REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

In the garden, and RAIN!!!!

POSTED BY: SIGNYM
UPDATED: Tuesday, November 1, 2022 17:55
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PAGE 144 of 231

Friday, April 30, 2021 11:40 PM

BRENDA


Seems my boss has retired. Her last day at a local long term care home was today and her last day at a local walk-in clinic was I think she said Wednesday.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 3:37 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Seems my boss has retired. Her last day at a local long term care home was today and her last day at a local walk-in clinic was I think she said Wednesday.



How do you feel about it?

Seems a bit sudden.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 3:54 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


That's great progress on the kitchen, SIX!

*****

Over at this end, I'm getting back to what passes for normal. I can lift up my left arm, and my neck only shoots pain to my forehead a little bit when I rotate it past a certain position. Hard to believe it's been a whole week.

I think the heating chemical patches shortened the course of recovery, and the meloxicam, pregablin, and a few judicious glasses of wine made it more tolerable. Didn't do anything outdoors today ... it was 93F anyway ... but put out peanuts for the birds*, walked the dog, did a crapton of dishes, sorted the mail, paid bills, made dinner (real roast t breast and bacon sandwiches with whatever toppings ppl like or can tolerate: avocado, mayo, tomato, cheese, arugula etc plus cucumber on the side.) and best of all used the drill and some brushes to scrub the bottom of the shower which was so disgusting I didn't want to step in. Also, picked up our tax return today (deadline was extended to May 15, whew!) with a whopping refund.

So all-in-all a more normally productive day. Tomorrow goes back down to 78 ... higher than I like but still Ok for yardwork, so tomorrow I'll finish planting out the veggie patch, unless something else gets in the way.





-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 8:38 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Glad you're feeling better.

Big tax returns are nice. I usually don't get them, but with income so low around here these days it's a nice mental game to get it.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 4:59 PM

BRENDA


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Seems my boss has retired. Her last day at a local long term care home was today and her last day at a local walk-in clinic was I think she said Wednesday.



How do you feel about it?

Seems a bit sudden.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.



Not sure. With the way things are right now it basically means I loose a social contact but on the flip side it does mean that my body gets more down time from lifting her heavy pots and such. So basically more time to heal.

Not really. She was tossing the idea around some last year towards the end as she is in her early 70s. Her medical license is paid up till next year, so she could pick up odd shifts here and there over the year.

So, it is basically wait and see.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 5:01 PM

BRENDA


Had a nice walk out in the dry and warm. Sun is shining right now. Hope it stays for the next week. Got a lot of things to do.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 6:56 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Had a nice visit with my Grandma and aunt today. I've got to get out to her house soon to fixe a few things, but I'm going to set some things up and find her egg timer so she remembers to get up and move around every hour while she's watching TV all day long.

She's never been the same since the hip surgery, but the doctors at the time said she could walk again without canes if she exercised... which she doesn't. I've got a low toilet here, and she needed my aunt's help getting out of it. After sitting down in my livingroom, it took the both of us to help her out of the big chair. I'm worried about her. She seems good otherwise though.


Mowed the lawn and watered it a few times after they left. I mowed 3 days ago, but it needed it after all that rain. But it was in the 80's today and tomorrow so it also needs more water for the new grass.. I'll water it once more tonight. I don't think I'll start any of the painting today, but maybe I get the bug. My old man isn't coming until Monday now, so I can paint all day tomorrow now that the lawn is taken care of.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 9:42 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Brenda:
Seems my boss has retired. Her last day at a local long term care home was today and her last day at a local walk-in clinic was I think she said Wednesday.

SIGNYM: How do you feel about it?
Seems a bit sudden.

BRENDA: Not sure. With the way things are right now it basically means I loose a social contact but on the flip side it does mean that my body gets more down time from lifting her heavy pots and such. So basically more time to heal.

Not really. She was tossing the idea around some last year towards the end as she is in her early 70s. Her medical license is paid up till next year, so she could pick up odd shifts here and there over the year.

So, it is basically wait and see.

I had no idea she was so old. I thought you had posted something about her children that made it seem like they were still living there, but I must have misunderstood.

You may be losing a social contact, but at least it doesn't sound like you need the money. And then you'll have more time to meet people who might be more compatible. So I guess overall things could be worse?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 9:44 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Had a nice visit with my Grandma and aunt today. I've got to get out to her house soon to fixe a few things, but I'm going to set some things up and find her egg timer so she remembers to get up and move around every hour while she's watching TV all day long.

She's never been the same since the hip surgery, but the doctors at the time said she could walk again without canes if she exercised... which she doesn't. I've got a low toilet here, and she needed my aunt's help getting out of it. After sitting down in my livingroom, it took the both of us to help her out of the big chair. I'm worried about her. She seems good otherwise though.


Mowed the lawn and watered it a few times after they left. I mowed 3 days ago, but it needed it after all that rain. But it was in the 80's today and tomorrow so it also needs more water for the new grass.. I'll water it once more tonight. I don't think I'll start any of the painting today, but maybe I get the bug. My old man isn't coming until Monday now, so I can paint all day tomorrow now that the lawn is taken care of.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

SIX you had company over! Imagine that! It's kind of a milestone, considering where your house started.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 11:02 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
SIX you had company over! Imagine that! It's kind of a milestone, considering where your house started.



Yeah... It's been a while, unless you count the unexpected drop in of my friend and his fiancee, or just when one of my buddies come alone and I don't care if they see I'm still living the bachelor life.

One of these days I'll have the whole house done.

Can't get too complacent though. I know I need to get out eventually. But if we had normal rain patterns here from now on I could see myself staying here. I just know that it's only a matter of time before we get water like we did the last 5 years though... especially last year. So much rain.

I think my sump pump has gone off less all spring this year than it did in a single day last year. It's nice going entire days without even noticing it instead of hearing it go off every 4 or 5 minutes.





--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 11:09 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Hey all ... I'm just dropping by to say hey! I'm reading the posts, just not posting back too much. It sounds like things are going OK at the moment for everyone. Myeb different, but not necessarily bad.

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Saturday, May 1, 2021 11:18 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Anyway, in the evening when I'm pretty much done for the day, I've been working on my savory curry chicken and vegetable biscuit/ muffin, and it's coming along nicely. I think I just need to make a couple more tweaks and it'll be ready as a meal.


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Saturday, May 1, 2021 11:31 PM

BRENDA


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Brenda:
Seems my boss has retired. Her last day at a local long term care home was today and her last day at a local walk-in clinic was I think she said Wednesday.

SIGNYM: How do you feel about it?
Seems a bit sudden.

BRENDA: Not sure. With the way things are right now it basically means I loose a social contact but on the flip side it does mean that my body gets more down time from lifting her heavy pots and such. So basically more time to heal.

Not really. She was tossing the idea around some last year towards the end as she is in her early 70s. Her medical license is paid up till next year, so she could pick up odd shifts here and there over the year.

So, it is basically wait and see.

I had no idea she was so old. I thought you had posted something about her children that made it seem like they were still living there, but I must have misunderstood.

You may be losing a social contact, but at least it doesn't sound like you need the money. And then you'll have more time to meet people who might be more compatible. So I guess overall things could be worse?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.



They had their married son and daughter-in-law living with them in 2019. They came back from Thailand to work in Canada to raise money for their missionary work there. Their son's wife is Thai.

I should be okay since I am now living in social housing. Yeah, and whenever my mah jong group starts back up that will give me something to do. And yeah.

Course this also gives me more time to work on my book and see about publishers as well as review what else I have written for potential. That would be nice.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 12:59 AM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
SIX you had company over! Imagine that! It's kind of a milestone, considering where your house started.

Yeah... It's been a while, unless you count the unexpected drop in of my friend and his fiancee, or just when one of my buddies come alone and I don't care if they see I'm still living the bachelor life.

One of these days I'll have the whole house done.

