficult, really-physical labor), are continually striving for excellence, and are honest and forthcoming enough to admit their mistakes. As much as I enjoyed this entire film, maybe the best part of it was the end - where you candidly admitted what had gone sideways. But your attitude about correcting your mistake! That, was GREAT - "ah, we got a bum steer - we'll just correct it, no biggie."
You two are the best of us. Thank you!!
Chikens at 25:03: "wow! well done!" 💪
The cat loves it as well (28:45).
I am going to learn with you guys on how to do this so I can do it in a small house in the south of Portugal. I am loving the videos!
Heroic effort, heroic music! Well done. Got so into the chicken I spaced on the explanation..
I look forward to all of your candid videos. You inspire me.
You two doing very well. Very organised, lovely
You two are going to be so full of wisdom when this whole project is finished.
I hope that you might consider putting a coffee table book together for when it’s all done. Your videos are so good, enjoyable and we get to live through your adventure. It’s old school but its so nice to pick up a good hard cover, leaf through the pages, gaze at the photos and remember.
Beer, now!! 😂😂😂😂 true Aussie Kylie ❤️
I agree with a previous writer, as a DIYer, I love watching the way you tackle your jobs, but you also narrate so well. It's just easy and a lot of fun to watch.
We all make mistakes when we're learning how to do something new. They key is to learn from it and avoid making the same mistakes in the future. You guys are doing a great job.
If only politicians were as transparent about their mistakes. The plumbing fbi, won’t be raiding your place any time soon. Congrats on the epic effort, such a good result despite setback. I will probably be doing this myself at some point, very inspiring, thank you 🙏 all the best to you
Yeah sure it's a good laugh when people cock things up but that's how you learn. This is the reason so many of us prefer your channel. You show the mistakes and own up to them. It's part of life and sure as sh't part of renovating. Keep the amazing work up!
You two are amazing. Yes, show us your mistakes / worries / changes of plan…. It shows you are human like the rest of us!!!!
An excellent episode today!!! Love the kitty cat testing out the floor!!! ❤️🐈
And the chickens!
Your music was very fitting for this video. I love watching you. I have great respect for the quality of your work. God bless.
Absolutely the right thing to do, to let us know about the drainage mistake, much more appreciated. 👍🏼
You were talking in a previous video about using bags from soil to plant in for extra raised bed space. The giant bags the Clay balls come in make excellent raised beds we’ve been growing root vegetables in a couple in our drive way with great results. We’ve also used a couple to collect leaves and yard waist to start some static compost piles in with good results. Thanks for sharing the mistakes a lot can be learned from these problems. When and if they arise and learning to deal with those is so important for Home Owner Builders.
My Saturday morning visit with my Portugal friends! Good morning!!!
You two work so flipping hard. You deserved some time off. I enjoy your videos so much. Best wishes.
For one woman, she’s some woman👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I hope you and Guy had a tasty lunch. Kylie you are both very hard workers and you deserve everything you get. ❤️❤️❤️❤️
In awe at the amount of effort you both put in, pure class. Thanks for sharing your adventure.
I've read some sad tales of other folks who have moved to Portugal to live a simpler, more satisfying life and have failed. Your venture will succeed because you have past experiences and are doing careful research before you take each step, you have sufficient financial resources to buy what you need, and you pace yourself with all the hard physical labor involved. This house will be comfortably habitable for the next 100 years because you are doing it "right".
Love it when you say we’ve cocked things up! So honest. Love you journey
Make - Fail - Make again. I love your attitude.
"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:"
I love watching you two no matter what you do. But it's great that you always want to do it the way. Thanks and until next week. Can't wait
OMG, I need a rest after watching this!! Have to notice someone had a haircut:)))
Thank you for sharing your projects with us! Cheers 🍻from Washington State, USA
Love your integrity in sharing the entire process warts and all.
That was a feat. Well done. Your staying power and stamina is impressive. You lovely people,
You guys have the Best attitude! You always make me laugh! So thanks for that.
Guy's so handsome and makes Kylie laugh all the time, i'm starting to fall in love 🙈
I love watching the progress on your farm - everything you do is well thought out and excellently done. It's going to be a spectacular homestead when finished.
