The bedroom ceiling is the lowest overall in the back of the coach, so it just touches the top of my head. The old ceiling carpet had already been removed by Des, so all I had to do was grind the toilet ceiling panel off then scrap back the foam underlay that was glued to the ceiling.
Time To Remove The Underlay
With scraper in hand it was time to start scraping back all the old underlay. This might sound like an easy job, but it had been glued up there very well. I thought it wouldn’t take to long, but I was wrong again as the bedroom ceiling end up taking around 8hrs just to get the foam off.
Now To Get Rid Of That Glue
With the contacted glue still all over the ceiling, the only way that I could think to do was to put a sanding disc on a grinder and go for it. Well… it worked, I had been covered in glue and dust. Thank goodness for a dust mask and safety glasses as once I was finished the job there was crap all over the place.
I’ll Just Keep On Going
Now that I’ve started on the ceiling, I’ll keep on going and finish it all off inside the coach. The next project will be the bathroom then onto the kitchen ceiling area, so once I have cleaned all that up it will be ready to glue and pop rivet some white Colorbond sheet metal that came with the coach from Des. The ceiling is a good job to do when the weather is wet and raining so while its nice and fine I will go finish removing the old air-con on the roof above the bedroom, they are the wholes in the ceiling you can see on the photo.
Last month our current house sitters were at Uluru (Ayers Rock) for a visit and also visited the camel farm while there. It is that time of the year at the end of May when the cameleers get to race between themselves and have a fun day.
To our surprise Ken and Leanne found a picture of Bernie and I on the promotional material for this years 2017 Camel Cup, two photos in fact. Bernie and I had a fantastic day last year and it was the highlight of our stay at the farm.
Camels are sensitive creatures
Camels are such beautiful creatures and very patient, much more patient that a horse will every be. Yes they can occasionally vomit all over you but that is only if they are really scared. You see camels are very sensitive creatures and highly emotional, they are very perceptive to your emotion.
Last year when we were there, I decided that if I was going to work with such sensitive large animals, that best way for them to know that I am a friend and not out to hurt them was to refrain from eating meat as much as possible while I worked with them. Over the weeks, I forgot about the strict ‘not eating meat rule’, one of the cameleers cooked a delicious chicken meal for everyone in the house. The little experiment I had haphazardly decided to do came all to clear to me the very next morning.
Frustrated cameleer
I was one frustrated cameleer! For the very first time the camels were turning their noses up at me, not listening or coming to me like they usually did all the past weeks. They would not sit still and putting a nose line on most of them was much more difficult that usual. What the hell was going on?? By this stage it had not occurred to me at all that the camels very well could be sensing or smelling the meat I ate the pervious night.
When I got home I told Bernie about the odd behaviour that all of the camels exhibited towards me through the shift and how frustrating it was. I have seen them do these types of behaviour to other certain cameleers but not to me. Was I doing something wrong, did I have a new perfume or deodorant? mmm no…..Bernie just replied ‘well babe you did eat meat for the first time in weeks remember? Huh true…..well I made sure I never did that again while working there, sensitive creatures they are for sure.
With so much stuff we need to fit out the coach, as well as tools, it was time to fix the bin doors on the coach as well as the diesel tank. I don’t need to lose 1000 Lt of diesel, so I got to work. When we were at the Sarina Ranges house sit home of Larry and Elaine.
Are they in the right place?
After marking out where I thought the locks should go, then realised it won’t so it was time to mark them out again. I’m glad I didn’t drill the hole before double checking my work. Remember the rule measure twice cut once…., as it would not have been the first time I’ve stuff up.
One less job to do
So many small jobs to do when building a motorhome, you finish one and there are so many more to work on. At least all the bins are now locked up (six of them) and two diesel fill points on either side of the coach. If you ever start working on a project nothing ever go’s to plan, modification has become my middle name.
Now with the roof fixed while in Bowen, it was time to start on the bedroom. The first thing was the windows…. I had to remove the old toilet window which Des had put in, because for us it was in the wrong place.
Time For Some Walls
With the window in place it was back inside to fit the insulation and wall paneling 16mm ply the we got when living in Yulara N.T. First thing was to remove the old aluminium sheetmetal so we could put in the new insulation.
With the inside panels going on its starting to look more like a bedroom, later we will be putting some kind of lament over the ply to finish it off.
So with the bedroom side walls in place it was time to set up the new sleeping area for the next part of our trip down the Queensland coast. We also had to re pack all the stuff we moved into the shed while house sitting in Bowen.
One step closer to having a motorhome, so the dream’s getting their slowly but we are on our way.
The condenser unit was fitted in the front bin on the drivers side and only had an out vent so if the bin door was closed, things didn’t work that well. This should have been one of the first things that I should have fixed, but as we were not on the road much I didn’t think about it at all. Now after driving from S.A. to N.T. and now into QLD, it was defiantly time to fix it.