Can't get too complacent though. I know I need to get out eventually. But if we had normal rain patterns here from now on I could see myself staying here. I just know that it's only a matter of time before we get water like we did the last 5 years though... especially last year. So much rain.

I think my sump pump has gone off less all spring this year than it did in a single day last year. It's nice going entire days without even noticing it instead of hearing it go off every 4 or 5 minutes.

Every 4 or 5 minutes? I didn't know you had that much problem.
You usually ignore my advice, but do you want advice, suggestions to solve that?

If so, try to describe the situation. Gutters on what parts of roof, how the tiling is incorporated in the sump well, and around the foundation (if you know), what is the land/yard contour, elevation, slope, what you have against the house/basement walls? Have you checked water flowage, like during a flooding storm, or via waterhose? how many feet from house to sidewalk/curb, and driveway, and how many inches of elevation difference in that slope? have you ever observed water seeping through your basement walls, or evidence of it?

I've helped others with this problem, and every house I've bought had similar problems at purchase which I quickly resolved.


I think you used to have some leaking sewer pipe, which I assume poured right into your sump.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 4:06 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Since my neck and shouldeer are back to "normal" an my left foot isn't hurting a lot (altho it is STILL puffy) I spent the day catching up on the chores and errands that I let go for a week: cleaning, cooking, raking, watering. I suppose the one thing I should have a sense of accomplishment about is that dd and I cleaned her bathroom top to bottom. But seeing as that should have been done a long time ago, I think the only thing I can feel about finally getting it done is relief.

I don't know HOW I'm going to make up the lost time. But all I can do is what I can do, even if maintenance seems to be slipping backwards.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 2:44 PM

BRENDA


Lazy Sunday by me.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 5:35 PM

BRENDA


Odd that I am still finding things in strange places.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 8:48 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Every 4 or 5 minutes? I didn't know you had that much problem.



Yup. Last spring was a nightmare. We'd already had over 30" of rain compared to the 4 or 5 we've had so far this year. And the city sewers got backed up twice for long enough that half of my very large front yard was submerged in water.

Quote:

You usually ignore my advice, but do you want advice, suggestions to solve that?


I'm all ears.

Quote:

If so, try to describe the situation. Gutters on what parts of roof,


I didn't have gutters until very late fall last year. Now they're on the front and the back of the roof. The only part that has two levels is in the back where the porch roof is below the house roof, and that gutter goes to the wall. In the front, there is an overhang that goes perpendicular to the main roof, so there are inside miters on both sides of that with about 6' of gutter coming out perpendicular to the main gutter.

Quote:

how the tiling is incorporated in the sump well, and around the foundation (if you know),


I don't know. The only thing I do know is that there is a very large pipe coming into the well from outside. I'd say it's 4" in diameter, but that's a guess.

Quote:

what is the land/yard contour,
Land grades down slightly from the house to the street, and also in the backyard to my back neighbor's property. I'm the only person on my block still considered a "minor" floodplain, and everyone on the few blocks behind me are in worse shape than I am.

Quote:

elevation, slope,


Floodplain, so low elevation. Last year the ditch across the street was full to the brim, and that's about 7 feet higher than my front door threshold.

Quote:

what you have against the house/basement walls?


Just bare dirt now. The moles have destroyed any grass that was growing up against the foundation, and I've spent the last few years caving the tunnels in. This year I started using smoke poison bombs in the tunnels. Hard to say if I've been successful or not since they're an invisible enemy, but after the second time about 3 weeks ago they haven't tried making new tunnels against the foundation.

I also put down about 10 times more Triazicide for the bugs around my foundation than the recommended amount. I haven't seen a single bug within 6 feet of my house anywhere this year, which is pretty amazing. I'm trying to kill all the food sources so they go bother my neighbors that don't do shit to protect their house instead.

Quote:

Have you checked water flowage, like during a flooding storm, or via waterhose?


I don't have much of a slope anywhere, so you really don't see much action. At least with the gutters up that stuff isn't falling right against the house and just sitting there anymore though.

Quote:

how many feet from house to sidewalk/curb,


It's a weird property. The shortest distance from the house to the curb is around 50 feet, with the longest being maybe 200 feet.

Quote:

and driveway,


Driveway comes within about 12 feet from the house.

Quote:

and how many inches of elevation difference in that slope?


Don't know, but there is a bigger difference than meets the eye, otherwise water would have been pouring into my house when the streets got so much water it was almost going into a truck cab that was parked across the street.

But I did have to turn the sump pump off that night because water was shooting out of my toilet every time it went off. A few hours after the water had started going down I still couldn't turn the pump on because the water was coming halfway up the cleanout valve next to my house, probably about a 18" to 2 feet higher than the drain pipe to the street.

Quote:

have you ever observed water seeping through your basement walls, or evidence of it?


Yes. That's why I mopped up about 500 gallons of water last spring. Late in the year I dug around the two cracks I know about and sealed them with Watertite after cleaning the cracks with a brass wheel on my power drill.

I think I'll have to get somebody to do injection molding to fix them proper, but since we aren't getting any rain I haven't been able to tell if my gutters and my patch work fixed the problem.


I didn't get any water in the basement or the garage thoug when that 40" of snow melted after sealing all the cracks last year, so I'm probably in better shape than I was last year.

Quote:

I've helped others with this problem, and every house I've bought had similar problems at purchase which I quickly resolved.


Come on over man.

Quote:

I think you used to have some leaking sewer pipe, which I assume poured right into your sump.



It was cracked, and I fixed it. It was the pipe that discharges the sump pump well as well as the kitchen sink above it. Most of the water from a pump cycle would make it out to the street, but a lot of it didn't. I only knew about it because I ended up with a gaping hole above the crack right up next to the foundation after the water had eroded the dirt above and taken it into the sewer through that pipe over time.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 8:51 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Since my neck and shouldeer are back to "normal" an my left foot isn't hurting a lot (altho it is STILL puffy) I spent the day catching up on the chores and errands that I let go for a week: cleaning, cooking, raking, watering. I suppose the one thing I should have a sense of accomplishment about is that dd and I cleaned her bathroom top to bottom. But seeing as that should have been done a long time ago, I think the only thing I can feel about finally getting it done is relief.

I don't know HOW I'm going to make up the lost time. But all I can do is what I can do, even if maintenance seems to be slipping backwards.

Falling behind on maintenance.

I recall hearing a woman explaining how she had just cleaned all her dishes, and washed them, and dried them, and mopped the floors, vacuumed the carpet, dusted the furniture, scrubbed the counters and bath and toilet, etc.
And she did all of this with the certain knowledge that she would have to do it all over again, in 6 months.

I think that was Erma Bombeck, or maybe Joan Rivers.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 8:52 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


All 9 upper cabinets got their first coat of paint inside and out today. A little trickier with the trim up, but I busted out my nice Wooster brush for the outside work.



Only two more to go, and I can focus on getting those doors and shelves ready to put in finally.

I'm going to have to get whatever I can done soon because it was hot enough inside the house today were I was sweating. Can't be doing this work and dripping sweat over everything.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 9:52 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Every 4 or 5 minutes? I didn't know you had that much problem.

Yup. Last spring was a nightmare. We'd already had over 30" of rain compared to the 4 or 5 we've had so far this year. And the city sewers got backed up twice for long enough that half of my very large front yard was submerged in water.

city sewers. does this mean the storm sewers, draining the streets? or sewage sewers, draining the plumbing from homes? or does your neighborhood have combined - with one sewer draining both storm water and sewage together?
And I'm not getting a clear picture: is your sump pump output going outside, n your grass or driveway, or is it going into your home sewage drain (like in your deepsink, or floor drain, etc)? Do you have a manual valve, to switch from "inside" drain to "outside" spout?
Quote:

Quote:

You usually ignore my advice, but do you want advice, suggestions to solve that?
I'm all ears.

OK, good to know, a place to start.
Quote:

Quote:

If so, try to describe the situation. Gutters on what parts of roof,
I didn't have gutters until very late fall last year.

