Waikato Times

You can never get bored in a weatherboa­rd

- Danny Katz

Something was in my mailbox – a small sample of fake-wood plastic with a sticker that said ‘‘Vinyl weatherboa­rd cladding. Never paint again. Maintenanc­e-Free. Won’t rot, peel, dent, or split!’’ And I thought, ‘‘Pfff, who would ever clad their house in vinyl?’’ So I threw the sample into the greens bin.

Then I remembered it was fake wood, so I took it out and threw it in the recyclable bin. Then I wondered if vinyl was recyclable, so I took it out and threw it in general rubbish. I struggle with bins. It’s hard.

But that vinyl cladding sample really got into my head. It made me wonder: why would anyone want to re-clad a beautiful authentic all-wood weatherboa­rd house?

I mean, that’s why we choose to live in them: because they’re quaint and natural and imbued with old-world charm.

There are so many great things about living in an allwood weatherboa­rd house. For one, the structure is very flexible – literally. The walls expand in the heat and contract in the cold, so it’s like living inside an enormous emphysemic lung.

In the hot months, you get a whole extra bedroom and a family entertainm­ent haven. Then in winter, you have to cook in the bathroom. You never get bored in a weatherboa­rd.

So much to love about weatherboa­rd houses! Like how the weatherboa­rds are made from thin pieces of cheap timber, so you can put your finger through them if they get a bit wet, or damp, or even if someone breathes directly on them and condensati­on forms.

Sometimes, on rainy days, I go outside and poke my finger through the living room wall and do a little finger-puppet show for everyone inside. You can’t do that with a brick house. You’ll break a nail.

Sorry, but I’m going to keep waxing lyrical about all-wood weatherboa­rd houses – just try and stop me!

I also love how the boards are always falling off or disintegra­ting, and then gusts of air

come through the gaps and you have to wear an anorak when you watch TV.

You also get to live symbiotica­lly with all the wildlife that crawl in through the gaps: cute possums, delightful rats, enchanting infestatio­ns of nesting termites.

I enjoy listening to them munching inside the bedroom wall space directly behind my head. Very soothing at night.

You know what? I don’t think there’s a single bad thing about living in an all-wood

weatherboa­rd house, nothing. OK, maybe one teeny thing. They need a bit of maintenanc­e now and then – but hardly ever, just once in a blue moon, like every second Wednesday.

And it’s easy – just a bit of patching, a bit of nailing, a bit of four-metre-high scaffolder­ecting-and-dismantlin­g –

Sometimes, I go outside and poke my finger through the living room wall and do a little finger-puppet show for everyone inside.

you’re done in about two weeks, just in time to start again.

And of course, they need a bit of painting too, to protect the weatherboa­rds. Enough coats of paint, so the weatherboa­rds are not wood any more. They’re actually thick layers of woodtextur­ed acrylic. Kind of like that vinyl cladding sample. Hey, how about that.

 ??  ?? Aren’t weatherboa­rd houses great? Well, they are when they’re maintained.
Aren’t weatherboa­rd houses great? Well, they are when they’re maintained.
 ??  ?? Holes are part ofthe charm.
Holes are part ofthe charm.

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