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    The description :skip to content mostly lemon based kate's somewhat eclectic journal menu home about.pyoor fleet.pyoor things.pyoor create.pyoor photos.pyoor video.pyoor the dead bug jumping podcast sloooooooow down t...

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skip to content mostly lemon based kate's somewhat eclectic journal menu home about.pyoor fleet.pyoor things.pyoor create.pyoor photos.pyoor video.pyoor the dead bug jumping podcast sloooooooow down things have slowed down somewhat. we burned the candle at both ends (and possibly in the middle) – managing to get one of the picture windows into the bedroom: and then the next day hoped to get the wrap up for the final window. only the next day i had a bit of a sore throat and didn’t quite feel right. after about 5 hours i was suddenly was hit by a wave of tiredness and feeling awful. we managed to get the tricky bit of the wrap done, but didn’t finish the front… kathryn was lovely and tidied up, watered the garden and ferried me home. but the next day i was done. it started off like a cold, but spiralled into nausea and fevers and utter exhaustion. after 3 days of laying on the sofa, sleeping and watching tv (i was so tired it took me 4 goes to make it through a star wars film – i just had to keep stopping and sleeping), i gave in and accepted that i was not, under any circumstances, going to make it in to work on friday. that day passed in a wave of tiredness – but with bonus excitement. i could stand up, i put clothes on (instead of pjs), and didn’t actually need to sleep through the day, just napped a bit in the morning. then saturday we went for gold – with a trip up to seattle to collect stuff that we’d put holds on at second use. there was an expected traffic apocalypse on i5* on saturday, so we took a very relaxed drive up the peninsula, and then hopped on a ferry. it was longer, but super pretty. and when we got there – we managed to collect actual marble tiles! for $20 :) we *think* there’s enough to do the bathroom floor. although wastage on hex tiles? hrm. also: a sink, light fittings, and arranged to collect a bath on monday… it wasn’t exactly resting, but it was a pretty chilled day. we also got to try out the dc rapid charging up in seattle – and it worked fine this time (unlike our last traumatic trip). i was still knackered by the end of the day though, and even today i’m struggling. i’m not sure if it’s a cold, or allergies, or what. but i’m so tired… despite that, on sunday we went for it – installing the final window. and although it took us about twice as long as normal, that last window slotted into place. we have all our windows in! and yesterday after collecting the bath… we have now returned to a couple of other jobs – the attic floor and the plumbing and the electrics. i realised i’d made a mistake when i was plumbing the vent for the bathroom. i’d tried to make it so that it didn’t run through the attic space – which worked, but was long, because we wanted to have as much attic floor available as possible. but i’d forgotten that there’s a vent fan duct that also needs to run through that space. so, there’s absolutely no point in trying to avoid the attic, so i lopped the zig-zag section out of the pipe, and made up a new simpler, shorter one. kathryn got more flooring down, and it meant that we could put the pipe through a hole in the floor, rather than having to do some weird long slit, too. kathryn’s dad also arrived to help us get the bath into the house. see, it turned out that the cast iron bath we’ve chosen is… heavy enough that the folks at second use declared it as being one that needed the fork-lift to get it into the pickup. and getting it out of the pickup was clearly not going to be a two person job. with three of us, it turned into just a very challenging problem. we flipped it end over end, tipped it, walked it, and eventually managed to kind of lever it into the house… it’s really heavy, but we slapped a lot of extra supports in that section of the house, so it should be okay. what is (unsurprisingly) difficult is that being a vintage bath(tub) – and having no overflow we’re finding it tricky to locate a us bath(tub) drain that’ll fit. since over here they generally have an overflow with a flappy little flippy thing to work the built in pop-up plug for the drain. i’m trying to find a pop-up drain that’ll work… but the size also seems a little obscure. we’re also thinking we it might be advisable to add an ’emergency’ drain to the floor…given the absence of overflow. we just need toilets now. more tricky, because that bathroom is a 14″ rough-in. and we’ve decided we like the look of unibody toilets. feh. * they were closing the motorway northbound and reducing lanes southbound. in seattle. one of the busiest stretches. author katee posted on 5/6/2018 categories general working like crazy we put in a solid 16.5 hours this weekend on the house. and what did we do? well, the two front windows, the last two original windows? they came out. we’d left them for a while for various reasons. one is that we don’t like having the front boarded up, but another is that one of them (the one nearest the car) is 8ft long and the other is 6ft long. we’d removed a 6ft one earlier and it was a complete pig, so we weren’t hugely looking forward to this. fortunately, the 8ft one was broken (our contractors broke it) so we tackled that first knowing we could chop it up to pull it out. it turned out, however, that the joker who installed it had used whatever s/he had lying around to install it. y’know, a couple of drywall screws, a few nails here and there. the end of a tube of caulk. in fact, it was so badly installed that we had more difficulty getting it out because it half fell out part way through. it was hanging by a couple of nails… in the end we put a tarp on the ground, kathryn pulled the nails and sort of let slide-fall onto the tarp where it shattered. fortunately, the contractors