Well then, that right there was a huge part of your problem right there. We might get all the rest of the minor items fixed up. It is amazing how many homeowners have flooding/wet basements and don't bother with gutters.
Quote:

Now they're on the front and the back of the roof. The only part that has two levels is in the back where the porch roof is below the house roof, and that gutter goes to the wall. In the front, there is an overhang that goes perpendicular to the main roof, so there are inside miters on both sides of that with about 6' of gutter coming out perpendicular to the main gutter.
I'm not picturing your roof. Is the main top ridge going front to back? Or the bottom edge of the roof slope is front and back? Are there sections of roof perimeter without gutter? How far away from the house wall does the roof edge/gutter extend? Is the wall about in line with the basement wall, or does it overhang a bit? Is front of your house facing street? Is house longer front to back, or side to side?
Quote:


Quote:

how the tiling is incorporated in the sump well, and around the foundation (if you know),
I don't know. The only thing I do know is that there is a very large pipe coming into the well from outside. I'd say it's 4" in diameter, but that's a guess.

On;y one? This would be the plastic tubing called tile, tiling, or drainage tile. It should go all the way around the house, at the level where the basement wall meets the concrete foundation, outside the wall, buried in dirt. It has holes in it, allowing water to enter, but not stones and such, but likely some dirt in it's early days. You could go to Home Depot to look at some tile up close.
The purpose of this is to give the water a place to go instead of backing up against the basement walls, where it would seep through.
Quote:


Quote:

what is the land/yard contour,
Land grades down slightly from the house to the street, and also in the backyard to my back neighbor's property. I'm the only person on my block still considered a "minor" floodplain, and everyone on the few blocks behind me are in worse shape than I am.

Quote:

elevation, slope,
Floodplain, so low elevation. Last year the ditch across the street was full to the brim, and that's about 7 feet higher than my front door threshold.

We can deal with that, you seem to have room to work with. Please describe your lot layout. how far from street to nearest part of house, corner lot or a neighbor each side, how far from property line with neighbor, and backside. Is garage detached, where?
I will likely tell you some secrets that you might not use, so my suggestions might be fluid, able to match various tricks for your situation.
Quote:

Quote:

what you have against the house/basement walls?
Just bare dirt now. The moles have destroyed any grass that was growing up against the foundation, and I've spent the last few years caving the tunnels in. This year I started using smoke poison bombs in the tunnels. Hard to say if I've been successful or not since they're an invisible enemy, but after the second time about 3 weeks ago they haven't tried making new tunnels against the foundation.

I also put down about 10 times more Triazicide for the bugs around my foundation than the recommended amount. I haven't seen a single bug within 6 feet of my house anywhere this year, which is pretty amazing. I'm trying to kill all the food sources so they go bother my neighbors that don't do shit to protect their house instead.

Is your goal to just have grass up to the wall? bushes/scrubs? gravel, flower bins? what is the elevation different between basement windows (or glass blocks) and the grass/dirt level?
Quote:


Quote:

Have you checked water flowage, like during a flooding storm, or via waterhose?
I don't have much of a slope anywhere, so you really don't see much action. At least with the gutters up that stuff isn't falling right against the house and just sitting there anymore though.

Quote:

how many feet from house to sidewalk/curb,
It's a weird property. The shortest distance from the house to the curb is around 50 feet, with the longest being maybe 200 feet.

Quote:

and driveway,
Driveway comes within about 12 feet from the house.

Quote:

and how many inches of elevation difference in that slope?
Don't know, but there is a bigger difference than meets the eye, otherwise water would have been pouring into my house when the streets got so much water it was almost going into a truck cab that was parked across the street.

But I did have to turn the sump pump off that night because water was shooting out of my toilet every time it went off. A few hours after the water had started going down I still couldn't turn the pump on because the water was coming halfway up the cleanout valve next to my house, probably about a 18" to 2 feet higher than the drain pipe to the street.

Quote:

have you ever observed water seeping through your basement walls, or evidence of it?
Yes. That's why I mopped up about 500 gallons of water last spring. Late in the year I dug around the two cracks I know about and sealed them with Watertite after cleaning the cracks with a brass wheel on my power drill.

I think I'll have to get somebody to do injection molding to fix them proper, but since we aren't getting any rain I haven't been able to tell if my gutters and my patch work fixed the problem.


I didn't get any water in the basement or the garage thoug when that 40" of snow melted after sealing all the cracks last year, so I'm probably in better shape than I was last year.

We should be able to let that seal be good enough - only need more if we are not successful.
Quote:



Quote:

I've helped others with this problem, and every house I've bought had similar problems at purchase which I quickly resolved.
Come on over man.

Sorry, I meant helping with the understandind, description, not so much with the labor. Some problems are not the most urgent, and can be done at more liesurely pace. I firmly believe in work smarter, not harder.
Quote:


Quote:

I think you used to have some leaking sewer pipe, which I assume poured right into your sump.

It was cracked, and I fixed it. It was the pipe that discharges the sump pump well as well as the kitchen sink above it. Most of the water from a pump cycle would make it out to the street, but a lot of it didn't. I only knew about it because I ended up with a gaping hole above the crack right up next to the foundation after the water had eroded the dirt above and taken it into the sewer through that pipe over time.



To seed your brain, I'll try to describe an overall drainage plan for your outside, which is where most wet basement causes are.

We can rearrange some of the dirt/elevation on your yard, likely without digging. This can be merely using leaf rake on wet grass.

That 200 feet area - is that open grass? If so, we can use that to pool the excess water - think of a very shallow retention pond, just until excess rains abate.
Except for sidewalk, driveway, stepping stones, etc, we want to have the 3 feet nearest the basement (and garage) to slope away from the structure, at least several inch drop. This can be done by adding dirt up against the wall/concrete, or raking away excess dirt from about 3 feet away from the wall.
Depending on how your layout, slope, relative elevations, obstructions, we will look to create a visually non-obvious drainage slope, think invisible ditch, which will direct your yard water mostly to the street, and then a low spot as backup "retention pond" if street cannot take the water. But we should be able to keep the water at least 3 feet away from basement wall.

Do you have trees? they can soak up water. is one part of curb significantly lower than the rest?
How far below the dirt on the outside is your basement floor on the inside? you can measure from a window, how far below is dirt on outside, and floor on inside.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 10:13 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Since my neck and shouldeer are back to "normal" an my left foot isn't hurting a lot (altho it is STILL puffy) I spent the day catching up on the chores and errands that I let go for a week: cleaning, cooking, raking, watering. I suppose the one thing I should have a sense of accomplishment about is that dd and I cleaned her bathroom top to bottom. But seeing as that should have been done a long time ago, I think the only thing I can feel about finally getting it done is relief.

I don't know HOW I'm going to make up the lost time. But all I can do is what I can do, even if maintenance seems to be slipping backwards.

Falling behind on maintenance.

I recall hearing a woman explaining how she had just cleaned all her dishes, and washed them, and dried them, and mopped the floors, vacuumed the carpet, dusted the furniture, scrubbed the counters and bath and toilet, etc.
And she did all of this with the certain knowledge that she would have to do it all over again, in 6 months.

I think that was Erma Bombeck, or maybe Joan Rivers.

HAHAHA!!!

Well, I'm always a little behind on cleaning, but since I'm the gardener what I'm REALLY falling behind on is yardwork.

We used to have an occasional helper come by every two weeks or so, but then Covid-19 hit so no more assistance.

It doesn't help that we have a largish property for a suburban lot (10,000 sq ft) and that I ambitiously converted the front yard to a native drought-tolerant garden many years ago, and have two rather largish vegetable gardens in the back as well as two large (60', 40') avocados in the back. Whoever said that xeriscaping requires less work than a lawn .... LIED. With lawns you just mow, blow, and go. But garden area is garden area. Also, the 30,000 sq ft lot across the street was vacant since 2007, and spewed weed seeds all over. It alsodoesn't help that I developed what seems to be a permanent pain syndrome after being given an antibiotic.

