Just the clothes on our backs

We last left the family by concluding a post with what my reading students call a “cliffhanger.”  In case you’ve forgotten, Meet Me at the Watering Hole ended like this:

The water dept. dudes made a few more calls, and then they called the guys in the diggers back to dig a hole large enough for them to get down in it and finally fix the water pipes.

And then, my friends, all hell broke loose.

I’m not exaggerating. I discovered the basement had water on the floor, so I passed that information on to Chuck. He and a water department dude went downstairs to see the mess, and I retired to the kitchen to once again attempt cooking supper. This could have been disaster, I later realized. Cooking over an open flame on the gas stove when – you guessed it. Or did you? Chuck came upstairs followed by the water dude and announced a gas leak. Quickly – no, immediately – no, instinctively – no, automatically – ANYWAY right away, I turned off the burner.

For our next trick, Chuck ran upstairs to gather the already-upset Amigo. I filled a cloth shopping bag (are you kidding? I’m Daisy! It’s what’s nearby!) with the entire family’s prescription meds. As I headed for the door and the boys came downstairs, it was apparent that the leak was bad and we were moving too slowly. The other water dude was at the open deck door with a panicky look on his face and shouting, “You folks got to get OUT!”

Serious? Dangerous? You bet. We stopped on a neighbor’s porch to put shoes on and both Water Dudes yelled at us to get farther away. We did. We ran, almost dragging each other, to the side street where our cars were parked. We headed to the Safe House, a.k.a. Petunia’s apartment.

Let’s look at the ingredients so far.

  • No running water
  • Water saturating our front yard
  • Water covering the basement floor
  • Gas. Not the kind that makes boys giggle, but the kind that can blow up houses.

Now I know what writers mean when they talk about people being evacuated with just the clothes on their backs. We were lucky; I had my purse, with my phone in it, and our meds. Amigo had shoes and his white cane. Chuck had his car keys. I didn’t have mine, so we piled into his vehicle.

It’s almost as though the story didn’t end there; it had just begun. Next? Settle. Eat a little. Drink fluids. Eventually, find a hotel (courtesy of our insurance company) and (sort of) sleep.

 

Dig. Dig. Dig.

Dig. Dig. Dig.

 No, it wasn’t that simple. Not a chance.

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Meet me at the watering hole

Not that watering hole. This one.

This watering hole.

This watering hole. The one in the front yard.

Deep inside this hole is a broken water line that normally brings treated water into our home. This day, we had no water in the house. I’d started cooking supper, started running a very full dishwasher, and reached to the sink to wash the onion and raw chicken residue from my hands. No water.

I checked the bathroom. No water.

I  went upstairs to check the bathroom there. No water.

Now I was worried. I called Chuck and asked “Were they working on water today? We don’t have water.” He hadn’t heard anything, so the investigation went on.

I walked down the street to find the remaining construction crew members. They told me I had to call the city, so I did. It was just after 4:30, and I was concerned that I’d missed office hours. A little exploration on the city’s web site led me to a 24 hour emergency line to the water dept., and they sent out a crew.

Water, water everywhere.

Water, water everywhere.

They found the problem and I filled them in on my neighbor’s report. He’d seen the sidewalk crew drive over our water main, back up, and put the marker stick back in the ground as if nothing had happened. Sure enough, the water dept. dudes told me it looked like the driver had tried to smooth out the area and cover his tracks. They turned off the water at the source and then told me it had been running all day.

What?! Running all day? Not into the house, it wasn’t. The water, the treated water was running into the ground, useless. It didn’t go through the meter, so we won’t have to pay, but it was wasted. Treated water, possibly hundreds of gallons of it, wasted.

The water dept. dudes made a few more calls, and then they called the guys in the diggers back to dig a hole large enough for them to get down in it and finally fix the water pipes.

And then, my friends, all hell broke loose.

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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of the water/gas leak cleanup

  • Bad: It’s several days after the disaster, and we’re still running fans to help dry out the standing water in the basement.
  • Good: The fans are working. We have several.
  • Ugly: The damp stains left behind and their suggestion of damage to the foundation.

Good, Bad, and Ugly: We’ve decided to handle the clean-up ourselves rather than hiring a cleaning service.

 

  • Good: Chuck made several phone calls to city folk and construction crews, and he actually talked to real people, not voice mail.
  • Bad: The construction guys who broke the water main lied about how they handled the situation. Professional? Not.
  • Ugly: There are more phone calls left to make.