had stuck a sheet of plastic across the front of it to stop it falling apart when they broke it, which stopped most of the glass exploding out across the garden. we then ripped out a big chunk of manky old wall… framed up for our new (much smaller) window made a little strip of ply to fill in the enormous gap in the siding left by the original builders… (which had been filled with spider nests and dead insects when we stripped the trim off) (over a roughly 6ft span that goes from 1.5 inches to less than 1/8th of an inch). did these people not have a f’kin plumb bob? and as the day wore to a close we put the siding up (we’ll cut out the window after the framing’s approved). sunday was a rinse and repeat: only in this case they had barely installed the window. it came out almost pristine. the few nails that were holding it in were mainly the ones in the trim. oh and 2 drywall screws and a 2 wood screws that were about 20mm long. there was also some caulk – about 20cm of it along the top edge of trim…holding the trim to the window. after kathryn pulled some of the trim off it became rapidly apparent that we’d have to hold it in while she pulled off the rest, because it was so loose. it actually threw us both for a bit, because less than an hour after we got there we’d removed the window and weren’t mentally ready for “now we need to demo the wall”. this one was tricker because we had to replace the header – our plans require two jack studs either side of the header (rather than one on the original header), so even though our new window is the same size as the old window (although approximately 30cm further north than the old window), we needed to pull the old header to install a longer one. but after quite a lot of experimentation with methods on previous windows we got this one in smoothly. albeit with some beating it with a hammer and a block of wood to get it in the last few mm (it was pretty snug). and ended the day with the front boarded up. so quick shower this morning a few nails (we didn’t do all the siding nails yesterday), and i’ll call for an inspection on that. then we can wrap the front, put in the last two windows…and commence making the rainscreen. also, obviously, there’s the interior electrics to do, and the drywall, and the flooring, and the heating… and and and. author katee posted on 21/5/2018 categories house cream crackered so yesterday we got window number five in. that end of the building is also partially wrapped, which is nice: it’s slightly irritating that the gas meter (which is as near to the front of the house as they’d allow) lands up right under the window. partly because it’s an ugly thing right under the window, and partly because we’d like to have the enclosing fence in front of the meter, but obviously pse would be unthrilled by that. so we need to work that out. we’d also like the fence there because it would mean we could put our rainwater capture tank just behind the fence, right at the front of the house, where it’s essentially invisible from the house. buuuuut, no. so that also needs a plan alteration. it has also come to my attention that i’ll need a socket for the pump for the rain water capture system… which i’d not considered or planned for. poot. anyhow. the window is in, the side is partially wrapped, all of these are good things. today i took a day ‘off’ and worked on the garden. part of this is because of the dear. oh, no, i mean deer. as in “oh, deer”. we’d heard a hint that deer don’t like fishing line strung across at knee-ish height because they feel it but can’t see it. the theory went that they can’t see the thing and so won’t attempt to jump it. apparently, however, they’ll step over the damn thing and eat the plant. or all the plants. our fruit bush planting took a deer related munching, so today i made up a temporary fruit cage, and i have plans to make a fully fledged fruit cage, but that requires more time and energy than i have today. also, more chicken wire than i bought. and a discussion with kathryn about how big to make it. i expect i caused much entertainment to anyone watching as i danced around with the bloody chickenwire as i unrolled it, and it re-rolled itself. and much cursing and pulling at it was had. and i attempted to semi-flatten it out and install it over my head and it would collapse or tangle itself up. i suppose, if i design it right, i could make the fruitcage disassembleable and sectional. hrm. anyhow, i also threw together a second raised bed (because i may have had a seed/bean buying incident). we just need to steal more soil to fill it. i’m thinking i might start digging the trench that’ll carry the rainwater back from the front of the house (it follows the line of the old soakaway pipe from the back of the house), so i can steal that good quality(ish) soil for the bed. i can also dig some more of the trench around the front of the house. that might work :-/ all the soil that’s left from the pit is really lousy clay with stones. i put some in there to hold down the card, but it’s not really what we want for the veg bed. i also, having changed the faulty relay on the mower yesterday, put it to work. sorta. see, while the relay definitely seems to have been faulty – and replacing it does make the mower ‘work’, the ancient agm battery in it is… uh, possibly somewhere after it’s last legs. the motor does spin, and if you have short enough grass and walk very slowly around the garden, occasionally tilting the mower up so it can spin back up to speed when it’s encountered some long grass, it does cut. i imagine it was quite nice to use when it was new, because it’s super quiet. it is, however, not terribly effective. i mean, it’s more effective than our cylinder mower. well, it’s less effort for an equivalent level of effective. i’m trying a few cycles of discharge and recharging to see if that helps, but i suspect it needs a new battery in addition to needing the new (and installed) relay. which is irritating because neuton do sell batteries – but they’re $100 apiece. which i’d not really mind too much if i knew the mower worked. but i’m not absolutely convinced that the battery is going to be the last of its failings. it could probably also do with the blade sharpening… so i’m not sure what we’ll do about that… author katee posted on 17/5/2018 17/5/2018 categories general less productive… so yesterday i had a small plan for the morning – errand, b&q home depot, fix lawn mower, maybe attach one of the exterior sockets. what happened instead was: collect tyre (takes a while, the woman didn’t twig that the tyre stood on the rack was a package for several minutes, looked very confused when it said it was in the collection place until i said – “it is a tyre, so it should be pretty big…”). home depot – meander round for hours trying to work out how best to manage the exterior sockets and the conduit that’s possibly required. i’m still unclear if it is required, but it only cost a few dollars and means i only have to install the sockets once. if i do it right. stare at pipe for our rain-water capture system. buy some… get back to the house, unload, laugh like an idiot* because i realized that yes, i bought enough pipe to do the run from the (theoretical) storage tank to the (theoretical) pump but… i didn’t buy anything to connect those lengths of pipe together. get back in the car, drive the 20 minutes back to home depot to buy those bits, a couple of other options for conduit (wrong choice), more drainage pipe (i realized that i should hook up the gutter at the front if we want to save enough to flush toilets too. then when kathryn arrived and we went to start work she realized that we were lacking something else. i can’t remember what, so i ended up making a third trip. by the end of that i was feeling pretty grumpy with myself. which made me grumpy. i know i shouldn’t be, i’m trying to work on letting the days when we don’t get as much as i’d like done wash over me and be gone, but i didn’t really feel like i’d made a huge number of things for me to do yesterday… …but still, we managed to get two layers of house wrap on, which is a good thing. it means today we need to cut the window opening, add one more layer of house wrap and pop the window in, then we should be able to move on to doing the front windows. which are, to be fair, some of the most difficult ones. they’re longer, heavier and require much more rebuilding (the bedroom) or working around the old header and framing (the office). on which note, since i have washing up to do, and a shower to have, i should get on. *causing the guy doing roof work across the street to stare at me in alarm author katee posted on 15/5/2018 17/5/2018 categories general well, that was hot. not in the sense of hawt, obviously. just fucking hot. so despite a predicted high of 28°c we’d made the plan to try and get the south window in yesterday. allowing a good chunk of day for us to do it, we planned to arrive early to try and avoid the worst of the sun, and then spend the day getting the window in – which meant cutting the hole, wrapping that side of the building, flashing, putting the window in, then fixing it in. being a sunday and not wanting to be deeply obnoxious, we didn’t want to get there really early. so, off we went – and realized that the sun hits that side of the house full on well before 9. probably before 8. so, uh, that didn’t work. but we carried on regardless – having to take breaks to hide in the shade every few minutes because it’s f’ckin hot cutting and hammering in the sun. so just as a reminder… … and now: it’s getting there. but yesterday was slow. damn slow. it was so hot it took us nearly 8 hours to put in the window and wrap that side, most of which was us sitting in the shade going ‘fuck, it’s hot’. i was not built for this kind of weather. anyhow, we’re going to start wrapping the north side today, so off i jolly well trot. author katee posted on 14/5/2018 categories general solidity arrives, and the garden continues work has more or less continued apace. wednesday was less productive than i might have hoped because of a pointless waste of my life dealing with the american healthcare ‘system’. it seems that between my pharmacy and my insurance company the wires have become crossed, and the pharmacy thinks my meds are no longer covered, or possibly i’m no longer covered. lord know which. it’s tedious in the extreme. thankfully the meds are cheap anyhow. but it means i’ll get to waste time on the phone on monday working out what is going on. yay. but no, remind me again how the nhs is a wasteful government bureaucracy. *sigh* mind you, it wasn’t all costco’s fault. i was slow getting going, then went to the house to measure the protrusion of the windows from the siding with the intention of getting a bit of z flashing that’d allow us to match the window protrusion on the french door trim (when we make the trim for them). then i went to b&q home depot where i realized that since my next stop was costco, i couldn’t buy the 10′ long bit of flashing (which is the length it comes in), because it’d mean leaving the window open in the car and the flashing sticking out. then costco took a while… and when i got to the house i was a bit… well, vague. i kinda pootled around for a bit staring at the wiring. trying to work out the best way to run it. considering options and considering that we need some boards to run the cables along, if i want to make it nice. and then that i need to know where we’re framing the ceiling. and after pondering it for a while i realized i need to check with my wife before i do that, and that i’d rather that the windows were in and not in the area where i’ll be wielding hammers. so i decided to wait. then i meandered around the house a bit before realizing i could probably put up the crossbracing on the 13′ walls. which i did… yay :) and it is astonishing the change. even at this point the interior walls had a flimsiness running down the length of the house. i kinda assumed it would be that way until we