Be that as it may, this is the month for the avocado leaves to fall (they make a bigger mess than maple trees bc the leaves are large and thick) and this is also the season to plant a vegetable garden, and also the season when weeds grow. And also the season to finish planting CA natives, if any are to be planted. Once summer rolls around everything except the well-watered areas go dormant, so I can slow the pace down by simply not watering.

"Tidy" does not describe the property!

But I did finish planting veggie patch#2 with a block of carrots and a row of onions. I've never planted carrot and onion seeds before.

And the neighbors will forgive the weeds in front when I share a dozen or so avocados with each family.

And I made a patch of bare dirt and sprinkled corn gluten on it, which is supposed to prevent weed seeds from sprouting, so I get to see whether it works or not.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Sunday, May 2, 2021 11:30 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


I hate the quote formatting here... This is going to get complicated if I don't remove my entries and just answer your question. Sorry if that ends up being confusing for you.

Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
city sewers. does this mean the storm sewers, draining the streets? or sewage sewers, draining the plumbing from homes? or does your neighborhood have combined - with one sewer draining both storm water and sewage together?



My sump pump/kitchen sink seems to go into the one that drains the street. It stopped draining the streets and my pump stopped working. It also shot water out of my toilet when the pump went on, so my crap probably goes out the back and ties into it too. I don't know man. Idiots built this house, and until I got here idiots "repaired" it too.

Could be everything goes into one, but I doubt it. I think my house is just built wrong.

Quote:

And I'm not getting a clear picture: is your sump pump output going outside, n your grass or driveway, or is it going into your home sewage drain (like in your deepsink, or floor drain, etc)?


It goes into the storm sewer, which may or may not also be the waste sewer.

Quote:

Do you have a manual valve, to switch from "inside" drain to "outside" spout?


No.

Quote:

I'm not picturing your roof. Is the main top ridge going front to back? Or the bottom edge of the roof slope is front and back?


Bottom of the roof is in the front and the back. The main ridge spans to both sides.

Quote:

Are there sections of roof perimeter without gutter?


Yes. The sides.

Quote:

How far away from the house wall does the roof edge/gutter extend?


Gutters are 5" gutters. The bigger type. On the sides of the house without gutters, the soffit goes out nearly 2 feet. On the sides with gutters, the gutters extend 3" past that.

Quote:

Is the wall about in line with the basement wall, or does it overhang a bit?


It should be in line, but I discovered last year that the vinyl siding was installed over asbestos siding, so there's a bit of an incidental overhang.

Quote:

Is front of your house facing street?


Yes.

Quote:

Is house longer front to back, or ide to side?


Side to side, about 2:1. Including the 3 season room, 3:1.

Quote:

On;y one? This would be the plastic tubing called tile, tiling, or drainage tile.


Yup. It's not plastic.

Quote:

It should go all the way around the house, at the level where the basement wall meets the concrete foundation, outside the wall, buried in dirt. It has holes in it, allowing water to enter, but not stones and such, but likely some dirt in it's early days. You could go to Home Depot to look at some tile up close.


I think it's likely very, very old... and not how it would be done today.

Quote:

The purpose of this is to give the water a place to go instead of backing up against the basement walls, where it would seep through.



I think it is still doing that job. Last year when we were waterlogged, my pump would still be going off every 15 to 20 minutes 3 days after a rain from the water coming in that pipe.

Quote:

We can deal with that, you seem to have room to work with. Please describe your lot layout. how far from street to nearest part of house, corner lot or a neighbor each side, how far from property line with neighbor, and backside. Is garage detached, where?


I have a relatively huge lot compared to other people. Corner lot.

At least 50 feet from the street at the closest point. Close to my next door neighbor by only about 20 feet. But probably 300 feet from my neighbor behind me. Garage is detached behind the back porch, around 15 feet away.

Quote:

I will likely tell you some secrets that you might not use, so my suggestions might be fluid, able to match various tricks for your situation.



OK.

Quote:

Is your goal to just have grass up to the wall? bushes/scrubs? gravel, flower bins?


Not grass. Because of that incidental overhang I mentioned above, it's a real bitch mowing it. I don't know what my end goal would be, but it needs to keep the water away and stay put. Bare dirt with occasional tunnels right up against the foundation is terrible. I can't really do anything until I know the mole problem is gone.... or maybe I can?

Quote:

what is the elevation different between basement windows (or glass blocks) and the grass/dirt level?


Double pane up/down glass windows. Probably 5" to 8".


Quote:

We should be able to let that seal be good enough - only need more if we are not successful.


Nice.

Quote:

Sorry, I meant helping with the understandind, description, not so much with the labor. Some problems are not the most urgent, and can be done at more liesurely pace. I firmly believe in work smarter, not harder.


I know. Just kiddin.

I feel I did a lot to shore it up last year. I can't say that I'm unhappy that we finally got a normal rainfall spring this year and I haven't been able to test it out yet though.

Quote:

To seed your brain, I'll try to describe an overall drainage plan for your outside, which is where most wet basement causes are.

We can rearrange some of the dirt/elevation on your yard, likely without digging. This can be merely using leaf rake on wet grass.

That 200 feet area - is that open grass?



Except for the tree, yeah. I get taxed a lot for that extra acerage and it takes forever to mow my front lawn. There's a lot of weeds. More this year than ever before. After my new grass from the divots after cutting down the trees is matured enough, I'm putting a lot of weed and feed down.

Quote:

If so, we can use that to pool the excess water - think of a very shallow retention pond, just until excess rains abate.


You can do that with just a rake? Sounds painful...

Quote:

Except for sidewalk, driveway, stepping stones, etc, we want to have the 3 feet nearest the basement (and garage) to slope away from the structure, at least several inch drop. This can be done by adding dirt up against the wall/concrete, or raking away excess dirt from about 3 feet away from the wall.


I always do my best to grade the dirt away from the house after collapsing the mole tunnels.

One of the first things I'm doing this year once I start working outside is to trench out the dirt from the foundation that is above grade, clean it all good, and paint it with the black tar a few inches below grade, then fill it all back in.

I'm definatley open to any low-maintenance ideas you have for putting a border around the foundation that will keep water away. Like I said before, I don't want grass there for easy mowing, and if something can be put down there that would block the moles from coming close even better.

Quote:

Depending on how your layout, slope, relative elevations, obstructions, we will look to create a visually non-obvious drainage slope, think invisible ditch, which will direct your yard water mostly to the street, and then a low spot as backup "retention pond" if street cannot take the water. But we should be able to keep the water at least 3 feet away from basement wall.

Do you have trees? they can soak up water. is one part of curb significantly lower than the rest?



I have one tree left. It's at least 50 feet from the house.

Quote:

How far below the dirt on the outside is your basement floor on the inside? you can measure from a window, how far below is dirt on outside, and floor on inside.



I measured it this morning while I was down there. About 44" to the window on the inside.

So probably in the mid to high 30's for the dirt level. I'd guess around 3 feet.

It occurs to me that I never mentioned the sump pump is in a crawl space and only has to push the water up about maybe 3 1/2 feet before it goes out the drain. The drain pipe is low compared to the windows on the livable side (the pipe goes through the foundation), but the dirt in the crawl grades down to the pump and then there's the extra depth of the well.

--------------------------------------------------

Imagine the hypocrisy of a government who will allow businesses to card people to get a job or buy groceries, but won't card people to vote in elections and gives millions of non-citizens free money from taxpayers.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 5:22 PM

BRENDA


Went through some stuff that I pulled out of an accordian file folder a few days ago. One thing I found was my dad's death certificate. How it got there, no idea. A map book of all the clans of Scotland. No idea on that either. Must have been something I bought years ago then forgot about. Also found a great old black and white photo of my parents. Taken long before I came along. They were goofing around in the backyard of house where they were renting a basement suite. They looked so happy.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 5:23 PM

BRENDA


Got my walk in and of course it decides to rain on the one day that I didn't take my umbrella with me. Had to dash into a store and buy another one before I could continue with my errands.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 7:49 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

I will likely tell you some secrets that you might not use, so my suggestions might be fluid, able to match various tricks for your situation.