Good: the water pressure in the laundry seems okay.

Bad: The laundry still needs to be done, no matter what else is happening in life.

Ugly: There are more dirty jeans and t-shirts and rags and towels due to the clean-up.

 

  • Bad: the water pressure in the upstairs bathroom is weak.
  • Good: the water pressure in the first floor bathroom is fine.
  • Ugly: this calls for another set of phone calls and a visit from the plumber.

Bad: We still can’t use our driveway or garage due to construction.

Good: That leaves us space in the garage to store basement items while we await another visit from the adjuster or the foundation expert.

Ugly: We still can’t use our driveway or garage due to construction.

 

  • Good: My Crocs, those ugly yet perfect gardening shoes, are also perfect for wandering through the waterlogged basement.
  • Bad: Crocs are ugly.
  • Ugly: Crocs.

Bad: The multitude of boxes on the floor soaked up water.

Good: Many boxes, set aside for recent moving adventures, were empty.

Ugly: Wet boxes are not recyclable. They also smell. For what it’s worth, they’ll be biodegradable if I can fit them all in the compost bin. hahahahahahahaha

 

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The Aftermath

It was an adventure. Some day I’ll laugh. Not yet, though. We’re still slogging through the aftermath of the water main destruction that led to flooding the basement and the gas line breakage that caused our evacuation in a mad, mad hurry. When I came home from the hotel the next morning, I walked in and saw this.

Untouched

Untouched

I’d been cooking supper when the gas main broke and the natural gas blanketed the house. Chuck was allowed in briefly that night to pack overnight bags for all of us. He took a few minutes to put the food in the refrigerator, but that was all. It was a little spooky coming into the silent house the next morning and seeing this scene.

Later, I checked on the basement. Oh, my. Untouched? Not here.

lunch bag in a puddle

lunch bag in a puddle

The OkayByMe Swamp had seeped – no, poured into the basement.

Back room - the source

Back room – the source

The back room was the worst – two inches deep throughout the whole storage room.

I fed Buttercup, picked up my schoolbag, and headed off to work for (fortunately) a half day.

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At the root of the matter – this tree.

I told the committee. I told the council. I explained that narrowing the road wouldn’t help the tree in front of my home because it would damage the root system beyond repair. Behold.

roots

roots

 

roots

roots

 

and more roots

and more roots

How dare that crew park their instrument of mass destruction next to the tree they’ve destroyed!

And there’s more – the neighbor’s cable line was torn down by one of the crew. In the process of reconnecting it, the tree (now missing most of its roots system) lost a large branch.

branching out

branching out

I’m really resenting this road replacement project. It’s causing major amounts of trouble for the tree and for my home.

 

 

 

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The O.K. Chorale Blues

Sing it, baby.

A water main break and a subsequent gas leak had us evacuating the house in a big, big hurry.

I closed out my grant project at work with success, at least anecdotally. Boss woman loved the results. Other teachers shared positive outcomes, too.

We’re still cleaning up, both literally and emotionally, for the disaster and near disaster from the leaks and evacuation.

I’m still debating whether it’s worthwhile to submit the grant applications I have in my to-do list. There are requirements that just don’t jive with the realities of a public school.

Chuck and I are overtired, and that’s leading to silliness and getting really punchy. Big Bang Theory has never been so hilarious.

I’m more than caught up at work, thank goodness. If I need a day for dealing with our basement mess…. well, no. We don’t have a contract any more, so taking an emergency day isn’t on the list of possibilities. Chuck and I will debate the merits of hiring a clean-up service or attacking the mess a few hours each evening.

Things could have been much worse. How?

  • I was standing next to the stove cooking with an open flame when the gas leak began. I heard the warning in time to shut it down.
  • Buttercup the bunny survived.
  • We didn’t lose anything of monetary value – so far.
  • La Petite was available to take Amigo for a few days and let him recover at a distance while we dealt with insurance claims and other follow-up details.
  • I took enough pictures for several posts on the whole wild and woolly experience.  Hah! You knew there was a a catch.

So, readers, I’ll update you on all the details, good or bad or ugly, after I catch up on sleep. Ha. Yeah.

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To Be is To Do, To Do is To Be

Do Be Do Be Do!

