Went in the Ranger to pick up Perry at his place so that he can use my truck until his is repaired. We stopped at Goodro’s for a case of Paslode nails and a square of ice and water shield… the former to replace those used in building the shed upper level, the latter for installing the people door, which is what we did for the rest of the morning. In breaks away from the action with Perry, I also drilled holes in three spots in order to bring electricity from down below to where it will be needed in the upper level. Just before lunch we put 30# felt on the south shed wall in anticipation of putting up the corner trim on that side. However, in discussing time management and priorities over lunch, we tackled the north end corners instead, as they were especially challenging. Push come to shove, I can put up the south end corner trim myself… obviously not as perfectly as Perry, but probably acceptably for a piece of carpentry that doesn’t have hinges. To build the north end corners Perry had to marry 5/4 pine with 5/4 PVC (which, as Murphy would tell you, are not the same thickness) to produce 4½″ wide trim pieces that are weather-proof on the lower end and a lot less expensive on the upper end. While he was doing that, I attempted to remove granitus impedimentia from the northwest corner retaining wall so that the trim on that corner could wrap around to the west side of the shed. Partial success only… and now all my cold chisels need to spend some quality time with Mr. Grinding Wheel. Jake Pirkkanen and his girlfriend, Carrie Ledbetter, arrived to take Hopea Kanootti for a spin while the foregoing was ongoing. By way past quitting time, Perry and I had the north end corner trim attached to the shed for all time. We then spent an hour cleaning up, putting away, and covering up… which made the sitting down and tilting back all the more appreciated.