OK.

Quote:

Is your goal to just have grass up to the wall? bushes/scrubs? gravel, flower bins?
Not grass. Because of that incidental overhang I mentioned above, it's a real bitch mowing it. I don't know what my end goal would be, but it needs to keep the water away and stay put. Bare dirt with occasional tunnels right up against the foundation is terrible. I can't really do anything until I know the mole problem is gone.... or maybe I can?

Quote:

what is the elevation different between basement windows (or glass blocks) and the grass/dirt level?
Double pane up/down glass windows. Probably 5" to 8".

Quote:

To seed your brain, I'll try to describe an overall drainage plan for your outside, which is where most wet basement causes are.



Quote:

Except for sidewalk, driveway, stepping stones, etc, we want to have the 3 feet nearest the basement (and garage) to slope away from the structure, at least several inch drop. This can be done by adding dirt up against the wall/concrete, or raking away excess dirt from about 3 feet away from the wall.
I always do my best to grade the dirt away from the house after collapsing the mole tunnels.

One of the first things I'm doing this year once I start working outside is to trench out the dirt from the foundation that is above grade, clean it all good, and paint it with the black tar a few inches below grade, then fill it all back in.

I'm definatley open to any low-maintenance ideas you have for putting a border around the foundation that will keep water away. Like I said before, I don't want grass there for easy mowing, and if something can be put down there that would block the moles from coming close even better.

Quote:

How far below the dirt on the outside is your basement floor on the inside? you can measure from a window, how far below is dirt on outside, and floor on inside.


I measured it this morning while I was down there. About 44" to the window on the inside.

So probably in the mid to high 30's for the dirt level. I'd guess around 3 feet.

It occurs to me that I never mentioned the sump pump is in a crawl space and only has to push the water up about maybe 3 1/2 feet before it goes out the drain. The drain pipe is low compared to the windows on the livable side (the pipe goes through the foundation), but the dirt in the crawl grades down to the pump and then there's the extra depth of the well.


Hoo boy, it looks like you are running ahead of me on this facet, so I'll start on this one. Seems you have a number of issues we can resolve in varying ways, but I'll focus on this first, since you plan to dig at it soon.

One of the secrets is subterranean water control, channeling, sloping. This means just below the surface. I plan to tell you about 2 for lawns/dirt, since it doesn't sound like you have a lot of gravel drive/park area. If I forget to tell you about sub-surface gravel channel, be sure to remind me.

For now, the sub-surface control against the basement wall and the top treatment against the basement wall are not exactly the same thing, but they can be planned together and done at the same time.


To start, you might already know some of these things, but I'll explain in case you don't.
If you were to drop your garden water hose in the middle of your grass, the ground underneath normally becomes waterlogged in the shape of a cone, spreading wider the lower it goes. If the surface does not allow the surface water to spread, then the waterlogged subsurface dirt does not normally transition horizontally. We can use this to control things, and also later to divert water.

Quote:


Consider next to your basement wall, say that surface water cannot get closer than 48 inches to your wall.

water
source,,,,48" of grass,,,,|
xxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx|
xxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| 4
xxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| 8
xxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| "
xxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx|
4xxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxx| b
8xxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxx| a
"xxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxx| s
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxx| e
oxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxx| m
fxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxx| e
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxx| n
gxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxx| t
rxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxx|
axxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxx| w
sxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxx| a
sxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxx| l
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xx| l
water drainage patternxx\x|
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\|

Then that drainage pattern would not get to your wall until the bottom, where it meets your foundation, and your drainage tile takes in the water.
Imagine that is a 45 degree slope in the above image.

So one trick is to install a diversion/protector below the surface. Again, imagine this is a 45 degree slope of the diversion.


xx|,,,,,grass surface,,,,,,,
xx|
xx|\
xx|x\
b |xx\
a |xxx\
s |xxxx\
e |xxxxx\ ---diversion material
m |xxxxxx\
e |xxxxxxx\
n |
t |
xx|
w |
a |
l |
l |
----- <-- foundation

Quote:




In this way, if your distance from foundation up to grass surface is only 36", then a diversion material of about 24" size would extend about 18" from the wall, and protect your whole wall from most waterlogged dirt or water settling pattern. The top of the material rests against the wall (like against your tar), either flush with or usually below the surface a bit.
Now your water will find/make new channels to take the water away, not against your basement.
One material I've cheaply used was garbage bags, the leaf kind, cut open and laid flat single thickness. Having holes in it is mot a tragic problem, because the vast majority of the water is being diverted away from the wall.
But you might be concerned with moles. I really like cheap plastic or rubber sheets or runners. I go to Farm & Fleet, to the flooring section, and look for the stair runners, or carpet protector runner. Used to be less than a $ per foot, and in 2 foot width on the roll. This I would conjure to be adequate deterant to your moles - but no guarantee.

I hope that is explained well enough, the under surface part.

For the surface, conjure if you added about an inch or 2 of dirt (with grass on top) to all of the 3-foot border nearest your basement wall. For the vast majority of waterfall, this would keep surface water at bay, until the surface water flowed to someplace else, or soaked into the dirt.

One or both of those could give you thoughts on your upcoming digging.

For the surface treatment against the wall. Bushes, scrub, that mulch type stuff, big flat rocks, 1-2" stones, etc...
I understand you are planning to sell your house. This is something that contributes to "curb appeal" often. Remember that the new owner will have their own ideas about what they want - so just having something easy to convert could be good enough - like a blank slate. I think Signym may have ideas of these things, even though her water situation is about the opposite of ours.
Just grass is the least sturdy against unguttered roofs, which is what you had, and there was likely a line of bare dirt where the rain water dropped straight from the roof edge. Other plants absorb some water, while resisting weathering from dropping water.
Really, just keeping the abutment to the wall a higher elevation than a few feet from the wall will do you good. Having downslope area for water to run away is the goal.
I assume you were planning to use that garden divider stuff tp keep the grass away, makes mowing easy.


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Monday, May 3, 2021 9:17 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Sounds good man. I appreciate the input. I'm so busy trying to wrap up the inside work that is taking longer than I ever thought it would, but the warm weather is going to drive me outside anyhow. I tend to sweat easy, so even with the A/C going it's not going to be good to keep working on stuff that shouldn't get sweat on it. At the latest I'd like to get started on tarring that foundation by the end of may. Next 10 days is pretty cool, so I'm still inside for the most part for now outside of keeping up with the lawn.

Of course, if we get a turn for the worse on the rain amounts and I have a disaster I might be much more motivated to tackle it ASAP.

But please feel free to let me know any ideas you have or any more questions you've got. Nobody I know has a clue about any of this, and it's not the easiest thing in the world to research online either.

Thanks

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 9:21 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Anybody ever try learning a foreign language before?

I've tried several programs over the years and quit within the first few weeks. Spanish every time. I think it was Rosetta Stone and hmmmmmm... the other name isn't coming to me now.

Saw a video on youtube about it the other day that made sense to me. Learn the most commonly used words first, then worry about proper grammatical use.

I'm frustrated today with it. I felt I was doing so well yesterday but today the answers just weren't coming to me. I think I've taken on too many words at once.

I'm going to keep trying it for a while. It seems like a good way to learn a language.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 9:38 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Went through some stuff that I pulled out of an accordian file folder a few days ago. One thing I found was my dad's death certificate. How it got there, no idea. A map book of all the clans of Scotland. No idea on that either. Must have been something I bought years ago then forgot about. Also found a great old black and white photo of my parents. Taken long before I came along. They were goofing around in the backyard of house where they were renting a basement suite. They looked so happy.



