 Right, we've made a start. Still got the water on the outside, but we've, er, we've bailed the inside out. We're going to have to get a bit more out of that. Looks like it's coming in from the outside. Yeah, so we'll get some more stoning and get a bit more of this water out. Yeah, I think it's coming through from the outside, but we'll see. A little pump would have been ideal, but we haven't got one. We haven't got time to go and get one. So, we'll just keep blasting it in. This is all stone that we've dug out. There's a lot of stone already in here, which we dug out from the hard-coated slag, which went down across there. So we had all the stone, all the hard-coated under that, which we just threw back inside and spread out. So a lot of it's already hard-coed up. Yeah, so here comes Alex with the next one. Now, we're going to have to get some more water out. It is getting back, it's getting back from the outside. Right, welcome back to Steve and Alex TV. We've had a brew. We've made a start on the stone, as you can see, but it's no good, but stone up if you don't know what the floor level is. There is. Did you see what's through here? We've got, like, focus. There you go. This is asphalt, which is on top of the concrete slab in the house. So we need to be coming up, I think, level with the asphalt. So if we hadn't done this, we'd have been a good inch. Yeah, we would have been a good inch low. So what we need to do is bring our stone up. As it is, it's dead easy to work to that. You've got your 225, you've got your 100 slab, 125 insulation, but we're coming up on that by an inch. Something needs to be more stone for an inch. Definitely the skillful fixing. It's packed up again today, so we're going to have to work on tonight and buy a bullet. We do, we are subscribed to GoPro, so we'll get a replacement for 90 quid. It's sort of painful, but yeah, anyway, that's another story. So yeah, we've got our levels now. We just need to transfer that level round with the pencil along this wall in the edge of the goodness. Well, dad gets a little blank. Stone's all in. Stone's whackered. So now it's the sand. It's weird doing this with a phone because I'm used to me hand being further away with GoPro. It's weird isn't it? Yeah. GoPro catches a lot more. Yeah. So, uh... Oh, it's a block, isn't it? There's a block under there. That'd be a box. Yeah. I think so, yeah. So yeah, stone's in, stone's whackered. And now we're getting the sand in. We've just got it leveled up here, so that's ready for whacking there. And then we're just going to get a really thin layer all across. After that, it's a viscoyne insulation and viscoyne. Ready for the concrete at 11 tomorrow. Between 10 and 1. Between 10 and 1, so... So we're coming at half seven. Yeah. We're just going to make sure it's ready, so we're sat waiting not panicking. Exactly. It's only early on Tuesday. Yeah, because we've got to, we've got to set it off early tomorrow as well. So yeah, let's get cracking. Right, as Alex goes for the knife, he's just put away. There. I've sort of all sand blinded. Sort of a lot of woes to get out of there tomorrow. Yeah, so we're rolling out the viscoyne now for underneath the insulation. And we're going to leave that in overnight. And then if it does rain, this is protected. We don't want any more water inside here. So that's the plan. And then we'll get the water out tomorrow before we put the insulation in. Otherwise, the insulation will just float. We'll get this all over, get this cut. Can't keep up with the camera. I'm pointing over here and the gopro easily picks that up. You've got to catch up. Yeah, so up the wall and then we're going to spread it all out. And then we've got loads of planks. We'll just put loads of planks on it tonight. So yeah, that's it. It took us all day. We should have done quicker than that, but we're not killing ourselves. We've done a lot of walking over the last few days. So yeah, that's it. We're going to get this viscoyne down, get packed up and get home. Back in the morning at half seven to get it prepped. So in the morning, it'll be insulation. Another layer of viscoyne, the main one, which laps over the walls. We're putting the 19 mil round the perimeter, and then we're putting the insulation up against it to trap it, which is a better idea, which a couple of people have suggested. And then, yeah, get that concrete in. Oh yeah, I've got to assemble our tamp. That's in the van, I think. Three pieces of obituary. We'll just screw them together. There we go. That's a long day. That's what we've put about. We've got five tonne delivered, but it's five tonne loose, so you get five good tonne. Not like these tonne bags that we've done 50 kilos in. There's probably about a quarter of a tonne left over, but we're going to go around the edge tomorrow, but we need to get the wash out first. It's too deep that it'll just turn to mush. So yeah, we're sorted. We're all ready to go. That's the viscoyne for under the insulation. We're 19 mils around the perimeter for our cold bridging insulation, and because the slab has got asphalt on it, we've bussed a hole through and transferred a level through, and Robbie's put that piece