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Stopped by a construction site in farm country just down the road from my father's house. He gets a kick out of watching people build houses. This one's going to be an exact replica of a house that was put up back in the early 1900s. The original pretty much ate itself over the years and needed to be replaced.

I don't know anything about construction but we were wondering why they were putting the foam board down. How do the layers go, can somebody explain that?

I also noticed that all the wood was particle board or pressed pieces. It's amazing what glue can do.

Stopped by a construction site in farm country just down the road from my father's house. He gets a kick out of watching people build houses. This one's going to be an exact replica of a house that was put up back in the early 1900s. The original pretty much ate itself over the years and needed to be replaced. I don't know anything about construction but we were wondering why they were putting the foam board down. How do the layers go, can somebody explain that? I also noticed that all the wood was particle board or pressed pieces. It's amazing what glue can do.

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[–] 0 pt

We're both named Aubrey and our skin looks like we've been sitting in a toaster oven too long. Full disclosure we actually know the guy who owns the property. We did see him but forgot to ask why they were doing what they were doing. I was more interested in picking his brain about how the library of Congress has all these maps of towns from back in the beginnings of our country. And I would love to find a map of where I grew up and want to see what it used to look like. All the lakes around us were all rivers at one point and they became reservoirs and I would love to see what towns were down there. There's actually ariel photography of where I'm from and the land I grew up on as a kid was in a gigantic farm. Used to be a dairy farm and the farmhouse was the house diagonally behind my father's.