Bauhaus concrete villa with core insulation - experiences

  • Erstellt am 2018-09-11 07:32:07

pagoni2020

2021-01-26 17:52:20
  • #1
Mine is outside.........why should a missing shelter prevent that???? ...or do you need underfloor heating turned on under your feet while grilling? :D :D. A real problem is my current diet, which still lasts for 10 days....or so. After that, no weather will stop me......the Argentine beef fillet already knows its fate. By the way, in the Grill Sportverein all the grill amateurs here can look at wonderfully crazy pictures & videos about the "Komodo" grill from the USA on page 4 by the user Flemse, rarely seen something so positively crazy, including a video of the delivery of his Komodo model from the USA. I could laugh myself silly over his thread. I think he lives in Denmark....wonderful....and he even bought the entry-level model :eek:
 

Pinkiponk

2021-01-26 17:56:48
  • #2

Alternatively, you can enjoy your grill by drinking nicely during the grilling process. ;-)
 

Pinkiponk

2021-01-26 18:02:20
  • #3
I console myself with the thought that Rick probably has to prepare for an ultra-hard triathlon in the pool, gets up at 4:00 a.m. every morning for it, and soon won’t be allowed to heat the water anymore for training purposes either. ;-) Brrr, would you seriously want to trade places with him? ;-)
 

11ant

2021-01-26 18:04:25
  • #4
Why? - fits perfectly with CorTen ...
 

rick2018

2021-01-26 18:18:29
  • #5
I do get up that early every day, but only because it's my rhythm. Recently, we head out with the tractor around 5:30 a.m. I really can't complain. I just miss the (few) social contacts we maintain at the moment.
 

Climbee

2021-01-27 14:01:58
  • #6
We are doing well too - we are just enjoying the house more intensely.

Both of us had birthdays during this time, my husband a milestone one. That’s unfortunate, we actually wanted to celebrate it big. Nothing happened. He then went around alone, following corona rules (only one person from a family at a time), collecting his congratulations, and I had a quiet afternoon. We imagined it differently, but it’s not a tragedy.

Much worse is for an old acquaintance who is celebrating his 90th today and whom we would have liked to celebrate on a grand scale. Now we will stand in the courtyard and congratulate him, and that’s all. THAT is bad, it will likely be his last milestone birthday and he is still fairly fit and has been thinking for half a year how he would celebrate it. He is really down. I really feel sorry for him. At 90, the likelihood of the next "0" birthday is rather limited.
 
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