That's a nice memory. I'm glad you found that Brenda.



--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 11:46 PM

BRENDA


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Went through some stuff that I pulled out of an accordian file folder a few days ago. One thing I found was my dad's death certificate. How it got there, no idea. A map book of all the clans of Scotland. No idea on that either. Must have been something I bought years ago then forgot about. Also found a great old black and white photo of my parents. Taken long before I came along. They were goofing around in the backyard of house where they were renting a basement suite. They looked so happy.



That's a nice memory. I'm glad you found that Brenda.



--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.



That picture was nice to find. I added it to some other family photos that I've collected.

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Monday, May 3, 2021 11:49 PM

BRENDA


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Anybody ever try learning a foreign language before?

I've tried several programs over the years and quit within the first few weeks. Spanish every time. I think it was Rosetta Stone and hmmmmmm... the other name isn't coming to me now.

Saw a video on youtube about it the other day that made sense to me. Learn the most commonly used words first, then worry about proper grammatical use.

I'm frustrated today with it. I felt I was doing so well yesterday but today the answers just weren't coming to me. I think I've taken on too many words at once.

I'm going to keep trying it for a while. It seems like a good way to learn a language.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.



Yes and it was Russian. I got a book from the library and started doing some of the exercises in it. Didn't finish it though but a couple of words stuck I think and not just nyet or da either.

I was doing it for the heck of it and long before the internet was around.

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Tuesday, May 4, 2021 8:41 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


That's about as far as I got before too. These "revolutionary" programs I tried didn't work for me. I think this one will, but it's very apparent that I'm going to have to do it every single day like flashcards.

My normal memory tricks don't help with this. I got a few books from my Uncle years back called Memory Makes Money and How to Develop a Super Power Memory. I never mastered the concepts in either of them, but I can have somebody give me a list of 20 words to look at for about 90 seconds and 5 hours later they could ask me to read the list to them backwards, or ask me what a word on the list was by its number and I could tell them. I've also become very good with names when there was a time that I couldn't remember somebody's name to save my life.

That all relies on mental images and little mental games that you can do with things that are already familiar to you.

But I'd say out of the 60 or so words I've been learning so far, the few that look familiar because they're spelled exactly like English words are spelled only make it more confusing since they're pronounced differently and have different meanings.

I'm hoping it stays fun the way I'm doing it. It's a good way to keep the mind sharp if I make an effort to do it a little bit everyday.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Tuesday, May 4, 2021 1:35 PM

BRENDA


I've heard of memory books like that. I can't be bothered for my memory. I just live with it.

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Tuesday, May 4, 2021 1:35 PM

BRENDA


Out for a walk on nice, dry day. Things to do. Need groceries.

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Tuesday, May 4, 2021 2:12 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I suck at learning languages. It's mostly rote memorization, and my memory has never been good.

But I had to take four years of language in HS and a year of German in university, and what works best for me is that I need to read it, hear it, say it, and write it. The more multi- sensorial, the better. For me, writing really seemed to imprint it in my mind. Even so, it took four years before French became somewhat automatic.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

THUGR posts about Putin so much, he must be in love.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 5:31 PM

BRENDA


Nice bright day today but suppose to go back to rain tomorrow. *sigh*

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 5:46 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Last week the resident potheads forgot to mention the Drug Addict Celebration Day.
And now the Sci-Fi fans forgot to mention May The Forth Be With You.

As consolation, Happy Illegal Alien Day today.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 6:25 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
city sewers. does this mean the storm sewers, draining the streets? or sewage sewers, draining the plumbing from homes? or does your neighborhood have combined - with one sewer draining both storm water and sewage together?

My sump pump/kitchen sink seems to go into the one that drains the street. It stopped draining the streets and my pump stopped working. It also shot water out of my toilet when the pump went on, so my crap probably goes out the back and ties into it too. I don't know man. Idiots built this house, and until I got here idiots "repaired" it too.

Could be everything goes into one, but I doubt it. I think my house is just built wrong.

Quote:

And I'm not getting a clear picture: is your sump pump output going outside, n your grass or driveway, or is it going into your home sewage drain (like in your deepsink, or floor drain, etc)?
It goes into the storm sewer, which may or may not also be the waste sewer.

Quote:

Do you have a manual valve, to switch from "inside" drain to "outside" spout?
No.

Quote:

I'm not picturing your roof. Is the main top ridge going front to back? Or the bottom edge of the roof slope is front and back?
Bottom of the roof is in the front and the back. The main ridge spans to both sides.

Quote:

Is front of your house facing street?
Yes.

Quote:

Is house longer front to back, or ide to side?
Side to side, about 2:1. Including the 3 season room, 3:1.

Quote:

On;y one? This would be the plastic tubing called tile, tiling, or drainage tile.
Yup. It's not plastic.

Quote:

It should go all the way around the house, at the level where the basement wall meets the concrete foundation, outside the wall, buried in dirt. It has holes in it, allowing water to enter, but not stones and such, but likely some dirt in it's early days. You could go to Home Depot to look at some tile up close.
I think it's likely very, very old... and not how it would be done today.

Quote:

The purpose of this is to give the water a place to go instead of backing up against the basement walls, where it would seep through.

I think it is still doing that job. Last year when we were waterlogged, my pump would still be going off every 15 to 20 minutes 3 days after a rain from the water coming in that pipe.

Quote:

We can deal with that, you seem to have room to work with. Please describe your lot layout. how far from street to nearest part of house, corner lot or a neighbor each side, how far from property line with neighbor, and backside. Is garage detached, where?
I have a relatively huge lot compared to other people. Corner lot.

At least 50 feet from the street at the closest point. Close to my next door neighbor by only about 20 feet. But probably 300 feet from my neighbor behind me. Garage is detached behind the back porch, around 15 feet away.

Quote:

I will likely tell you some secrets that you might not use, so my suggestions might be fluid, able to match various tricks for your situation.

OK.

Quote:

Is your goal to just have grass up to the wall? bushes/scrubs? gravel, flower bins?
Not grass. Because of that incidental overhang I mentioned above, it's a real bitch mowing it. I don't know what my end goal would be, but it needs to keep the water away and stay put. Bare dirt with occasional tunnels right up against the foundation is terrible. I can't really do anything until I know the mole problem is gone.... or maybe I can?

Quote:

what is the elevation different between basement windows (or glass blocks) and the grass/dirt level?
Double pane up/down glass windows. Probably 5" to 8".

Quote:

We should be able to let that seal be good enough - only need more if we are not successful.
Nice.

Quote:

Sorry, I meant helping with the understandind, description, not so much with the labor. Some problems are not the most urgent, and can be done at more liesurely pace. I firmly believe in work smarter, not harder.
I know. Just kiddin.

I feel I did a lot to shore it up last year. I can't say that I'm unhappy that we finally got a normal rainfall spring this year and I haven't been able to test it out yet though.

Quote:

To seed your brain, I'll try to describe an overall drainage plan for your outside, which is where most wet basement causes are.

We can rearrange some of the dirt/elevation on your yard, likely without digging. This can be merely using leaf rake on wet grass.

That 200 feet area - is that open grass?

Except for the tree, yeah. I get taxed a lot for that extra acerage and it takes forever to mow my front lawn. There's a lot of weeds. More this year than ever before. After my new grass from the divots after cutting down the trees is matured enough, I'm putting a lot of weed and feed down.

Quote:

If so, we can use that to pool the excess water - think of a very shallow retention pond, just until excess rains abate.
You can do that with just a rake? Sounds painful...

Quote:

Except for sidewalk, driveway, stepping stones, etc, we want to have the 3 feet nearest the basement (and garage) to slope away from the structure, at least several inch drop. This can be done by adding dirt up against the wall/concrete, or raking away excess dirt from about 3 feet away from the wall.
I always do my best to grade the dirt away from the house after collapsing the mole tunnels.