Time For Some Modifications
To start with we had to seal the air-con unit to the outside bin door, so off to the hardware store for some sheetmetal. Ended up getting some flashing which would mean I would not have to bend any 90 angles. So out with the tin snips and pop rivet gun to make some ducting.
Time For Some Intake Vents
Now all we had to do was the intake vents, I thought three would do for a start and thats all they had at the hardware. So back to the coach I went to start fitting the intake vents. First off was to mark out the holes for the vents then cut them out.
One Cool Motorhome.
Now that job is done It’s so much cooler inside when driving down the road. Also when we stay somewhere I don’t have to open up the air-con’s bin door again, now that all the hot air is blown outside.
The only time it’s good to have a leaky roof is when their is nothing to get damaged inside. After a year thinking the roof was ok in Leigh Creek, we started having problems with the roof again. Mainly because where we moved to rained a bit more. To start off we thought it was only the fiberglass panels that were replaced from the old original bus windows that Des had fitted.
Thanks to Zac for his great help in getting the huge job started by cutting out the old Sikaflex. I was working six days a week @ Curtin Springs Station N.T., all I could manage was regluing after work. It did stop the water coming in around the fiberglass panels.
Its Still Wet In Here.
Our first house sitting job was in Bowen for Michael and Michelle. We had no rain forecast for the next few days so Charmaine and myself started on the roof to fix the rest of the leaks. The first job was to remove the solar panels and hatches from the roof.
The Fun Starts Now …….Not !!!
The fun of sanding back the old paint job as well as getting rid of the surface rust around the hatches. It was one of those jobs you love to hate, but had to be done, so with buckets of water and sanding paper in hand it was head down & ass up and off to work we go.
I Do Like Painting
Time to undercoat….. we had been so lucky as it had been raining all the way around us and only that a couple of rain drops on the coach. So after I Sikaflexed all the joints it was time to undercoat using some Infrared Heat Reflective Primer.
Now for the topcoat, the best part of the job as it’s almost done. Des (the bloke we got the coach before us), had already paid for the paint, so now it was time for three topcoats.
A Job Well Done
So after four days we had finish painting the roof and the inside temp had gone down at least 4 degrees. The paint was a polyurethane membrane which meant no more water leaking when it rained and would be a lot cooler in summer. We just have to remove the old air conditioner unit which is now under the solar panels. This is way down the back of the coach once done the roof will be totally finished off, in time this back area will also have a deck for us one day.
There are thousands of products these days and we are all spoilt for choice in every direction we turn. We go out to the local shops and our huge shopping centres with their half empty shop fronts that promise the world but most times don’t deliver a true Aussie product.
Most people are unconscious consumers when it comes to buying and only look at the price. Is it on special? Is is a brand I am emotionally attached to? One huge question is…do I really need it. The answer is usually NO.
Being A Conscious Consumer
Bernie has been asked by people travelling if we promote any products and the answer has been always a no. It’s far more important when starting out to be a conscious consumer. What is that? You may be asking…. ask yourself the right questions. ……Where is that product made? Is it promoting Aussie jobs? Is it doing a benefit for my body and health? Is it a quality product or just a brand name? Is it something that correlates with my belief systems? Where is my money going? Church people all around Australia do not give money to the church they do not believe in, ….. so what is any different when buy a product?
This journey of conscious consuming does not come easily to any of us these days,…..why is that so? I can only think of one large word to answer this…CONSUMERISM!!!!.
Bernie and I feel that it is important to firstly inspire people to find their own moral compass…whatever that maybe. Obviously, we both use and buy products for cleaning, bathing, and restoring our health and wellbeing, These mostly correlate with our belief systems, but not all the time, …..as we are on our own journey of rediscovery ourselves and are far from any end.
We both want to encourage people to find what works for you, if you have found something that works for you, please just add a comment, as it may help someone else on their own journey as well….Let’s learn together!
In the next few weeks and months Bernie and I will be putting more blogs up in the ‘Conscious Consumerism’ category.
Have a great Day!
Ps. If you want to read another great blog, read Alden Wicker’s on March 01/2017 …
Leaving Leigh Creek S.A on the start of our new life, We had to be in Yulara to start work in five days. With a smile on our faces the next stop was port Augusta for the night, then head north on the Stuart Hwy. The coach was packed full with only room down the front for our bed and some were to cook on the road.
Too Good To Be True
All was going fine, then I started to lose a little bit of power we were only 150 klms down the road and almost to Hawker. Just an other 140 ks to Port Augusta I thought, then the gauges on the dash started flutter around. Thats when the coach started to drop the RPM of every 30 klms…. I was losing around 100-150 RPM, it looked like some electrical gremlin had raised it’s ugly head. We made it into Port Augusta but just at a max speed of 60k/h, fill it up at the first servo we came to. After a 750 Lt hole in my pocket an 1000 Lt tank sounds great till you have to fill it up.