put the drywall on, but adding the (fine homebuilding recommended) crossbracing has transformed things. the interior walls – and the bathroom – now feel solid in every direction. which is good, because the drilling fairy needs to come along and throw in the lighting cables. to do that we need to frame up the last bits of the walls above the hall ceilings and above the laundry room – because that’s where some of the cables will run. anyhow, so kathryn arrived in the afternoon and we got the third (and final) window into the back wall. the back is now almost ready to have the rainscreen cladding put on (just need that flashing across the top of the back door) – we have an open question with the local planners about the grading of lumber for the cladding. i’m hoping “shop grade” / “ungraded” is sufficient. i don’t see why it wouldn’t be, given that it’s just ornamental. but then i often fail to see why some things are checked and other things aren’t. i still don’t really see why they have such interest in my plumbing. i get wiring more (although i’m not fond of having it assessed). but plumbing? seriously, if it drains into the drain it’s doing a damn sight better than it was before. anyhow, this weekend we’re hoping to do at least one of the side windows, then it’s just the front windows… and then cladding the entire building, finishing the wiring rough in*, putting up all the drywall, plastering, doing all the trim…installing a kitchen…painting, tiling the entire floor, oh – installing the heating system… in other news, we’ve been sucked into gardening. the raised bed was just the start; we’ve cut in a second bed at the back (with aronia – which it turns out produces berries you can substitute for sloes in sloe gin), some eastern european raspberries (groundcover, apparently), elderberries, a type of ornamental wheat that looked very pretty… we’ve also planted the plants in our herb garden and then had the audacity to start creating a herby/culinary border which is where things got interesting (in the bad way). part way through planting the rosemary as we tried to dig over the soil we found what we think is a barrel. it’s so rusty and holed that i don’t think there’s going to be anything noxious in it. but we want to know if it is a source of noxious things, because currently our bay tree is planted there, so is our rosemary (although further back now) and that means digging more. and it may mean renting a digger. feh. * i realised i’d forgotten to install any network cable. and i want network cable. i’m not sure where the cable will come in, but i do like to hide the media server out of the way and for optimum performance that means having a decent wired network. so i forked out the money today for some cat6 cable (i know, i could have got cat5e, but the last cat5e i got was terrible). author katee posted on 11/5/2018 17/5/2018 categories general now with less lawn! so, our project to almost completely eliminate the lawn has started. we had an incident yesterday at the farmer’s market. the usual kind of incident. the ‘oh, we’ve just bought a lot of plants’ incident. we weren’t as bad as we sometimes are. we kept it to edibles. and not that many, because, well, the house currently lacks liveability. but, having got a couple of them in the ground last night and realised there was little hope for us to get the rest of the stuff done (because it was getting late), we laid out where we wanted the raised bed. today i grabbed the chop saw, the nail gun and threw together our first raised bed. i then strimmed the grass as short as i could get it, threw down an enormous pile of cardboard, and then between kathryn and i we transferred a lot of the soil which has come out of the hole that will be our rain water capture device into the new raised bed. and lo: i’m really rather proud of it given it’s made with the shoddiest bits of wood and a couple of hours with a chop saw and a nail gun. we also both had a bit more of a go at strimming the grass, which is proving to be a bit of a mare. it’s already long enough that it needs cutting again – which is a double pain because the (free) lawnmower we picked up at the weekend (“free! free! free!”) which is a neutron em 4.1 – an old battery lawnmower – does not work. irritatingly it looks like it’s been apart (and not been well put together). so i need to do some fault finding. i note that both the motor and relay are available as spares, which is suggestive of common faults. feh. this afternoon, before we set to on the garden we… fitted a second window! it’s not quite finished yet – i got a bit keen on the caulk, so we decided to let that dry before putting the final layer of flashing on. so there’s no picture of it yet… but…there was a picture of the hole… it is definitely coming along now :) author katee posted on 8/5/2018 8/5/2018 categories house more electrics, more wood so, having posted about trying to hodge it with the wrong tools yesterday; today i decided to suck it up and buy a new 90° drill. not a good quality one, obviously*. i grabbed a ryobi one tool. largely because i picked up the ryobi one impact driver for putting in the bolts that attach the simpson anchors** to the walls. i’m glad i got it, although it’s clearly cheap and not going to last a terribly long time. but it does mean, i think for the first time ever, we have a power tool with a battery pack where you can buy the tools and the pack off the shelf. our makita drill has an ancient version of the 18v pack (not compatible with the newer ones – it’s several generations behind). the ridgid stuff is similarly archaic – no packs off the shelf, no new compatible tools. it’s weird to be able to go into a store and just buy stuff that works with it. kind of nice, too. i actually picked up a strimmer today (because the grass was getting beyond out of hand – and needed to be cut back from the house (it’s done now)). it came with another battery and charger – so we now have 3 batteries, two chargers and 3 tools that take the same