One of the first things I'm doing this year once I start working outside is to trench out the dirt from the foundation that is above grade, clean it all good, and paint it with the black tar a few inches below grade, then fill it all back in.

I'm definatley open to any low-maintenance ideas you have for putting a border around the foundation that will keep water away. Like I said before, I don't want grass there for easy mowing, and if something can be put down there that would block the moles from coming close even better.

Quote:

Depending on how your layout, slope, relative elevations, obstructions, we will look to create a visually non-obvious drainage slope, think invisible ditch, which will direct your yard water mostly to the street, and then a low spot as backup "retention pond" if street cannot take the water. But we should be able to keep the water at least 3 feet away from basement wall.

Do you have trees? they can soak up water. is one part of curb significantly lower than the rest?

I have one tree left. It's at least 50 feet from the house.

Quote:

How far below the dirt on the outside is your basement floor on the inside? you can measure from a window, how far below is dirt on outside, and floor on inside.

I measured it this morning while I was down there. About 44" to the window on the inside.

So probably in the mid to high 30's for the dirt level. I'd guess around 3 feet.

It occurs to me that I never mentioned the sump pump is in a crawl space and only has to push the water up about maybe 3 1/2 feet before it goes out the drain. The drain pipe is low compared to the windows on the livable side (the pipe goes through the foundation), but the dirt in the crawl grades down to the pump and then there's the extra depth of the well.

I forgot to ask. Your gutter downpipe(s), which way does the discharge face/point to? How far away from the basement does the farthest tip of the pipe hit the ground?


If you have questions about the basement wall protection I posted above, let me know.


I'll edit this post to list the different topics I think we should/could address.

1. Sump pump.
A. discharge pressure.
B. discharge path, options - valve
C. alternate sump pum
D. inside.outside discharge options
E. indoor plumbing.

2. sloping away from structures
A. subsurface gravel channel, if applicable.
B. surface channel, contours
C. sub-surface diversion, against basement wall - explained in 3 May post.


3. establish drainage pattern, plan
A. digging dirt from places you want water to go, on the surface
B. Adding dirt to the places where you don't want water to go, repelling surface water.
C. possibly an external sump well
E. purpose of sand pit.


4. we may need to triage the levels of attention or response.
A. standard everyday water drainage and sumping
B. steady level raining, ensuring everything working well
C. heavy rain, how to deal with (options)
D. flooding, how to deal with (we set up a plan in advance) until a permanent solution comes about.


5. inside sewer pipes, planning, configuration, elevations.
A. Main pipe stack.
B. Toilet pedestal.


I feel I am forgetting some.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 9:48 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
I forgot to ask. Your gutter downpipe(s), which way does the discharge face/point to? How far away from the basement does the farthest tip of the pipe hit the ground?



They point all over man. And temporarily I have them super long. It makes mowing a bitch, but in the front they drain out beyond the hasta bed, and in the back they drain feet away from the house.

Everything is angled crazy and in the back of the house I have what I call the "Bermuda Triangle" where the house, back porch and my garage all form a triangle that is filled with sand. The sand is from when the idiots who put the patio pavers down dug out dirt, filled it with sand, and didn't put the sand on top of plastic before putting the pavers in... it really sucks.

So in seriously heavy rains, or in times where we're getting an inch or two every day, that whole area can be flooded, even with the gutters up.

I just bought a few gutter extenders that pop out to 50 feet. I'm going to put that on the spout on the garage close to the porch, and on the porch, and extend them onto the driveway where it does slope down and away.

Eventually, when I do something with that sand pit, I'm going to have to have a good plan in place to get that water out and away in that area, but for now I don't care because it's all on top of sand.


I wish I could send you pictures, but the PM function is broke, and I don't want to post anything here these days that unfriendlies can use to identify me.


Quote:

If you have questions about the basement wall protection I posted above, let me know.
I'll edit this post to list the different topics I think we should/could address.



I'm not sure how this would work, so if you have more info or could explain it better, I'm all ears.

My house is angled, and the downspout in the back couldn't even get to the street at all. I'm thinking for the roof water the best I can do is using more of those plastic gutter extenders. I'm going to try the first two out and see how that goes. At least I can get as much water as possible out of the Bermuda Triangle with them now.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 9:54 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


If I could have days like today everyday, I'd finish this house in no time.

I put the 2nd coat of paint inside all of the top cabinets by about 1PM. Then I mowed/bagged the lawn for the 3rd time this week and got that out for trash pickup tomorrow. Then I put the 2nd coat on the outside of the top cabinets, and also hit the bottoms of the high cabs and the microwave nook... something I couldn't find the time to do when I did the 1st coat. I also took a painters brush and got the caulk that is in between the top tiles and the backs of the cabinets to really give it a clean look.

I'm still on the fence about putting a 3rd coat in the cabinets, but I will be doing it outside the cabs.

After that, I went grocery shopping and hit the big box store for some more things I need in the future. I had to buy another 8ft length of corner guard anyhow for the bottom cabinets, which I will be painting whenever I have paint out for the cabs.


Going to have to start painting those doors and shelves... at least for the top. And getting that hardware sanded and spray painted too. We're just about done with the upper cabs.



--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 10:44 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


JSF.... let me know when you've got this and I'll remove it.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 11:44 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
I forgot to ask. Your gutter downpipe(s), which way does the discharge face/point to? How far away from the basement does the farthest tip of the pipe hit the ground?

They point all over man. And temporarily I have them super long. It makes mowing a bitch, but in the front they drain out beyond the hasta bed, and in the back they drain feet away from the house.

Everything is angled crazy and in the back of the house I have what I call the "Bermuda Triangle" where the house, back porch and my garage all form a triangle that is filled with sand. The sand is from when the idiots who put the patio pavers down dug out dirt, filled it with sand, and didn't put the sand on top of plastic before putting the pavers in... it really sucks.

So in seriously heavy rains, or in times where we're getting an inch or two every day, that whole area can be flooded, even with the gutters up.

I just bought a few gutter extenders that pop out to 50 feet. I'm going to put that on the spout on the garage close to the porch, and on the porch, and extend them onto the driveway where it does slope down and away.

Eventually, when I do something with that sand pit, I'm going to have to have a good plan in place to get that water out and away in that area, but for now I don't care because it's all on top of sand.


I wish I could send you pictures, but the PM function is broke, and I don't want to post anything here these days that unfriendlies can use to identify me.

Quote:

If you have questions about the basement wall protection I posted above, let me know.
I'll edit this post to list the different topics I think we should/could address.


I'm not sure how this would work, so if you have more info or could explain it better, I'm all ears.

My house is angled, and the downspout in the back couldn't even get to the street at all. I'm thinking for the roof water the best I can do is using more of those plastic gutter extenders. I'm going to try the first two out and see how that goes. At least I can get as much water as possible out of the Bermuda Triangle with them now.

I wonder if you mean actual downspout tube as "extenders" - or the simple tile hose with the fancy end spout tucked inside, and flexible snake-like tube, which leaks out any extra water afterwards, which I see many people use.

That short discharge tube, slap a tube extender on the end of that, snake it around what you need, and get the discharge farther away from the house.

Once we get the near-house surface situation better, we should get away with 10" or less extenders.


More Q: you said across street was a ditch with water sometimes 7 feet higher that your front door threshold. Is your street curb/gutter higher than your front threshold? than your grass abutting basement wall? than the bottom of your basement window?

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Wednesday, May 5, 2021 11:45 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
JSF.... let me know when you've got this and I'll remove it.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

that disappeared fast, didnt get it.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 12:11 AM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
That's about as far as I got before too. These "revolutionary" programs I tried didn't work for me. I think this one will, but it's very apparent that I'm going to have to do it every single day like flashcards.

My normal memory tricks don't help with this. I got a few books from my Uncle years back called Memory Makes Money and How to Develop a Super Power Memory. I never mastered the concepts in either of them, but I can have somebody give me a list of 20 words to look at for about 90 seconds and 5 hours later they could ask me to read the list to them backwards, or ask me what a word on the list was by its number and I could tell them. I've also become very good with names when there was a time that I couldn't remember somebody's name to save my life.

