🔥I released an album of music you can listen to free! Let me know what you think! 👉 open.spotify.com/artist/1VOVKFOF2gmaiZysdVug2I?si=HUEvBHVzSDKfoayWUNO4vQ
I really appreciate seeing an accomplished TH-camr and DIYer have the same struggles as myself! Parts not arriving on time, parts getting messed up in the mail or delivered to the wrong address, not having the right tools, struggling with the ladder, measuring/cutting wrong, changing your mind about the color of something 4-5 times and still not being sure for a whole ride home. I feel less alone in this world LOL!
In mid april, we started our 20'×24' pergola and id like us all to take a moment to appreciate what we wives go through when watching, standing guard and observing our husbands who insist on doing these jobs with their aging muscles and dwindling balance without help from other friends with aging muscles and dwindling balance! Its extremely emotionally and psychologically taxing leaving us SPENT after a full day of hubby pushing the limits! True Story y'all.
I pay my life insurance and work by myself, that way I don't get distracted. God forbid something happens, but if I die, as I bleed out or suffocate, those final moments may be peaceful, rather than filled with ineffective shrieking of my loving wife.
19:29 for the back of the roof panels, old school wives tale, rural legend, call it what you want....use light blue/sky blue. It supposedly helps keep wasps from building nests because they don't see it as protected from the sky. My parents did this with their outdoor porches and over the last 5 years the number of nests built is noticeably less than when they were the original darker color. Maybe it works, maybe it is luck or confirmation bias, but when I build my porch extension for my home I'll be painting it light blue underneath.
You are an inspiration, dude. I've got some projects that are not nearly as in-depth as yours, and I've been holding off on doing them. Watching this video has given me the willpower to get them done.
@@HAXMAN I tried telling my wife that... She said "Price it out.. if the wood is $1500 (which it looks like it would be.. I count at least 9 or 10 6x6 cedar post? 8-10 feet long?), I'll just go buy a gazebo from Costco" Made my heart cry a bit. :(
They aren't 6x6 cedar lumber posts from a sawmill, which would certainly run you over $1500 today. He did use 6x6 posts but I heard him specify that the entire project were pressure treated 6x6 post for the cost savings, which are substantial for (close to) the same structural rigidity as well as aesthetically more pleasing than 4x4's, don't want no wimpy crap..
Remember, it's not the fall that hurts...it's the sudden impact at the bottom that does! 😉 And it only hurts for as long as it takes your flesh and bones to heal, that's all. BTW, what is the Sherwin Williams number for that shade of "dookey"?🤣
Stain the ends of the cuts of the wood! Did a mailbox with PT 4x6 and looked great with a light seal, came back 2 weeks later and had wood splits starting from the ends. Adding more stain and to the ends stopped it from spliting 😊
"take a measurement and walk 30 feet, I'll remember it" been there too many times 😂 always entertaining content and fun for new ideas, looks fantastic brotherrr! 🍻 Love that momma haxman supports you so much!
I love that I’m not the only one with a plan that doesn’t go accordingly thing brake and we have to adjust accordingly and you handle it well thank you for the inspiration to keep going forward with DIY projects
Why did you go with 9’X 9’? 12’ X 12’ would have been way more esthetic more protective of what you might put underneath it. Just my opinion. I built a pergola that was 15’X15’ 11’ high and it was amazing.
@HAXMAN I stay every time for these videos, the dialogue and charisma is gold… can’t believe I wasn’t subscribed, am now. Please don’t stop, you two are great!
You know what would be a grrrreat youtube series? The Haxman builds a composite deck. And you could even do it on site at a subscribers house! Like my house! I already have the footers poured please help a guy out... Lol
I agree. That would be a great series. Hey BTW, he could do a series on a stamped concrete patio after your composite deck. I’ve already got the patio area prepped for him!
😂 Good one, @TheRoadFarmer! My house is next. I want an enclosed glass room on my bottom floor (It needs a concrete floor lain), and a walk-out deck off my second-story kitchen and bedroom. He can use my place as a demo next!
we've built a shed for outdoor canning, etc. Timber frame, like yours, but with sides up here in the northeast. One side is my husband's. He was a mechanic, and it took a while to get all his tools and his toolbox here, Now he's putting his tools back in. Toolbox is 800 lbs empty. Anyway, the thing I most like about our shed that is different from our other farm buildings is that it has a floor. Rough cut hemlock. Under his toolbox is heavy thick plywood. Also, I like having an extra oven, especially since our stupid governor is making it harder to buy propane appliances. It's always good to have many ways to cook. And if you're a canner, to be able to keep the canning heat outside your house.