battery. yay! anyhow, the 90° drill is only a baby one and also makes the hot smell and stalls a fair bit trying to cut through the studs. but it is way easier. and less prone to trying to break my wrist, or smack me in the face. hopefully it’ll survive through the entire wiring experience. so, with that in hand i ran the rough in for the kitchen. i’m still using up the last of the salvaged wiring, but it’s getting to the point where i’ll need to switch to the new and painfully expensive stuff. i’m still stunned by how expensive materials here. anyhow. basically, the far end of the house (longer runs) will be all new cable. apart from the odd short segment running between outlets. oh, and i realised that i was a fool, and about to make a dumb mistake. i’d thought about putting each of the two kitchen lights on the two (required) circuits for the kitchen. of course, that doesn’t work if you want them to be switched on the same switch, which we do. thankfully i twigged that before i’d run any wire. it was one of those “oh, i could do this” moments, when i should stick with the plan. stick with the plan kate, there’s a reason you made it. i also spent a chunk of time today digging through our wood pile to find short bits to make into the diagonal reinforcing bits to go in our 13ft (4m) walls, and then cutting them to length. they will actually sit about half way up the wall – adding some much needed strength to the flexy 13′ lengths of 2×4 – but to avoid them getting confused for anything else i’ve tucked them in the wall and will hopefully get them nailed in on saturday. i’ve also cut some of the bits for attaching the ceiling drywall (plasterboard). i’m also optimistically trying to look at plasterboard lifts. … and this weekend we’re thinking about putting windows in. again, the plan was to do that earlier in the week, but instead it rained and i threw myself off a step. but this weekend looks to be dry and so do the monday and tuesday following. so that’ll keep us busy… * the number of times i’ve broken my rules about buying good quality tools is growing. i’ve still more-or-less stuck to buying good quality drill bits / blades, because they can make a shitty tool into an adequate one. ** these are u shaped bits of metal that hold the house to the foundation – designed for earthquake resistance. author katee posted on 4/5/2018 categories general nema what? so, thankfully despite it saying in my electrical book that some early nema marked cable had a smaller diameter earth wire than is the current standard, it seems that which we pulled out from the house at least appears to be the right diameter. i hope to hell it is, because the new wiring in our new lounge is entirely old cable. despite me attempting to snap my ankle like a twig 2 days ago (i slipped off the step into the house carrying a 4′ x 8′ x 3/4″ sheet of plywood by myself, like the daft ha’peth i am*) i spent today working on the house. yesterday i rested with my ankle up on the sofa most of the day (apart from a meeting about selling our land). but today i made a more significant start on roughing in the wiring. this has meant drilling a lot of holes. a lot of 3/4″ diameter holes. our poor little ridgid drill does not like it. i mean, really i should do them all with an auger bit and a right angle drill, but i’ve instead been abusing the spade bit and the forstner bit. i keep using the spade bit and most of the time it’s fine, but it’s certainly working the drill out. it’s also giving the nasty cheap ryobi 90° adaptor a tough time. we did have a harbor freight right angle drill, but it upped and died (ironically when i was not doing anything at all – i’d just put a bit in to drill a hole, turned it on and it made an unpleasant graunching noise, before failing to turn the chuck). the cheap harbor freight forstner bit is, however, wearing out. not really surprising, this isn’t really what it’s for. and the random double studs (often followed by a stupid little gap, then another double stud) which are around because of the way the house was framed – then we’ve modified it – then we’ve repaired rotten bits – or replaced sections of framing – or added a window… all of that means a lot of fun trying to work out ways to get the spade bit in. the winner today was having to drill the hole, feed the extension bit in, then with it all in place open the 90° drill adaptor’s chuck as wide as it could go, then i could get that over the top of the extender, tighten the chuck and then add on the actual drill to the end of that. still, the lounge cable now runs to the wall where the fusebox will be (note to self – label wires tomorrow). kathryn and i have finished putting up ceiling joists in the hall, so that’s definite progress. and the 3/4″ ply is for the attic floor – two pieces are up, just the rest of it to go… right, to bed with me because tomorrow is another day of drilling holes and feeding wires. * my wife arrived literally 3 minutes after this debacle, at which point i was still trying not to make wimpering noises. i knew she was coming, but it looked like it might rain, so i was trying to be… quick. or stupid. author katee posted on 3/5/2018 categories house ‘the fuck? i am beginning to consider the possibility that washington is not, in fact, made of the normal stuff that land is made of. instead it appears to be a well disguised pile of ants and pine needles. #ants in our new house #ants in our apartment #pine needles everywhere #what the fuck author katee posted on 3/5/2018 categories general posts navigation page 1 page 2 … page 551 next page ancient history june 2018 m t w t f s s « may 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 internal links kate's photos links a minor journey dead bug jumping john honiball's blogspot john honiball's old sad things pyoor.goods virtually speaking pyoor.finder search for: search home about.pyoor fleet.pyoor things.pyoor create.pyoor photos.pyoor video.pyoor the dead bug jumping podcast mostly lemon based proudly powered by wordpress

