After making such strides yesterday, it almost seemed a little anti-climactic to only get a few more supports in place today. But, I suppose that's to be expected when you only have so much building material on hand.
You can see here that two more cross beams have been installed. I still have enough to finish level two and get half of level three done, but I need hardware. Looks like a trip to my local hardware store is in my future.
The girls are excited and have made use of what exists to climb already. When it is all done, there will be four levels - each two feet above the one below it. That will leave about two feet of 4x4 sticking up at the top onto which I will attach a safety railing. Then, one-by-one each side can be constructed and connected. They will vary in length so their angles will be different, thus their difficulty to climb. I'm shopping for hand holds and finding they can be quite pricey. Their quality varies, as well. My initial research shows an amazing number of people who dedicate a basement or garage wall (and sometimes ceiling!) to climbing. Fun times ahead!
One Dad's journal on discoveries, findings, education, and even a few rants with our childrens' Waldorf experience
Monday, January 9, 2012
Building A Climbing Wall - Day 1
Over the recent holiday break, we decided to build a climbing wall for the girls. Brainstorming lead me to the idea of a free-standing 4'x4' tower with platforms inside (to act as a ladder). We could then build up to four "walls" at any angle we wished and just connect them to the tower. This posting serves to show the first steps taken. I decided to sink one post into the ground to stabilize the entire structure. So, what you see here is a 12' 4x4 sunk into the ground just over two feet and the hole filled in with concrete. Just about 10 feet is standing above ground.
About 90 minutes later, the remaining three 4x4s are standing and connected with one level of support beam. These three posts are just standing on top of the ground. Everything has been bolted into place but I'm keeping the kids away until I can get the next tier of supports in place. However, at this point, it feels pretty stable. In this photo, the horizinal pieces are just laying up off of the ground and will be the next support layer. I plan to space these 2 feet apart.
About 90 minutes later, the remaining three 4x4s are standing and connected with one level of support beam. These three posts are just standing on top of the ground. Everything has been bolted into place but I'm keeping the kids away until I can get the next tier of supports in place. However, at this point, it feels pretty stable. In this photo, the horizinal pieces are just laying up off of the ground and will be the next support layer. I plan to space these 2 feet apart.
More to come...
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