Jan 18, 2013

Plastering At the Cabin, Part 1

As I mentioned in the previous post, I've been plastering at the cabin.  The building is made of basic adobe (dirt + water + sun); no additives.  These days, many people use stabilized adobes to increase waterprooficity, but when my dad was building the cabin, he went with the traditional recipe.  (Stabilizing adobe most commonly requires the addition of petroleum additives.  Another option is the addition of lime.)   The benefit to natural adobe is that anyone who has ever made a mudpie has the basic experience and feel of the material.
The back of the cabin - all adobes visible.
Looking at the still unplastered walls of the cabin is like a reverse stratigraphic investigation.  My father made many of the adobes himself, trucking in soils from various areas nearby.  As the bricks were made, he build the walls, so a close look reveals a variety of textures and colors.  Some bricks were made by now defunct adobe yards throughout NM.  When I was very little, he brought in some burnt adobes (fired in kilns until the clay has turned to ceramic) from the Tucson area, a type of brick not seen in NM.  Some bricks have larger pebbles, others have a lot of sticks and bits of wood in them (which makes me wonder because my dad hates that).  The mud used as mortar came from yet another soil source, so the walls are interesting to say the least. 

They walls are, of course, quite thick - at least 12", more in some places.  In the early days, my dad was sloppy about the mortaring, so there are many large crevices that serve as homes to a diversity of insects and small mammals (how I feel about this depends on how often the fauna pass through the veil into the interior of the home). The whole building is very NM, not at all like the nueva Santa Fe Style featuring smoothed edges, massive walls and weird pink and turquoise accents.   

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