Tornado: The Recovery
Tornado vs. Trees
Tornado vs. Fence
The Recovery
Trees Cleaned Up:
Big oak and pine removed in front

After storm: Trees down
After cleanup: Trees removed
Bye-bye, Barn
Had to tear down and burn the poor barn.

After new roof and siding:


To reassure you, the siding is all the same color - Prestige Beige. It
just looks different with different lighting. Also, it is on straight,
despite looking slanted in the first picture. That is an effect of reducing
the size of the image.
Timber
The
farm has ... whoops... HAD a fair amount of good timber - oak, maple,
hickory, walnut. The tornado did a lot of damage - uprooting and breaking.
We had a timber cutter cut and take 13 large truck loads of timber to the
sawmill. Too bad the market price was down due to so much downed timber
being available after the storm.

The photo at the right shows what's left at the edge of the last open
field in the back. The green line shows where the tree canopy used to be...
in a solid mass. What's piled on the ground is the branches and logs that
were not suitable for the sawmill. These are pretty much the way they fell.
Mud
Who knew that the longest-lasting effect of a tornado was a yard full of
mud?
You can see from the photos that the "clean-up" resulted in a mass of mud
all around the house. I guess it should not be a surprise, once you count
the various pieces of equipment involved. Most of these either parked
in or drove across the yard. That dragged mud onto the gravel driveway,
making it part of the mud mess, too. The larger vehicles tore up the
driveway itself.
Tree removal crew - bobcat, large dump truck for branches and
chips, chipper truck, various pick-up trucks. Left small branches and some
wood chips and dips in the yard where the tree stumps once were.
Electric company - large vehicle to deliver new pole and dig new
hole. Dumped sub-soil onto my flower bed.
Timber guys - large tractor with prongs on front,
VERY large truck to haul off
logs, several pick-up trucks
Roofers - large truck delivering shingles, large truck to haul off
old shingles, several pick-up trucks. Left lots of nails and bits and pieces
of shingles.
Siding guys - several pick-up trucks. Left bits of old siding and
nails, but not as bad as the roofers did.
Stone mason - (technically not a repair but we replaced part of
the vinyl siding with stone) Dug down to add foundation, truck for
delivering stone, pick-up trucks. Left stone chips and dried mortar.
Demolishing the storage shed and removing its foundation -
backhoe worked big time on this. Burned parts.
What's Next?
Since the yard was already completely torn up, we decided that now was
the time to add that garage we'd been wanting. Are we nuts??
So, the mud era continued and the repair to the lawn and landscaping had
to wait until construction was well underway. The photos of the house above
were actually taken just as we started the earth-moving part of the
new construction.
Tornado vs. Trees
Tornado vs. Fence
The Recovery
© 1997-2008 Jan Smith
All Rights Reserved
~~ 1 Cor. 10:31 ...whatever you do, do it all for the
glory of God. ~~
Last updated:
January 22, 2008 |