Battery room shelves under construction |
- Door –purchased second hand
- Box for the battery set – second hand and left over timber from other jobs
- Pine studs for the wall frame- gleaned from a skip behind a shop where they were remodelling. We asked first!
- Timber for the shelving. The uprights came from another shop makeover and the wood for the shelves from various free sources
- Grain bench. A cupboard no longer wanted by a family member
- Wall paint was half price because another customer was unhappy with the tint
The shelves are filling up with produce |
We built a wall of shelves in the
room, which now serves multiple functions including:-
- Storage for all our bottling and jam making equipment and supplies
- Storage our ginger beer making gear as well as the bottles of ginger beer
- Storage area for some long lasting crops including pumpkins (about 60 this year), potatoes, garlic and other produce
The power management system and battery box |
Other uses of the room include
- Storage for our battery bank (in a vented cupboard)
- Shelving for our inverter, regulator and associated equipment
- Space for our grain processing bench with oat roller and grain grinder attached (storage underneath)
- Provides a mouse proof storage area for bulk grains (oats and wheat)
The dividing wall with one side to be finished |
The dividing wall that separates the
battery room from the workshop has one other benefit. We intend finishing off
the project by building shelves on the workshop side of it, so all our tools,
workshop equipment and materials can be housed together in an orderly
fashion. This extra storage area will
massively improve the way the workshop functions as well. However, we know from past experience that any spare
shelves will mysteriously fill up with objects we need to store, as well as
objects that we keep because we are sure they will come in handy one day!
1 comment:
It’s good that you were able to make room for the equipment and have space to store your produce. At least now you can do your processing done without having to carry the raw produce and the finished products to and from storage! That, and having extra storage never hurts in the long run. Cheers!
Colette
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