It hurts me so hard that you flexed so hard with those beams while that tractor sat so so close to this project. Then again, I believe as I type this that may have been your YT strategy because you knew it would drive every man crazy not to comment 😂😂😂😂😂😂. Good job. Looks great! Maybe an outdoor cooking adventure awaits
We've been looking at building something similar, but instead of a metal roof bifacial solar panels. They have these rubber seals that you can use between the panels now to make it an actual water proof roof, that charges things.
I was having a bad day and I came across your video. I hardly ever leave comments but you drew out quite a bit of sporadic chuckles… thank you for that!!!
✌️😜Just what I needed leading into the Father's Day weekend, a fabulous dose of HAXMAN humor 🤣💒A Blessed Joyful Father's Day to all the Dad's ⚔️ God Bless us All 🇺🇸🙏✝️
I e been needing a large shade like this and now I have a blueprint. Your build is easy enough for a simple DIY but complicated enough for me to sweat the entire build. Keep those videos coming.
Love these videos! Great projects and I appreciate that Adam keeps it real not afraid to act like a human being with fears and frustrations. Also, shout out to Kim- great job behind the camera and not afraid to jump in and help as always!
4:25 If you can carry it up a ladder, then you should have faced the ladder the other way and carried the timber over the shoulder. It is a faster more secure climb. The ladder parallel to the posts, and the timber sliding up those posts, makes it so if you lose control or get tired, the two posts will not let the timber fall towards the ladder. Once you get to the top the timber will let you know, it can be set down. The transition is a lot smoother. 6:20 Don't use the speed square to "drill straight". You can see in the video that it is NOT working. Use 2 pieces of wood. 2x4s will work. About a foot long each ( 6" will work). Make sure the ends are square(miter saw). Slap them together with the 4" (3.5") sides together and off-set them 1". Screw together. Drill the bit till the paddle goes past the surface or place a third 2x4 laying down on the 4 (3.5") side. Then place you 2x4s offset guild on top. By now you should be getting what is happening. The inside corner of the 2x4 offset guild makes two sides to place the drill shank on and keep the bit straight. You can make one end 90° and the other end 45°
Sir thank you so much for being so REAL!! I respect and appreciate you sharing all aspects of your projects. Tools, techniques, skills and (my favorite ) your mistakes! It makes you relatable and inspires us to TRY your projects. PLUS, your wife is such an amazing assistant/project manager, truly inspires hubby and wife DIY teams! Of course I am a little partial since my name is also Kim, and I am the assistant /project manager and my husband Dan is the humorous muscle of our team! You two are the best keep making your videos and God bless you both!
You are a brave man. I just did a project like this with some 6x6x16 and they are HEAVY. You filmed it for all of us to see. You brave. Keep them coming and be safe.
"Meat that smells wierd... and then you eat it and are like..." That one got me good... I went back and watched it again just to hear you say it. You've got such a good delivery and your voices and impressions are what make me a subscriber. Thanks for all the laughs... I think your videos are funnier and more relatable when things don't go according to plan.
Absolutely a Great look and job. Just a thought, when putting in the screws for the roof, if you set the screw on the material and give the back of the drill a pop with your other hand the screw starts almost immediately. Just what I do and works for me.
Correct color: POLAR WHITE. If you're hot out there under the sun, send that energy back up to outer space. The dark panel gets hot under the sun and then the back of the panel radiates the heat down on you. Sure there's shade, but the heat is still a THING. Bright white roofs don't get anywhere near as hot underneath.
I just love how accessible your videos and projects are!! I'm a complete amateur woodworker, but watching this makes me want to go build a gazebo right now!! Makes it looks so easy, when it's broken down step by step like this. awesome video!
You rock!!! I'm retiring in a couple of months and was looking for a few ideas for the back yard since I will have nothing but time, came across one of your videos and not only was it educational, your humor had me dying and wanting to see more. I've checked out three videos so far and will keep going until I find a project I can handle and afford. Thank you and keep doing what your doing.
Great way to use up all that used oil in save from oil changes. I do this all the time. Lasts longer than anything else I have tried and I think it looks good too.
