Taking our chances with the weather

This time of year our weather is very changeable. While we look at the weather forecasts, the truth is they don't mean much. The local mountains and winds determine what kind of day we will have. On most days I don't determine the adjenda until I study the skies on my drive up to the lake. Even then I'll weigh a couple of the crew's opinions before we strike a course of action.

There's just over seven weeks until opening day and we have six weeks of concrete sculpting to accomplish. That means we have to take some chances with the weather and push it HARD. This morning the weatherman called for rain but not until the afternoon. The sky was cloudy but the ceiling was high. We decided to forgo the underneath mudding and go for the gusto. We would review our decision every two hours or at each crew break. The last remaining facia of the large building was our first item on the adjenda, then Peter jumped to the branches on the treehouse while I started in on a thirty foot deck wall. All of this work was out in the open.

At noon the weather was still good but the sky was getting darker. We decided to push on and started in on eight fence posts and three light standards. The Wave Swinger sign post was the next to get the treatment. As Peter and I mudded the crew abandoned painting, wiring and other tasks to help sculpt. The rain still held off and so Peter and I tackled fifty feet of retaining wall, pushing our luck a little more. A couple of times a few raindrops fell but then held off. We worked on, continually looking up at the clouds.

As the crew took a quick break at second coffee a very light misty rain started. This time the skies didn't brighten. The rolls of plastic were quickly rolled out and the tarps were unfolded to cover things up in a hurry. While we could stop the application of the concrete we were not nearly done. We still had to sponge off the 'dirt banks' and spray on the texture. There were also plenty of woodgrain to carve. Because the rain was now starting to fall seriously and the humidity was rising, the concrete wasn't hardening as fast as usual. It takes more skill and more care to carve woodgrain into wet concrete but the crew was up to the task. We were shoulder to shoulder as we worked. Look close in the picture and you can count nine happy people leaving their mark in the concrete as they worked to beat the rain. The rest of the crew were scrambling to set up more tarps and cover, starting with the freshest concrete and working towards the dryer stuff done earlier in the day.

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By quitting time we were done and the rain was coming down hard. There would be no overtime today. As I drove out I snapped this picture of the park from outside the fence. There's not a lot of color yet on the lower areas but the concrete work on this corner of the park is now done and looking good.

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Happlily no concrete was lost to the rain today. We had stolen another whole day of progress by pushing our luck with the weather. Tomorrow, with the weatherman's current forecast, it looks like we will have to work the entire day under cover. But then again, just maybe, we will get lucky one more time...

-grampa dan

Deja view

On July 30 of last year I met Chris at the site of what was to become Cultus Lake Adventure Park. He had brought his 65 foot tall snorkel lift to the site. We first used a spray bomb to lay the proposed park layout onto the ground. We then jumped in the snorkel lift to go to the top height of the ferris wheel to see how everything would look. The job site was dead flat at that point. We had to imagine how it would appear when done. Everything was still in question and in flux. The features and rides were just ideas back then - except the ferris wheel, bumper boats and the carousel.

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Here's a shot from the snorkel lift back last July. We are at the full height of it's reach. The lines for the proposed attractions, pathways and buildings are sprayed out in pink paint on the ground.

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Today, for the first time, Chris and I were able to climb into the ferris wheel and ride to the top. I snapped this picture looking east. We were quite a bit higher than we had been last July for we raised the ride about eight feet by putting it at the same height at the building deck. The brown tree (to the right in the picture) that sits on top of the roof is about 54' tall and we were looking way down on it as we rode.

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Instead of spray painted lines I could see the real thing below us, just as I imagined it last July - only better!

-grampa dan

Final form

So much hard work goes into the park features as we weld and apply the galvanized mesh. These are the stages where we spend most of our time. The thing about this foundation work is that it is transparent and only outlines what is to come. In the last few weeks we have at last applied the concrete and sculpted a good portion of the final form. The mountain and Bucky's Bumper Boat pool areas are now almost complete and it is so much fun to watch it come together.

Yesterday we finished off all of the post supports and beams for the Wave Swinger ride.

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Today, with better weather we got out from under the cover and turned our attention to the area's last big wall - over 130 feet long. There are cool details at every turn. Here Peter carves the detailed woodgrain into the heavy wood timbers that act as a retaining wall.

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As this area comes together the close, mid and long views from any angle are spectacular. Painted it will be even better!

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It is exciting to see the final forms emerge from all the the work we did previously.

-grampa dan