Let’s Sleep On It
After a good nights sleep it was off to the truck work shop across the road. They just so happen to have someone free to start working on it there and then… How good was that? So off we to the shops to stock up on things you can’t get in the middle of nowhere. ( Yulara NT).
Back at the workshop they had found after 3 hrs it was not an electrical problem at all but a fuel supply problem…..in particular the in tank filter. Bugger I’d just filled the bloody thing up and now It has to drain the hole lot, so 5 x 205 Lt drums later it was 5pm on a Friday night and the filter was out.
Back On the Road
So by Monday afternoon, the filter was clean, pumping the diesel back into the tank, we’re back on the road.
Curtain Springs to Alice
But about 9 months later driving into Alice Springs….. Oh bugger it’s happening again! With only 450 Lt in the tank and some drums from a caravan park, we drained the tank again. This time it was modification time because that filter was not going back in again. Some more shopping in Alice and a movie it was back to fix the filter system for good.
We are still getting sludge out of the tank I’ve cleaned it out about 5 times now, but the tank is slowly cleaning it’s self out. I just have to remember to turn the valves back on after I clean the filter, yes I did forget the first time and had to bleed the diesel pump to get it going again. You only ever do it once..
Currently we are on our third house sit and this is our longest one yet….it’s for 6 months. This is really good for us with such a big project, as it give us time to work on finishing off the bedroom and start on the bathroom. When the weather is good, I am get to pulling out the rest of the old air-con unit on the roof too. There are still holes to patch up, plus a bit of water proofing, since we are putting a roof top deck some time later on. Having a shed a the house to store our stuff makes it so much easier than trying to work around all that crap you still need.
Pets in all shapes and sizes…
The main part of most house sitting is looking after the family animals both big and small….. so far it’s been from cats to cattle. Our first sit was in Bowen for Michael & Michelle they have 13 acres about 20 mins out of town. We looked after their property for three weeks through the Christmas /New year time so they could go on a family holidays with their son, Jay. They have two lovely and very affectionate Border Collies, Buddy has long hair and Rosie has the shorter hair. They have two outside cats, one ginger in colour called Tom and Timmy is grey, all of them warmed to us very well.
Our February house sit was in Sarina Rangers, QLD, in a peaceful place that has a lovely running (all year) creek that is great for swimming and a cool down in the heat. Which we did almost everyday. We looked after Tyson and Tommy Tigger, four cow + one bull. This was a different house sit as we stayed in the coach half parked in their shed. Elaine and her partner, were in the middle of building their new house. Our blog top photo was taken by her, it was such a good photo we had to share it! It will be nice to pop in an visit them on our way up north next time.
Then you think it couldn’t get better we had our own creek to swim in every day.
Chuwar near Ipswich is our new house sit at the moment, we are here for 6 months. We are looking after two dogs, Kingston and Lexy as well as Charlie the cat.
In addition we get to eat all the fruits, herbs and veggies of other peoples labour, how good it this!
House sitting has turn out to be one of the best ideas Charmaine’s come up with. We have pets to cuddle and love part time, as well as meeting some loverly people on our adventure around Australia. So click this link to go to aussiehousesitters it is a great way to get out of the motorhome for a short break or long one, whatever suits you. Housesitting has given us time to keep fitting out the coach, one house sit at a time.
We started working on the coach when we were down in Leigh Creek which was around two years ago now. I started by stripping out the old toilet down the back as this is where we would like the bedroom to go.
We started pulling things apart and should have know as a past chippy myself, that the job was bigger than we originally thought. As I started taking the loo apart I realised that it had been leaking for quite a while, (how long no one knows)….. not outside, just under the floor so their were pools of slop and rust under the timber flooring. YUCK!
Clean up time
Some days you think to your self ……why did I start this motorhome project? …… but then, envisioning the big picture …..it’s going to be our permanent home. The though of not having to pack up a house ever again makes these shitty jobs bearable.
So we started grinding the rust off and sanding the metal back which was a bit like a chemical shit storm in the coach, thank goodness for dust masks! After the dust had settled and was cleaned up in was time for some painting.
Water proofing the floor
It might be over kill but bugger it, we though even if the roof leaks we know the floor is not going to rust again. So I used some polyurethane floor paint inside the back floor, with two coats before the flooring went down.
Flooring getting laid
Now the fun bit cutting up the timber to size, we are putting in a flat floor so the old aisle will no longer be there. We will however be able to use it as storage in some places and ducting in some other areas. Screwing as well as gluing the floor went down just fine. We will be having an access point to get into the gearbox under the gas strutted bed.