Wijnands, the jury (aka my wife) is still out on the "mad" verdict but all signs point to an emphatic yes and a life sentence + 117 years of hard labor. I am very grateful for your most kind comments.
Penny, it's a big carriage pulled by one little, rather sickly donkey (me) so you will have to learn to contain yourself
Joking of course. You want juice? Here is some more
A few weeks back I'd finished drawing the blueprints and submitted an application for a building permit. Yes, I said the building permit - sometimes I put the carriage in front of me. You have already caught me doing it once before
I thought I didn't need a building permit because one doesn't need the permit generally when putting up a greenhouse in the agricultural zone and so I was semi-happily tinkering for over a year. Moreover, I was just modifying the existing screen enclosure. Local newspaper Naples Daily News decided to write a column on our efforts and of course they snapped a photo and published. The County Commissioners saw the pic and the signs of construction going on and this is how I got caught. Turns out when a greenhouse is attached to a house and is not going to be used for agricultural purposes, one needs the building permit. It took a good effort to clarify this info alone. The County was nice enough not fining me and just told me to get a permit at this stage but I am dealing with lots of different County employees and departments and who knows what will happen and when.
As mentioned above, the next big hurdle was finding not only a trustworthy and reasonable civil engineer but one that would not make me disassemble a year's worth of work (and $10,000 in materials) but build on it, which means a knowledgeable and experienced engineer willing to cope with the County if it challenges us. Luckily, with vital help we found one. The engineering drawings alone would have cost $4000 but he was compassionate and let me draw myself under his supervision. Two months and $2000 later I had all I needed to submit an application featuring the calculated reinforcements to what I had built so far. These things happen left and right when you "wing it" as I was doing with my highly unconventional, self-invented building techniques, which the engineer had to calculate. You don’t build greenhouses with ½”x10’ EMT (galvanized steel conduit) pipes and stainless steel hose clamps (a steel ribbon + screw type) and other homemade fasteners etc on top of an existing commercial aluminum frame. When one of my good neighbors saw it he had a bewildered look on his face and muttered something about a monkey puzzle
The 55'x55'x22'tall structure has to withstand 170 MPH hurricane wind load... of course I assume that at some point, perhaps 70-100 MPH, the plastic and the shade cloth will rip or detach altogether. I need to be able to take off the coverings before the hurricane or cut it off if there is little time. Not for category 1 or maybe even 2, but for 3 and up for sure. The problem is that the rating=wind speed often change suddenly. For instance, the latest big one in mid-2000's - hurricane Wilma - was coming as category 1 (~75 MPH sustained), so my neighbors left the plastic on their greenhouses. Within 100 miles from us, it gained strength of category 3 (~125 MPH). No time to do anything. Ripped all greenhouses, mangled some.
BTW, the 95% shade cloth, 95'x65', was $1300 and the plastic, same dimensions, from Reef Industries (should serve 5-7 years at least) was $2200. This is much more than peanuts for us.
Anyway, atm I am waiting to hear from the County on the permit – approved or not. If approved, then construction. Then inspection by the County that I did everything as the engineer designed. I’d dearly love to have the cover on before the end of Nov (which I don’t think is happening). It’s a lot of repetitive, hard labor to keep the temporary fish-holding ponds warm enough during colder nights, sometimes weeks.