Wooly Booger??? Like those tires I used to have my old trike? Yea she was a Big Red 200ES Rear AND FRONT Racks, High, Low, AND REVERSE Gears, PLUS NO CHAIN.... Yup.. she had a sweet DRIVE SHAFT!!! It was like a TANK!!! Except for when 15 year old me got my hands on tryin to fix it... Didn't know a dang thing about carburetors, fuel/air mixtures, spark gaps, OR compression... so pulling that spark plug in and out hundreds of times too it's toll while trying to get that sucker to start some days.... eventually the threads just gave up and shot the spark plug out and into the bottom of the gas tank..... :'( That was the last time I ever sat on her soft n comfy plastic foam seats while she was purring..... eventually sold her off to someone who knew what he was doing... he spiffied her up with new plastics, fixed up the bent racks from the flips we did together (unintentionally of course lol) and brought her back to her former glory..... he sold her to some Mexican kid that somehow set it on fire within 2 weeks and it was SCRAP :'( R.I.P. Big Bertha and your AMAZING Wooly Boogers that paddled me through many a HUGE puddle - - - Sorry about that.. you just managed to bring back memories I haven't thought about in about 25 years... Thank you :) .... And I got my eyes peeled for that dang wooly booger that's stalkin you... gonna turn 'em into a NEW set of tire if'n I catch 'em!! Use them big 'ol teeth for soem EXTRA GRIP!!! :D
*Love the proportions. 1/3 more work and you'd have a guest house!* *We've got a cheap sawmill and my wife immediately said: "What if you did it with 12" beams" lol.* *"We'll need a crane, or at least six more kids" I said.*
@@HAXMAN I think strapping the ladder to the timber is a smart idea. I get your fear of heights. It's not being up there that scares me, it's taking one wrong move and falling.
My family are so excited for this project. My kids love watching for the Sasquatch. My wife loves to get ideas for our new place and I get to build. Thank you sir.
@@HAXMAN ya cant get creative about extending the reach? Ask bigfoot how to put something on the forks or in the bucket to make it lift higher. Alternatively you could have hired a helicopter to bring them in, or a large crane as long as you don't tip it from too much weight.
I'm a submariner, 16 years. 3 months dived in an 8400 long-ton tin can, no sun, no fresh air etc.? No problem! 10 foot in the air half-way to clear my guttering, I'm a mess. Trust me, I understand.
More than likely the tools were purchased over the years!! Not his first day building!!😂😂😂😂😂😂 The ole lady buys shoes, we buy tools, even if we don't need it right now!!😂😂😂
Always enjoyed your content but just noticed your from the great state of GA! Only change suggestion for this would be to do pyramid cuts on the end of your beams for the extra little pop.
Very nice job, and I’m happy I got to see the two pups! 😉 My one mal (the alpha girl) is very intimidating-sounding and rougher during play and the other is just a happy-go-lucky little stud muffin that can take whatever the “queen” dishes out! Love them so! Incredible athletes and keep me going for sure. I’m certain I’d be way heavier (and completely miserable) if I didn’t have my pups. The third has his own requirements I have to accommodate, so after catering to all 3, my “me time” is 0 minutes. 😅
Thanks for the great video! I’m dreaming of a similar, but simpler project. Hopefully, I’ll pour a slab soon, when it’s cool 🤞 I’ll probably end up driving an hour to rent a MudMixer. I’m old! I’ll take all the help I can get! Thanks again, for the great content.
Outstanding Looking structure there. Nice and beefy. I love how the metal roof company manufactured your panels for you right on the spot. I wish we had a place like that hear us. Where do you live?
I'm with you on heights and ladder falls - I live in Florida so our problem is gators in the pool, but I like gators so I didn't consider the little three footer who got into my pool to be a problem.
May I suggest getting some beam brackets to help take the load of the lag bolts. I know it's a simple Gazebo but for the few bucks that they are it will help it last a lot longer.
So the daughter and I were watching your video and after picking up the metal, we realized that we live very close to you. Enjoy your videos very much. Keep the project coming.
I built one similar, years ago and I think I should tell you, after the fact. You should have vented the top ridge. If it is going to become a kitchen, the smoke has to escape. A fan is a must for flying creatures. Flies hate the fan and will stay away.