You both deserve a spa day! Great work and thank you for sharing 👍 👏
What a shame about your pipes. A big thank you for sharing your highs and lows of renovating your home. It’s the real world and annoying stuff happens to us all, and it’s important to see you tubers acknowledge issues and then get on with the fixes. Take super care, Laura 🍻🍻🍻
I think you guys are amazing! It’s always good to see how you arrive at solutions and even when things go wrong, the way you resolve them and share the resolution with us is admirable! Keep going!
Hi
You deserve relaxing yourself after this hard work
Awesome job on that sub floor👍👍
My oh my you have both worked sooo hard and deserve your days if respite..
especially in the hot weather. I love to see the chickens checking out what you have done lols
You two are just amazing. I would never have understood the flooring process, if I had not seen it step by step. Your strength and stick to it is amazing. Have so much more to learn. Blessings.💕
She is so good at this. Nice and level!
Complex projects like yours have a lot of complex decisions and solutions. Most you get right some you don’t. Love you attitude and willingness to share the good the bad and the ugly! My favorite Portugal rehab channel. Keep up the great work and remember it’s the journey not the destination that brings the most joy!
MY favorite rehab channel/project. Full stop. 😉
*Kylie & Guy, To admit to & to learn better is to learn from one's own mistakes... & you both are always willing to do this on video, when a cockup is made.*
Enjoying getting to know you. Good luck, good spirits.
Can't wait to see you decorate and enjoy. Great farm! Thank you
This is only a comment how im used to doing it,im a digger driver/groundsworker,and when we dig for houses,we put down 110mm pipe for waste along with 32mm pipe for water from outside into the gravel underneath the utility room,and the plumber then comes and connects his pipes to that 110mm and 32mm and spreds his pipes around,when he is done the floor is poured.great work as always guys
Great accomplishment despite having to redo the pipe. Appreciate the transparency! Hope you are both tested and recovered.
I don’t recall if I commented on it but I was quit concerned when I watch the waste pipe episode. Glad you are going to be able to check it properly when you lay the new pipe.
An outstanding Australian.
I could listen to Kylie explain anything. I love her accent.
As someone who lives in a basement in Canada I remember when they were building my place the amount of moisture repellent and French drains and Tara wrap they put around the concrete just to protect the basement from moisture for which I am eternally grateful because I’m allergic to mould
Such a lot of hard work, if I wore a hat, I’d take it off to you. Also, great choice of music which perfectly fit the content.
Great information. Long days and lots of ‘hard yakka’. Thanks.
It's a breathable lime mortar version of a damp proof course. I am watching this cheering you guys on because its one step closer to finishing the house.you guys deserve any and every bit of comfort.
Never laugh at…but laugh with you…when and if you do😉 and I love that you share everything good and not so good…and on this video awesome work again… a long day..but they pay off ❤️👏🏻🙋🏻♀️🇬🇧💕jane
Thank you for including the "what you learned" and how you are going to change. Please continuing to show it all.
Wow the sheer energy that takes! Amazing!
I did watch a French man create a French drain. He had a lot of damp in his kitchen. Like all French countryside properties they did not have damp proof courses. He dug out the ditch which ran alongside of his kitchen / house to about 1.5 meter depth then filled it up with gravel.
Might you think about adding some text with the pipe cement correction on the previous video? Not that I’ll ever lay this type of floor, but for those whom sought out the advice you were giving. Love your content and your humor!!!!💗💗💗
Bravissimo 👏. See you guys on Sunday.
Love seeing the progress :) and I'm super glad you are taking breaks.
Yeap! Definitely we enjoyed!
Respect. Just total unadulterated respect. We had about 30C last week and that was unbearable (Scots - so dropping like flies).
Very inspiring 👏
KYLIE IS AMAZING!!!!
This task appears to have been a backbreaking, tedious and grueling job. I commend you on your perseverance to follow it to completion. Great job!
Flabbergasted to see how thick the entire floor is and more needs to come on top of it.
I know the final layer isn't that thick but I can imagine the layers down below will do there job 100%.
Looking awesome guys and keep up the great work you're doing.
