One of my mission trip youth has helped roof multiple times - KY, ND, and NM. If the psychology/journalism thing doesn't work out for her, she has a fall back.
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As a teenager, I helped my dad add un-coated fiberglass insulation in our crawl space. Itched for about a week. Had to trash the clothes I wore, as anytime I wore them, I would start itching all over again. This was before such safety features as masks. Fortunately, I'm still able to breath without artificial means.
I used to normalize pressure discs used in pressure switches for large trucks, i.e. PACCAR, Freightliner, Volvo(Mack), etc. Put 10 through the punch press to create a dimple in the disc. Put 10 through the pressure tester. Repeat.
What was nice was that it was 4 1/2 day work week and it was the summer in the Seattle area. I was out of there on Friday shortly after the cloud cover had "burned" off.
As I mentioned a few days ago, I worked a summer at Marble Slab Creamery and that was my worst job ever...turned me off of ice cream for a while, and I have a lingering (though fading) scar from a severe waffle iron burn (I was on cone duty that day...OUCH).
grad_devil's post that I've quoted here reminds me of my undergrad job at the Gothic Bookshop in the Bryan Center. I loved that job...I got to be around books and get paid for it, it taught me a lot about time management as a busy student, and I was able to have enough running around money to have my fun without always begging my parents for cash. Fond memories of those three years.
Our architectural committee dictates color and type of shingles that need to be used. I build a shed and found that out as part of the process.
With that said, I've noticed other sheds/gazebos/etc. in the neighborhood that have incorrect shingles.
Yes, it really is inexcusable. In conciliation, Kim - can use my tattoo design if desired.
I'd like to see it get some use. My daughter spent 3 (maybe 4) mins concocting it - and although I was warmed by its simple genius, the community reaction was to mock me for only having one arm.
I'd go with metal if it's standing seam...got mine 21 years ago, it looks like the day they installed it. Marvelous.
I'm not sure of the status of asphalt based shingles these days..they went thru a horrid period a decade or so ago when nearly all the major brands cheapened their recipe due to the price of oil, and it led to astronomical failures...had a friend with alleged 30 year architectural shingles, they failed in five years...this was very common, the manufacturers (sensing bankruptcy) denied almost all claims claiming that installation was wrong, etc, etc...there was a local handyman savant who had a column in our local rag, he wrote about this for years, it really was a mess...SO, you might want to make sure that whatever shingle you might choose is actually holding up well...
If you go with metal, do be advised that your roof dynamics will change, especially if you have snow...I am available for free consultations!
I second all of this.
But perhaps you should weigh budwom's advice over mine. I replaced (or reinstalled) a gutter 5 times before I installed snow breaks. One time I had to replace the fascia too. Seems simple now, but I was leery of poking holes in our roof as a solution to anything. That and a steep pitch and the wrong ladders.
I can identify with this! First, thru dumb luck, it turned out that my gutters are mounted kind of low, so when the (literally) tons of snow slide off, they shoot over the top of the gutters, don't tear off.
I finally got snow breaks this year (long boring story) but this is a new wave kind and entails zero holes in the roof...they are very low profile, but clamp onto the standing seams themselves, no holes anywhere...got good advice from a friend on those. Should have done it years ago.
Like BlueTeuf says, gutters can be a real issue, you might want to adjust them or get rid of them (I got rid of them on one side, then to prevent erosion (from rain, melting snow) I put down several inches of crushed stone...all depends on what look you want, where your doors are, etc.
I'd quiz him on the gutter guards...if you have major snow, it's apt to rip off the gutter guards if they are directly in the way of sliding snow...make sure the snow can whiz right over them...
My metal roof is going to outlast me by decades, I'm sure.