A good trick for being on roofs is to use a piece of foam from a old couch cushion it works for tin or shingles. Never had on move more than a inch or 2
Man I love this channel. Been following since forever and every video keeps me engaged and feeling as if I can do what you do because it’s so well explained
Love it I keep thinking round with thatch roof but probably take too long as I have never done a thatched roof but there in might be why I need too lol
Ditch the drill and bolts for some powerlags or equivalent. Sooooooo much easier and faster. Love the dados. I personally removed all the wood at the sides. That gives me a flat plane to start the chisel which I move through the remaining wood on an angle. Sorta like how I was taught to plane.
Great build. I want to do something like this on my existing stamped concrete patio, but a friend is telling me to core through it and not anchor on top like you did? Can you tell me why you did it this way, as that’s the way I wanted to. Thx
Love your builds, you definitely should start putting graphics on your videos with a general cost of materials to give people a chance to gauge what they need to save up for to afford their own builds.
🔥I released an album of music you can listen to free! Let me know what you think! 👉 open.spotify.com/artist/1VOVKFOF2gmaiZysdVug2I?si=HUEvBHVzSDKfoayWUNO4vQ
Just followed you on spotify! I'll listen in the morning at work while i case mail! (rural mail carrier for USPS)
I really appreciate seeing an accomplished TH-camr and DIYer have the same struggles as myself! Parts not arriving on time, parts getting messed up in the mail or delivered to the wrong address, not having the right tools, struggling with the ladder, measuring/cutting wrong, changing your mind about the color of something 4-5 times and still not being sure for a whole ride home. I feel less alone in this world LOL!
John C. Riley is both a talented actor and DIY’er!
*If you close your eyes on the voice alone, this is **_Dale Doback_** from **_Stepbrothers_** lol*
OK, I thought I was the only one. Good Lord, we all have a doppelganger, but this is too close
The entire monologue of other things that scare you cracked me up. “When you open some meat and you can’t tell if it smells bad…”. pure gold!
I was thinking the same thing, I have the same issue with milk though
In mid april, we started our 20'×24' pergola and id like us all to take a moment to appreciate what we wives go through when watching, standing guard and observing our husbands who insist on doing these jobs with their aging muscles and dwindling balance without help from other friends with aging muscles and dwindling balance! Its extremely emotionally and psychologically taxing leaving us SPENT after a full day of hubby pushing the limits! True Story y'all.
😂
🤣
I built a patio table and my wife was worried......I can't wait till we build a pergola 😂
@@camaroguy84 😳😬🥴🤣🤣
I pay my life insurance and work by myself, that way I don't get distracted. God forbid something happens, but if I die, as I bleed out or suffocate, those final moments may be peaceful, rather than filled with ineffective shrieking of my loving wife.
19:29 for the back of the roof panels, old school wives tale, rural legend, call it what you want....use light blue/sky blue. It supposedly helps keep wasps from building nests because they don't see it as protected from the sky. My parents did this with their outdoor porches and over the last 5 years the number of nests built is noticeably less than when they were the original darker color. Maybe it works, maybe it is luck or confirmation bias, but when I build my porch extension for my home I'll be painting it light blue underneath.
Just stumbled onto this channel,,
this fellow is no actor, he's just a clown who loves to give people a good healthy laugh ..
You are an inspiration, dude. I've got some projects that are not nearly as in-depth as yours, and I've been holding off on doing them. Watching this video has given me the willpower to get them done.
Awesome, thank you!
Man…. It is so easy to watch you do this… the reality would be drastically different for me!!! Thank you!!
Trust me. If I can you can.
@@HAXMAN I tried telling my wife that... She said "Price it out.. if the wood is $1500 (which it looks like it would be.. I count at least 9 or 10 6x6 cedar post? 8-10 feet long?), I'll just go buy a gazebo from Costco" Made my heart cry a bit. :(
They aren't 6x6 cedar lumber posts from a sawmill, which would certainly run you over $1500 today. He did use 6x6 posts but I heard him specify that the entire project were pressure treated 6x6 post for the cost savings, which are substantial for (close to) the same structural rigidity as well as aesthetically more pleasing than 4x4's, don't want no wimpy crap..
Remember, it's not the fall that hurts...it's the sudden impact at the bottom that does! 😉
And it only hurts for as long as it takes your flesh and bones to heal, that's all.
