It is nearly the end of a short, 3-day visit to Oberlin. The main purpose of the trip was the (second) conditional use permit hearing with the planning commission. Happily, despite a minority of our neighbors' best efforts, the permit was approved unanimously.
Dominique and I agreed that the first priority was to continue the foyer project. We had already stripped most of the wallpaper off in a frenzy of "I can't stand this old wallpaper and especially this sea grass!" and were left with a lot of brown adhesive - and most of the sea grass. However, I decided that in the interest of good neighbor relations, I should do something about the front yard. The grassy area looked ok, but the small left section, where a large tree had previously grown, was overgrown and ugly, with lots of green/brown sprouts from the trunk and ton of reddish bushes. Not to mention gigantic dandelions and other weeds.
So I - with Mom's help and tools - spent most of Wednesday and at least half of Thursday on cleaning up that area, plus I attempted to mow the lawn but that was a wasted effort because the grass really wasn't long enough. At the end, the front section didn't look good, exactly, because there were lots of bare dirt areas, but it looked better. Unfortunately, I forgot to take a "before" picture but I think we have some in the file at home so I'll post later. We'll see if it's an improvement or not.
Finally, on Thursday afternoon, I picked up the foyer project. I had brought a Roundup sprayer to spray an adhesive-removing solution on the walls. (DIF is what is generally recommended. We had some in the basement, but we also had some other stuff so for no particular reason I decided to use it instead.) The concentrate is supposed to be mixed with warm water and we haven't turned on the gas yet, so I had to microwave several water bottles full of water. Mom had given me some drop cloths. At first I tried to be very careful with the spray and tried to tape the cloths on the wall to protect the wood moldings, but I couldn't get them to stay on at and it didn't appear that the solution was hurting the wood finish at all. Nor did it seem to hurt my eyes as the spray ricocheted off the wall and all over my face.
Scraping off the adhesive was surprisingly easy, although I decided that I need to remove the middle wood molding (I'm sure there's a technical term for this but I don't know what it is) in order to get all the wallpaper and adhesive off. I used a fireplace tool as a crowbar to pry it off, after loosening it with the scraper. I spent most of Friday working on the foyer although I had to quit a bit earlier than I would have liked so that the News Tribune could take another picture of me for an article that I'm pretty sure will never appear in the paper. (Why are they doing an article on our B&B? There's no story...)
When I was done I realized that I missed one little area above the door - rats, I'll have to catch it next time. I started sanding the areas I had scraped on Thursday, but I quickly realized that you really have to let the walls dry well before starting that, otherwise adhesive gets on your sander. Seems quite obvious once you've done it wrong. So I was a little limited in how much sanding I could do.
It's not a bad task and goes fairly quickly but there are lots of distractions with Sunny, guests, and the media all taking up little bits of time. That said, it would probably drive me crazy to do it nonstop for hours on end with no distractions. It feels good to have launched this project.
This is the area above the fireplace mantel. To the left, the adhesive has been scraped away. Gee, I've already forgotten how bad it looked with all that brown stuff all over the walls.
Thursday was Bastille Day so I hung our French flag.
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