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Registry Domain ID: D92821960-LROR
Registrar WHOIS Server:
Registrar URL: http://www.tucows.com
Updated Date: 2016-12-01T11:54:41Z
Creation Date: 2002-12-04T17:05:21Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2017-12-04T17:05:21Z
Registrar Registration Expiration Date:
Registrar: Tucows Inc.
Registrar IANA ID: 69
Registrar Abuse Contact Email:
Registrar Abuse Contact Phone:
Reseller:
Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited
Domain Status: clientUpdateProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientUpdateProhibited
Registry Registrant ID: C131719779-LROR
Registrant Name: Katherine Elliott
Registrant Organization: Pyoor
Registrant Street: 69 Wootton Crescent
Registrant City: Bristol
Registrant State/Province:
Registrant Postal Code: BS44AN
Registrant Country: GB
Registrant Phone: +44.1179717868
Registrant Phone Ext:
Registrant Fax:
Registrant Fax Ext:
Registrant Email: [email protected]
Registry Admin ID: C131719781-LROR
Admin Name: Katherine Walton-Elliott
Admin Organization:
Admin Street: 69 Wootton Crescent
Admin City: Bristol
Admin State/Province: --
Admin Postal Code: BS44AN
Admin Country: GB
Admin Phone: +44.7884070322
Admin Phone Ext:
Admin Fax:
Admin Fax Ext:
Admin Email: [email protected]
Registry Tech ID: C131719781-LROR
Tech Name: Katherine Walton-Elliott
Tech Organization:
Tech Street: 69 Wootton Crescent
Tech City: Bristol
Tech State/Province: --
Tech Postal Code: BS44AN
Tech Country: GB
Tech Phone: +44.7884070322
Tech Phone Ext:
Tech Fax:
Tech Fax Ext:
Tech Email: [email protected]
Name Server: NS1.TSOHOST.CO.UK
Name Server: NS2.TSOHOST.CO.UK
Name Server: NS3.TSOHOST.CO.UK
DNSSEC: unsigned
URL of the ICANN Whois Inaccuracy Complaint Form: https://www.icann.org/wicf/
>>> Last update of WHOIS database: 2017-07-14T20:24:18Z <<<