BTW, what is the Sherwin Williams number for that shade of "dookey"?🤣
Stain the ends of the cuts of the wood! Did a mailbox with PT 4x6 and looked great with a light seal, came back 2 weeks later and had wood splits starting from the ends. Adding more stain and to the ends stopped it from spliting 😊
I love how the real highlight of this entire video is actually the beam saw bolt - and it keeps getting better.
Every video, everytime, I get a good chuckle when "big foot" appears for a brief moment!
"take a measurement and walk 30 feet, I'll remember it" been there too many times 😂 always entertaining content and fun for new ideas, looks fantastic brotherrr! 🍻
Love that momma haxman supports you so much!
Thank you!
Me too! 😁
@@HAXMAN Can't wait to see the difference from empty yard to fully pimped out palace when you're done all your additions!
I love that I’m not the only one with a plan that doesn’t go accordingly thing brake and we have to adjust accordingly and you handle it well thank you for the inspiration to keep going forward with DIY projects
Why did you go with 9’X 9’? 12’ X 12’ would have been way more esthetic more protective of what you might put underneath it. Just my opinion. I built a pergola that was 15’X15’ 11’ high and it was amazing.
@HAXMAN I stay every time for these videos, the dialogue and charisma is gold… can’t believe I wasn’t subscribed, am now. Please don’t stop, you two are great!
Thank you!
I’m planning on making a grill gazebo, this video really helps out! Wasn’t sure if I should go with 4x4 or 6x6 posts, but the 6x6 look great!
You know what would be a grrrreat youtube series? The Haxman builds a composite deck. And you could even do it on site at a subscribers house! Like my house! I already have the footers poured please help a guy out... Lol
😄
I agree. That would be a great series. Hey BTW, he could do a series on a stamped concrete patio after your composite deck. I’ve already got the patio area prepped for him!
😂 Good one, @TheRoadFarmer! My house is next. I want an enclosed glass room on my bottom floor (It needs a concrete floor lain), and a walk-out deck off my second-story kitchen and bedroom. He can use my place as a demo next!
we've built a shed for outdoor canning, etc. Timber frame, like yours, but with sides up here in the northeast. One side is my husband's. He was a mechanic, and it took a while to get all his tools and his toolbox here, Now he's putting his tools back in. Toolbox is 800 lbs empty. Anyway, the thing I most like about our shed that is different from our other farm buildings is that it has a floor. Rough cut hemlock. Under his toolbox is heavy thick plywood. Also, I like having an extra oven, especially since our stupid governor is making it harder to buy propane appliances. It's always good to have many ways to cook. And if you're a canner, to be able to keep the canning heat outside your house.
Once again, you killed "it" and not yourself Adam. Great job man. It looks awesome.
Thank you!
Omg Thank you for this. I have giggled all thru these vids!
It hurts me so hard that you flexed so hard with those beams while that tractor sat so so close to this project. Then again, I believe as I type this that may have been your YT strategy because you knew it would drive every man crazy not to comment 😂😂😂😂😂😂.
Good job. Looks great! Maybe an outdoor cooking adventure awaits
We've been looking at building something similar, but instead of a metal roof bifacial solar panels. They have these rubber seals that you can use between the panels now to make it an actual water proof roof, that charges things.
I just saw them do that on Ambition Strikes. Pretty cool.
I was having a bad day and I came across your video. I hardly ever leave comments but you drew out quite a bit of sporadic chuckles… thank you for that!!!
✌️😜Just what I needed leading into the Father's Day weekend, a fabulous dose of HAXMAN humor 🤣💒A Blessed Joyful Father's Day to all the Dad's ⚔️ God Bless us All 🇺🇸🙏✝️
Thanks brother!
I e been needing a large shade like this and now I have a blueprint. Your build is easy enough for a simple DIY but complicated enough for me to sweat the entire build. Keep those videos coming.
Since all of your projects are *'BigFoot Approved'* , I decided to subscribe. We love your channel.
Love these videos! Great projects and I appreciate that Adam keeps it real not afraid to act like a human being with fears and frustrations. Also, shout out to Kim- great job behind the camera and not afraid to jump in and help as always!
Thanks Joe!
4:25 If you can carry it up a ladder, then you should have faced the ladder the other way and carried the timber over the shoulder. It is a faster more secure climb. The ladder parallel to the posts, and the timber sliding up those posts, makes it so if you lose control or get tired, the two posts will not let the timber fall towards the ladder. Once you get to the top the timber will let you know, it can be set down. The transition is a lot smoother.