Long ago, when Amigo was a baby, I had a sweatshirt that proclaimed to the world:

shirt

 

Mine was white, not black, and credited Plato rather than Sartre with the second form of To Be. And so it goes as I give away the source for my latest posts announcing what’s done and what’s still To Do (be do be do).

With the help of a rake and a light rain, I managed to get the stepping stones a.k.a. old boards out of the garden. Now I can turn the soil, if the weather will ever cooperate. If not, it may be another year to plant no-till style.

Boards!

Boards!

More Boards!

More Boards!

Then the seeds will go in, and hopefully the seedlings will follow sooner rather than later.

Those patches of brown may look more like patches of growth soon.

 

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From The Home Office in Daisy’s House

It started as a bedroom – La Petite’s bedroom. Then she grew up. And moved out. And stayed moved out. We’re still crossing our fingers. 

Then we cleaned and de-cluttered and rearranged. At the present time, Amigo’s bean bag chairs sit on the bed out of reach of bunny teeth. For my laptop, we found a new-to-me writing desk that’s perfect for a laptop like mine.

Pretty, isn't it?

Pretty, isn’t it?

Chuck found it at an antique mall and managed to bargain the price down a bit. It’s lovely, sturdy, and fits the character of the house nicely. Then we looked inside.

Inkwell?

Inkwell?

It was probably an inkwell when the desk was built. The writer’s bottle of ink would have settled into its home in the drawer to avoid spilling. Well, avoid spilling most of the time.

Ink - well.

Ink – well.

It’s all good. I’ll probably use the little spot for paper clips or jump drives. Works for me! Next:

  • bulletin board or other means of displaying necessary info nearby
  • file cabinet or equivalent
  • desk chair

I believe we have potential for finding all three of these in the basement. The basement, that is, that is still home to huge piles that Chuck made to allow the plumbers in last fall. Too bad I can’t just wave a wand and say “Accio Desk Chair!” In the meantime, I’ll move my muggle self to the piles and start sorting. My new home office awaits.

 

 

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Purging and Decluttering continues

Spell checker doesn’t recognize Decluttering as a word. Get used to it, WordPress, it’s going to be a regular term around here.

I managed to get rid of two boxes of miscellaneous, as the thrift stores call it. Two boxes out of the way! That’s a good start. Then we attacked La Petite’s room. It’s going to become a guest room slash office – mainly an office for me. When I approach a project and consider blogging the process, I almost always forget the “before” pictures. This time I have “before” photos, but we haven’t reached the “after” stage yet. Observe – if you dare.

trashy card table pretending it’s a nightstand

The View of the Floor

Buttercup loved playing with (and chewing on) the large boxes we’d stashed in here. Upon the onset of Operation Office, we discovered that she had also shredded large pieces of styrofoam packaging material. Clean-up, shall we say, was not fun.

These, then, are the “before” pictures. “After” might be a while. Right now, the card table is just a stashing place for all things awaiting La Petite. The bed has been moved to a different space, and two of Amigo’s bean bag chairs have made their way in to live on the rug. I suppose this is the “during” stage.

Readers, if we ever reach the finished product, I’ll take pictures. Really.

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Storing the canning supplies

Oh, I was so proud last June. I organized the cupboards, cleared a space, and the storage for my home-canned goods looked great. Here’s an encore post showing the stock and the storage. 

There must be a better way.

This is the “before” picture. I’ve increased my repertoire of canned foods every year, and with that increase in recipes came an increased yield. Then comes the question: where do I keep all these provisions? And after we finish each jar of pickles or jam or applesauce, where will I keep the reusable jars? Above you see the dilemma in June: a partial shelf of pickles and jams and applesauce and rhubarb waiting for their day on the table, surrounded by empty canning jars and freezer containers.

Something here must go.

Step 1: I cleaned out half the books at the top.

Step 2: I gathered boxes for a thrift store donation (shelves out of sight on the left).

Step 3: I relocated the crockpot and reorganized the jars by size.

Step 4: Move in!!

Ah. That’s better.

Readers, this is the “after” shot – the “after” shot for June. After I’ve canned my way through June and July and even part of August, this cupboard will look very different. I’ll be sure to show you then. Remind me. Really.

Okay, readers. I now have at least double that amount of empty jars, and I never did show you August, did I? Expect a sequel as I work on decluttering – as much decluttering as my still-weak left side will allow. 

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