Your poetry requires some accompanying photography!
Ask and ye shall receive. I had to uploadeth them from my phoneth...
So here is the full story of how that day went. The builder said 7am they'd start the dig. I figured this would roll like every other contractor we've ever done business with. That meant they'd go get what they needed at 7am and show up here around 9:45am finally. Nope. They were here in the cul de sac staging and waiting to come onto the property at least by 6:20am because that is when I first heard the dumptruck idling. They were here even earlier I am sure. 7am hit and we had people in the backyard getting started.
We got our cars out of the garage as forewarned and if we had needed them (which we didn't) it was a good thing we did. There was at least a foot of dirt across the driveway that would have trapped us in. I half wonder if they did this to not scuff up the cement with the tractor treads because they were cutting across the driveway. They could have come in on the lawn, but this saved us having to repair yards of sod.
The tractor work was amazing to watch. I couldn't parallel park even close to as well as this guy got into the corners. There was one section where he literally just fit sideways into with 6" to spare in front and the side of the tractor touching the wall, but it let him shave a straight wall perfectly in front of him.
What's even more nuts is that they were done before 1pm. Rebar started immediately after that and was done by 6pm.
The bummer is I had a crazy work day and basically missed all of it. I was able to pop my head out a few times and grab those photos, but that is pretty much it.
The mud in the driveway I wish I got a photo of or even saw. All I know is what my wife told me. They were power washing the whole front area starting at about 4:30pm for 2 hours. When I finally walked out there at 6pm, they were almost done. There is not a clue other than the lawn that anything even happened. The driveway might even be cleaner than when they started...
Plumbing started today and it's not quite as hectic in the yard. We spent some time at lunch pinning down exact placement of the spa jets and bubblers and talked about lighting placement and that we need to choose our two scuppers.
The RiverFlow parts are onsite. This stuff looks like it's civil engineering grade. Here is our builder holding up one of the pieces of it. The 10HP pump sits on top of this. That is 12" PVC right there....
Plumbing is supposed to continue on through tomorrow and then gunite on Monday. We're watching the weather close because it is supposed to rain a bit on Monday. The weather forecasts have been close to useless lately though. They change hourly and almost every time they have predicted rain (which ended up pushing our start date out) they were wrong and it was dry.
I'll get some more photos tomorrow as I want to have a good record of the plumbing lines, but really while this is exciting overall that we started, there are only so may pictures of a steel filled hole I can post and consider interesting.
plat.