6:20 Don't use the speed square to "drill straight". You can see in the video that it is NOT working. Use 2 pieces of wood. 2x4s will work. About a foot long each ( 6" will work). Make sure the ends are square(miter saw). Slap them together with the 4" (3.5") sides together and off-set them 1". Screw together. Drill the bit till the paddle goes past the surface or place a third 2x4 laying down on the 4 (3.5") side. Then place you 2x4s offset guild on top. By now you should be getting what is happening. The inside corner of the 2x4 offset guild makes two sides to place the drill shank on and keep the bit straight. You can make one end 90° and the other end 45°
Sir thank you so much for being so REAL!! I respect and appreciate you sharing all aspects of your projects. Tools, techniques, skills and (my favorite ) your mistakes! It makes you relatable and inspires us to TRY your projects. PLUS, your wife is such an amazing assistant/project manager, truly inspires hubby and wife DIY teams! Of course I am a little partial since my name is also Kim, and I am the assistant /project manager and my husband Dan is the humorous muscle of our team! You two are the best keep making your videos and God bless you both!
Thank you so much Kim!
I can help you with sketchup! So inspiring!
You always make it look so easy with a Ton of humor to boot. Love the Billie Bob imitation! Happy Fathers Day 2024!
You are a brave man. I just did a project like this with some 6x6x16 and they are HEAVY. You filmed it for all of us to see. You brave. Keep them coming and be safe.
Thank you!
"Meat that smells wierd... and then you eat it and are like..." That one got me good... I went back and watched it again just to hear you say it. You've got such a good delivery and your voices and impressions are what make me a subscriber. Thanks for all the laughs... I think your videos are funnier and more relatable when things don't go according to plan.
Thank you!
Absolutely a Great look and job. Just a thought, when putting in the screws for the roof, if you set the screw on the material and give the back of the drill a pop with your other hand the screw starts almost immediately. Just what I do and works for me.
"Dead people's things for sale" Oh my God that caught me by surprise. That shop is hilarious. 🤣
:)
I love that you show your mistakes, i refreshing to see that honesty
Correct color: POLAR WHITE. If you're hot out there under the sun, send that energy back up to outer space. The dark panel gets hot under the sun and then the back of the panel radiates the heat down on you. Sure there's shade, but the heat is still a THING. Bright white roofs don't get anywhere near as hot underneath.
I just love how accessible your videos and projects are!! I'm a complete amateur woodworker, but watching this makes me want to go build a gazebo right now!! Makes it looks so easy, when it's broken down step by step like this. awesome video!
Glad I'm not the only one to tie the ladder top to something when available.
Luv the detailed video showing how to cut so everything fits perfectly ,the tools etc used as well. Awesome videos
The fall won't hurt ya.... its the sudden stop lol. Looks great !
Thanks!
Thank you very much Ross!
@@HAXMANyou D man!! Great channel!
The Bigfoot cameo turned me into a fan 😂😂😂😂😂😂 love the video didn’t even know I needed a pavilion
I have a big patio and would love a pavilion. And a hammock and swing .
You rock!!! I'm retiring in a couple of months and was looking for a few ideas for the back yard since I will have nothing but time, came across one of your videos and not only was it educational, your humor had me dying and wanting to see more. I've checked out three videos so far and will keep going until I find a project I can handle and afford. Thank you and keep doing what your doing.
you are rocking it with these new videos HAX! Backyard is looking great. You and the family deserve it.
Thank you so much!
This is exactly how I build things, and my wife laughs at me the same way I laugh at you. Thank you.
Great minds think alike 😄
Just found this video. It's great the 2 of you are great together. Nice job.
Your videos just crack me up.
Thank you!
I've got an 8' x 16' I want to build. This video gave me a LOT of information I can use.
Awesome!
Man, you are so real, a standup guy, I've done the same exact thing. you have a new fan👍
and he's hilarious.
Great way to use up all that used oil in save from oil changes. I do this all the time. Lasts longer than anything else I have tried and I think it looks good too.
Thanks for watching! You can feed a HAXMAN child by purchasing merch at www.thehaxman.com.