For more information on Whois status codes, please visit https://icann.org/epp

Access to Public Interest Registry WHOIS information is provided to assist persons in determining the contents of a domain name registration record in the Public Interest Registry registry database. The data in this record is provided by Public Interest Registry for informational purposes only, and Public Interest Registry does not guarantee its accuracy. This service is intended only for query-based access. You agree that you will use this data only for lawful purposes and that, under no circumstances will you use this data to: (a) allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission by e-mail, telephone, or facsimile of mass unsolicited, commercial advertising or solicitations to entities other than the data recipient's own existing customers; or (b) enable high volume, automated, electronic processes that send queries or data to the systems of Registry Operator, a Registrar, or Afilias except as reasonably necessary to register domain names or modify existing registrations. All rights reserved. Public Interest Registry reserves the right to modify these terms at any time. By submitting this query, you agree to abide by this policy.

  REFERRER http://www.pir.org/

  REGISTRAR Public Interest Registry

SERVERS

  SERVER org.whois-servers.net

  ARGS pyoor.org

  PORT 43

  TYPE domain

DOMAIN

  NAME pyoor.org

  HANDLE D92821960-LROR

  CREATED 2002-04-12

STATUS
clientTransferProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited
clientUpdateProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientUpdateProhibited

NSERVER

  NS1.TSOHOST.CO.UK 195.62.28.14

  NS2.TSOHOST.CO.UK 95.142.155.4

  NS3.TSOHOST.CO.UK 95.142.154.15

OWNER

  HANDLE C131719779-LROR

  NAME Katherine Elliott

  ORGANIZATION Pyoor

ADDRESS

STREET
69 Wootton Crescent

  CITY Bristol

  PCODE BS44AN

  COUNTRY GB

  PHONE +44.1179717868

  EMAIL [email protected]

ADMIN

  HANDLE C131719781-LROR

  NAME Katherine Walton-Elliott

ADDRESS

STREET
69 Wootton Crescent

  CITY Bristol

  STATE --

  PCODE BS44AN

  COUNTRY GB

  PHONE +44.7884070322

  EMAIL [email protected]

TECH

  HANDLE C131719781-LROR

  NAME Katherine Walton-Elliott

ADDRESS

STREET
69 Wootton Crescent

  CITY Bristol

  STATE --

  PCODE BS44AN

  COUNTRY GB

  PHONE +44.7884070322

  EMAIL [email protected]

  REGISTERED yes

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