of timber in there. That's the bottom of that is level for our slab. So that's our height, which means, same as last job, we've got this 4B1 nail to the top of the blocks, which takes our slab, obviously an inch higher than the blockwork, but once the slab's in and gone off, these just pop off and we carry on as normal from the blockwork, just raises the slab up. Yeah, started stoning up here, but we stopped because of the water, so we can do the, once the slab's in and trailed up, we can do that tomorrow, and then it's go home, have tea, and head to the airport and pick Alex's girlfriend, Nierup, who's traveling over from Sweden, and then we're off to Whaton Tells for a couple of nights for a scarefest. So yeah, that's it. So we'll get this slab in tomorrow, get all tidied up and cleaned up, and then it's leaving it tidied for a couple of days, then I'm back Saturday on my own to start the brickwork. So I think, thinking as I'm talking here, we'll get some loading out done as well while Alex is with me tomorrow. Yeah, so we've been waiting for concrete, which we hope we are. We're coming in at half seven, so we'll get loads out while waiting. So yeah, that's it for now. Once the slab's in, we can get all those blocks at the end of the drive onto the slab, and start making the drive a bit bigger. See you soon. Al, what time are we on now? 10 to. So it took us an hour, one hour exactly, to get all the cold bridging strip in and all the insulation, and it's in tight. We use 125 jab light, so that's left over. That could go on for the next job. Got a load more room at the front now, so we're quickly going to get this fish green down now, and then have a quick break, and then start getting this water out, getting the stoning, so we can get a bit of an area back down the bottom. And like I said, once the slab's in, we can start getting blocks in. Right, a serious cold, so we'll get back to you. 1205. 1205, so we're two hours into our window, aren't we? Yeah, two and a very long two hours. Yeah, it's been bouncing down, so as you can see, it's getting pulled a bit now. It's still raining, but it's gone off a little bit, so we're just trying to get some of this surplus walk out. Just in case they arrive, because they do anytime, so we don't have any fancy hoovers or devices, so it's all flashing in the bucket. That's like the foundation days. Yeah, just like the foundation days. Say what I said, there's not as much as I thought. That's 40 litres of total. Yeah. Yeah, it's now raining, so it's not too heavy. Yeah, it's getting to make it a bit drier, then. We should be all right. Hell, look at that, because the materials are getting wet on the wagon. Oh, I see. All right, and then I'm just taking it over to the gully over at you. All right, so we're going to keep doing this, and then we'll get back to you. If we hadn't taped that, it would have run between the pieces of the screen. Yeah, so good job we taped it up. It was wet enough, yeah. Have we filmed all this bit? Yeah. Okay, so yeah, you've seen it all. You've seen the face. All right, we'll catch in. Hopefully we'll get back to you when the concrete arrives, so hopefully that's soon. Ten to one. Concrete has arrived. Ten minutes before our window shut. Yeah, so we're all ready. Pretty much all the water's out now. Alex is just making me a quick brew. We're all set. Tamps ready to go. Got our concrete level. We're walking concrete in level, just for our flight. So, all ready to get going. So we'll switch all the time-lapse now and just time-lapse this bit, as it will be quite a long video otherwise. See you in a bit. And there we go. Concrete's in. It's absolutely lashing it down at the moment, so we're going to get tamped in and we'll show you afterwards because Dad's phone's getting really drenched here, so we'll get this tamped open and call it. Get the tools washed and such. We've got a spare barrel just in case you need any. Because knowing our luck, we'd need some. They're just hosing down the road now, thank goodness. And yeah, so tamping, floating, cleaning, done. Dad's going to go pay while I get started. And we're back, and we're done. And we're absolutely soaked through to the skin. It's too late to put coats on, so anyway, the screen's all cut off, and the water's gathering on the concrete, bunches escaping down the cavity there. Yeah, that's it. If it does fill the cavity up, it will overflow into there. There, that's what we've done. There's our door. We're all set. Bit windy now, bloody cold. Yeah, so we're going to get going now. So that's it now. We're tidy. We've got a big, nice big flat area now to store things. Put things out of the way, keep it clean. Yeah, we can do the mixing on there. We can store all the crap in the corner now out of the way. Just a big relief. We can start getting things in off the road now and get things loaded out. All the blocks can come up now, which is in the way. We can get the stone down the edges, get the water out. So yeah, so we're going to get cleaned up now and head to Manchester Airport to pick me up, and then off to Orton Towers. I don't know, I'm going to manage a kind of bloody walk. So anyway, we'll see you on the next one.