Wooly Booger??? Like those tires I used to have my old trike? Yea she was a Big Red 200ES Rear AND FRONT Racks, High, Low, AND REVERSE Gears, PLUS NO CHAIN.... Yup.. she had a sweet DRIVE SHAFT!!! It was like a TANK!!! Except for when 15 year old me got my hands on tryin to fix it... Didn't know a dang thing about carburetors, fuel/air mixtures, spark gaps, OR compression... so pulling that spark plug in and out hundreds of times too it's toll while trying to get that sucker to start some days.... eventually the threads just gave up and shot the spark plug out and into the bottom of the gas tank..... :'( That was the last time I ever sat on her soft n comfy plastic foam seats while she was purring..... eventually sold her off to someone who knew what he was doing... he spiffied her up with new plastics, fixed up the bent racks from the flips we did together (unintentionally of course lol) and brought her back to her former glory..... he sold her to some Mexican kid that somehow set it on fire within 2 weeks and it was SCRAP :'(
R.I.P. Big Bertha and your AMAZING Wooly Boogers that paddled me through many a HUGE puddle
- - - Sorry about that.. you just managed to bring back memories I haven't thought about in about 25 years... Thank you :) .... And I got my eyes peeled for that dang wooly booger that's stalkin you... gonna turn 'em into a NEW set of tire if'n I catch 'em!! Use them big 'ol teeth for soem EXTRA GRIP!!! :D
@@sandstorm6605 I think about $1400 with the concrete.
That blue shirt with the chicken on it lol
*Love the proportions. 1/3 more work and you'd have a guest house!*
*We've got a cheap sawmill and my wife immediately said: "What if you did it with 12" beams" lol.*
*"We'll need a crane, or at least six more kids" I said.*
So …….. you could have built a 14x10 😊
Great job and very entertaining video as always!!! Perfect timing since I’m in the early stages of my outdoor kitchen!!!
Awesome! Thank you! Good luck with your build.
Hey haxman. I appreciate you. Please be careful. I'm 53 now and I try to not think I'm 33. Thank you. God bless you and your family!
Thank you Thomas! Funny how our brains work that way. 😄
Awesome job! I love how real life you keep it. Keep up the awesome work brother. 👏 👏👏
Haxman showing how T-rex would climb a ladder.
😂
@@HAXMAN I think strapping the ladder to the timber is a smart idea. I get your fear of heights. It's not being up there that scares me, it's taking one wrong move and falling.
My family are so excited for this project.
My kids love watching for the Sasquatch. My wife loves to get ideas for our new place and I get to build.
Thank you sir.
Thank you! I love hearing that a family can enjoy watching together. That’s the best.
“Timber frame ASMR” 😂😂😂😂😂
Definitely subscribing.
Love the projects and the goofy humor mixed with caring and informative personality. If that makes sense.
I got almost 4 minutes in before I remembered to change to double speed for this guy 😊
Dude! You’re good people and a blast to watch. Thanks for your content that has inspired me to almost do these things 🤣🤣
so for the life of me, i cant fathom why you fooled around carrying those beams up a ladder when you have a tractor...
It doesn't lift that high.
😂@@HAXMAN
For the 'tube 😂
@@HAXMAN ya cant get creative about extending the reach? Ask bigfoot how to put something on the forks or in the bucket to make it lift higher. Alternatively you could have hired a helicopter to bring them in, or a large crane as long as you don't tip it from too much weight.
Tractor ain't got no gas innit. 😂
Great engineer and too funny. His work is exceptional.
I'm a submariner, 16 years. 3 months dived in an 8400 long-ton tin can, no sun, no fresh air etc.? No problem! 10 foot in the air half-way to clear my guttering, I'm a mess. Trust me, I understand.
I like that your wife is involved with your projects❤
Nothing screams "On a budget" like treated 6x6s...
50$ a pop
Ain’t nuthin cheap anymore after covid. They knock you over the head no matter what you buy
I saw a fella use a chain saw on some 6x6 studs. Not a bad idea if you just need a rough cut.
Just found your site - informative and entertaining.
Step 1: Buy 3k worth of Milwaukee tools.
😂😂😂
My rule is: one new tool per project. The kitchen got me four, no argument. Life is negotiating
More than likely the tools were purchased over the years!! Not his first day building!!😂😂😂😂😂😂
The ole lady buys shoes, we buy tools, even if we don't need it right now!!😂😂😂
Unless you rent some tool store for expensive ones is another cost.