I really like the music you chose For your floor project.
How refreshing to see that others also make mistakes. Luckily the area is not too big. I once again take my hat off to the both of you.
Impressed as ever. I was always told "Kylie" was an Aboriginal word for a kind of boomerang - but it turns out it means "machine"!! 😉I know you stress these are not 'how to' videos, but I reckon there'd be merit in putting together a step-by-step edit once the whole cake/floor is baked (remember VideoJug?).
25:03 cheeky Nigela 🤣 .. *WELL DONE* Kylie.. the floor turned out great!
Those chickens!!! Wait until Monday’s video, they make another guest appearance in the house 😂
Yay!! Laying the limecrete floor!! I love your videos, just to see what all you are up to and listen to you talk about it. Why this is wonderful and fascinating, I don't know but it most definitely is.
I think you guys are doing fine. Pretty sure the solvent joint would be fine but I understand your concern. You need to do what makes you feel the most at ease. This is all so labor intensive....I do not envy you. After wracking my brain, the only labor easing suggestion would be a farm screw conveyor to move the expanded clay. Farmers use them to move corn into silos. But....finding one and using it for building materials might be iffy at best. Thanks for including us and all the work that goes into the videos!
We really appreciate the two of you!!💜
Hats off to you guys; what a great job x
I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.
I love your videos! I think you two would be fabulous neighbors and friends
Totally agree! Anyone who is so curious about how things work will bring rich conversations to the table.
I used a product called glapor under my limecrete floor . Very similar to the clay product you used but basically the same principle . I can empathise with the exhaustion! That particular part of my project absolutely flattened me for a few days
Thank you for all the detail. I truly appreciate your videos.
I love it! “What happened “
HELLO KYLIE & GUY...WHAT A COUPLE OF TROOPERS!...WELL DONE...AND SOME EPIC MUSIC IN THE BACKGROUND DURING TIME LAPSE TO BOOT!...KEEP IT GOING...YOU'RE MAKING BIG PROGRESS...ALL THE BEST...🙏;)
Thanks for all your hard work making these videos. The restoration is entertaining and I look forward to seeing a first-class but sympathetic quinta renovation. You've shown your hand now on previous renovations, you've got something unique going on ... watch the viewings grow. Come on Guy, dream up some click bait titles! Not every quinto is as beautiful as yours or progressing with the style yours is, including the garden. Two videos a week with curated content, you are ready to take off - please keep at it.
You two are really amazing!!!
Great to see how you always improve on how to do things
I am not sure you have the right approach, but it makes a lot of sense to me.
You will have a charming stone house with all the modern comfort.
Living, learning👍and learning to trust your gut too! I hope you got the blip sorted. Bless ya'hearts.💕
I am always impressed by what a great team you are. You not only accomplish all that hard work on your home and farm, but you also make great teachers. It’s a joy to watch. Thanks. 🌺
Glad you guys are taking the time you need to recover
Chickens are always good for a light moment. Great progress despite the minor setback. Thanks!
Great job on the floor! I really have nothing to add other than working the algorithm. But I always seek out people with a large amount of intellectual curiosity since it makes them very interesting.
Gosh you two work hard! That old gut feeling.....I felt very upset for you hearing about the cement and the pipe and advice given. These things happen with the best of intentions. I'm pleased to hear you had some rest and recovery. All the best. It will be awesome in the end. x
Fantastic job. So hard to push through a whole day of hard labour. We used to have a cabin, and we would call that a "cabin day." Hang in there from New Zealand!
I think you should make a more wet mixture. A auto leveling mix. Will take more time to cure but I think it’s a better way. Greetings from Viseu.
Big fan from India sir God bless your family
The info you shared on the Leca really made sense why you've done things the way you have! Then I had wondered how you are able to stand to pour the next layer...then the next shot showed your floating standing pads of plywood- mystery solved! BTW, Kylie, your arms are showing the results of your hard physical work- looking fab my dear! Enjoyed this video so much, you both are so fun to listen to and watch as you work on your lovely home.
Awesome job guys
after you have replaced the pipe you will feel better, it doesn't help but these things happen love the job your doing its looking great