@@richardsybrandy1instead of 4 projects, you could have split the kitchen into many more tools
I like you’lls accent. Makes me remember and miss my times in the south. Chester, SC.
Defiantly not dinky looking. Nice Job ... thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
Always enjoyed your content but just noticed your from the great state of GA! Only change suggestion for this would be to do pyramid cuts on the end of your beams for the extra little pop.
Very nice job, and I’m happy I got to see the two pups! 😉 My one mal (the alpha girl) is very intimidating-sounding and rougher during play and the other is just a happy-go-lucky little stud muffin that can take whatever the “queen” dishes out! Love them so! Incredible athletes and keep me going for sure. I’m certain I’d be way heavier (and completely miserable) if I didn’t have my pups. The third has his own requirements I have to accommodate, so after catering to all 3, my “me time” is 0 minutes. 😅
God bless you got a lot of energy keep making the videos
Thanks for the great video! I’m dreaming of a similar, but simpler project. Hopefully, I’ll pour a slab soon, when it’s cool 🤞 I’ll probably end up driving an hour to rent a MudMixer. I’m old! I’ll take all the help I can get! Thanks again, for the great content.
Outstanding Looking structure there. Nice and beefy. I love how the metal roof company manufactured your panels for you right on the spot. I wish we had a place like that hear us. Where do you live?
I'm with you on heights and ladder falls - I live in Florida so our problem is gators in the pool, but I like gators so I didn't consider the little three footer who got into my pool to be a problem.
May I suggest getting some beam brackets to help take the load of the lag bolts. I know it's a simple Gazebo but for the few bucks that they are it will help it last a lot longer.
We love it when you show the guy in the Bigfoot costume.👍 we definitely want more. Bigfoot sightings on your show.😊
You're so funny! Love the comedic commentary while you work!
Sir, another great build, and enjoy watching your videos from Jupiter, Florida.
Thank you!
So the daughter and I were watching your video and after picking up the metal, we realized that we live very close to you. Enjoy your videos very much. Keep the project coming.
It's a small world. Thank you!
I have to say, I am very impressed. Looks great!
This project is stunning
@@southkoreavideo Thank you!
There's no stropping you! You are a bad ass!!!
he deserves a tv show good dude
I've always wanted to build a structure like this. Very nice job, and a great result.
I built one similar, years ago and I think I should tell you, after the fact. You should have vented the top ridge. If it is going to become a kitchen, the smoke has to escape. A fan is a must for flying creatures. Flies hate the fan and will stay away.
Wow that was an incredebicle descent into madness.
@8:55 This man is genuinely pissed off, but displays it with control, sarcasm, and a smidgen of passive aggression. 🤣
That's a real man right there.
Wow! Great job man. I appreciate the skill it takes to hand saw an angle cut like that. My corners would be rounded lol
Thank you!
Great video. Not sure you know but, they sell a tool called a beam saw. That would have helped you with all the difficult cuts.
A good trick for being on roofs is to use a piece of foam from a old couch cushion it works for tin or shingles. Never had on move more than a inch or 2
Man I love this channel. Been following since forever and every video keeps me engaged and feeling as if I can do what you do because it’s so well explained
I appreciate that!
Love it I keep thinking round with thatch roof but probably take too long as I have never done a thatched roof but there in might be why I need too lol
Awesome video! I always learn a lot and feel inspired to say f it, and try building this myself! 😆
Happy Father’s Day!
Thank you! You too!
Looks amazing! great job!
💪💪Awesome, you're brilliant,, love your different voices 🤣
I love watching these videos! The humor, the hard work! Keep it up!
Thank you!
@@HAXMAN And your wife is beautiful! So that's a win too! :)
Ditch the drill and bolts for some powerlags or equivalent. Sooooooo much easier and faster.
Love the dados. I personally removed all the wood at the sides. That gives me a flat plane to start the chisel which I move through the remaining wood on an angle. Sorta like how I was taught to plane.
Great build. I want to do something like this on my existing stamped concrete patio, but a friend is telling me to core through it and not anchor on top like you did? Can you tell me why you did it this way, as that’s the way I wanted to. Thx
Love your builds, you definitely should start putting graphics on your videos with a general cost of materials to give people a chance to gauge what they need to save up for to afford their own builds.
ROFL at your crazy comments! Love this! And you do great work too. Kudos to your camera gal! She captures the action well.