That all relies on mental images and little mental games that you can do with things that are already familiar to you.

But I'd say out of the 60 or so words I've been learning so far, the few that look familiar because they're spelled exactly like English words are spelled only make it more confusing since they're pronounced differently and have different meanings.

I'm hoping it stays fun the way I'm doing it. It's a good way to keep the mind sharp if I make an effort to do it a little bit everyday.

Have you tried going at it 2 opposing ways?
Make a list of sentences or questions you would like to speak in the other language.
Then, follow the teaching tools of the program. After understanding what they tell you to learn, a sentence or more, then choose one that you listed, and try to learn that. Then some more of what they are preaching.
That way you try to absorb what they want you to, but then you are inquiring about what you want, how you'll need to construct and grammar it.
When doing the ones you listed, try to get the words, worry less about the structure abd grammar - you get that later.

I forgot - you are not trying German, are you? That is more than 3 languages in one.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 9:11 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
I wonder if you mean actual downspout tube as "extenders" - or the simple tile hose with the fancy end spout tucked inside, and flexible snake-like tube, which leaks out any extra water afterwards, which I see many people use.



Yeah. I mean those flexible snake-like tubes. I picked two up for $18 yesterday. I'll put them on the most worrysome parts and figure out if I want a different solution anywhere else. It's a real pain to mow my lawn in the back with the actual metal downspout going out 8 feet from my house, but at least I'm not worried about the roof water back there anymore.

Quote:

That short discharge tube, slap a tube extender on the end of that, snake it around what you need, and get the discharge farther away from the house.


I don't have any short discharge tubes. I had a ton of extra downspouts and had them make very long ones everywhere. I figured I have plenty leftover to cut and move as I see fit later, but I just wanted the water away from the house now. But the two in the "Bermuda Triangle" still let all the water into the sand pit, so I'm going to extend them to the driveway where they will go out to the street.

I've made a mock up picture of the layout so you have a better idea of wha I've been talking about. I just don't really want it up here is all. I can't even just put it on a password encoded link or anything since the PM function here doesn't work anymore.

Quote:

Once we get the near-house surface situation better, we should get away with 10" or less extenders.


More Q: you said across street was a ditch with water sometimes 7 feet higher that your front door threshold.



Yeah. It's not this year, but it was last year.

Quote:

Is your street curb/gutter higher than your front threshold?


No. If it were, I would have had massive flooding last year when the streets were flooded so high that it almost got into the cab of a pickup truck down the street.

Quote:

than your grass abutting basement wall?


No. See above.

Quote:

than the bottom of your basement window?



Possibly? I don't think so though.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 1:46 PM

BRENDA


Off to find out about new hearing aides.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 4:53 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
I wonder if you mean actual downspout tube as "extenders" - or the simple tile hose with the fancy end spout tucked inside, and flexible snake-like tube, which leaks out any extra water afterwards, which I see many people use.

Yeah. I mean those flexible snake-like tubes. I picked two up for $18 yesterday. I'll put them on the most worrysome parts and figure out if I want a different solution anywhere else. It's a real pain to mow my lawn in the back with the actual metal downspout going out 8 feet from my house, but at least I'm not worried about the roof water back there anymore.

Quote:

That short discharge tube, slap a tube extender on the end of that, snake it around what you need, and get the discharge farther away from the house.
I don't have any short discharge tubes. I had a ton of extra downspouts and had them make very long ones everywhere. I figured I have plenty leftover to cut and move as I see fit later, but I just wanted the water away from the house now. But the two in the "Bermuda Triangle" still let all the water into the sand pit, so I'm going to extend them to the driveway where they will go out to the street.

I've made a mock up picture of the layout so you have a better idea of wha I've been talking about. I just don't really want it up here is all. I can't even just put it on a password encoded link or anything since the PM function here doesn't work anymore.

Quote:

Once we get the near-house surface situation better, we should get away with 10" or less extenders.


More Q: you said across street was a ditch with water sometimes 7 feet higher that your front door threshold.

Yeah. It's not this year, but it was last year.

Quote:

Is your street curb/gutter higher than your front threshold?
No. If it were, I would have had massive flooding last year when the streets were flooded so high that it almost got into the cab of a pickup truck down the street.

Quote:

than your grass abutting basement wall?
No. See above.

Quote:

than the bottom of your basement window?

Possibly? I don't think so though.

Well, that sounds great, makes things much easier.


Your long discharge extender tubes - do you mean the hinged ones, so you can fold them up against your house? Or it is solid tube from eaves to grass? I just fold mine up to mow, and drop them down as I pass by the next round of mowing.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 6:44 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Well, that sounds great, makes things much easier.



Yeah... Like I said, it's possible I wouldn't have less than half of the problems I had before, but we had 5 straight years of increasingly shitty rain and I didn't have gutters on my house for any of them. They weren't installed until late September of last year, well after the bad rains were over.

Last year we had over 60" of rain through spring and summer... Most of that before June. This year we're still under 10".

I really need to figure out how to kill those f'ing moles and keep them from making tunnels against the house, and then do something about the bare dirt along the back of the house. Something that is easy to mow around. Then I need to figure out a permanent solution for getting water out of the Bermuda triangle.


Quote:

Your long discharge extender tubes - do you mean the hinged ones, so you can fold them up against your house?


No. I really should get those for the downspouts I'm not planning on extending any further. Right now, I have elbows at the bottom that feed into another 8 feet of downspout. I cant mow around them, I can't move them. I figured until I figure out what I'm going to do that's better than having water drop right next to the house.

The tubes are just plastic that you screw to the end of a downspout, and you can "pop" them out and bend them to go where you want to. Unfortunately, they're not nearly as long as I thought they were going to be. I had to use 2 of them on a single downspout, and I don't know if it will even be long enough on my driveway to get to where it will roll off the property. I'm going to have to find a cheaper solution since those were about $9.00 each after taxes and I'd need about 5 of them for the other gutter in the Bermuda Triangle.

The problem with the garage is that the land around it isn't graded properly at all. Rain that falls in front of the garage tends to pool there. Once you get about 15 feet away from the front of the garage, the water runs down and into the street. The half of the garage toward my back neighbor is fine since my property is higher than his, but on the other side it was just putting the water in the sand where it didn't go anywhere helpful. I'm hoping the 2 extenders do the trick now.

Quote:

Or it is solid tube from eaves to grass? I just fold mine up to mow, and drop them down as I pass by the next round of mowing.



Yeah. Those sound nice. I have 3 downspouts where that type would come in very handy.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 6:51 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


I was going to put a 3rd coat of paint on the front of the cabinets, but I think I'm done for the day.

I painted inside and out on all of the bottom cabinets, and that's actually harder to do than the upper ones because of the reaching from awkward cross legged positions for one of them, and then having to sit inside the other big one for 1/3rd of the job, and then lay down to do another part of it before I can get to the reachable half where I need to just reach from awkward positions.

The other two small ones aren't so bad, but you have to be real careful not to bang the back of the paint brush handle into the other side that you just painted.


After that, I put the 1st coat of actual paint on the front of the lower cabs today, and then put the 2nd coat under the high cabinets above the stove and microwave.

It's looking fantastic.

Too bad I can't put the doors and shelves up for a while. I still have to paint the doors and shelves, and I've still got to sand down all the hardware and hit it with the spray paint.

Fortunately, doing that work is less than half a day stuff, so as the weather gets warmer and I start doing stuff outside again, I can start my mornings wrapping up the doors and shelves a little at a time.

I'm just glad I still had cold days left to finish painting the bottom cabinets. There's no way I could do what I did today without sweating all over my work if it was 90 degrees outside instead of 50.

I plan on getting the 2nd and final inside coat on the bottom cabinet insides tomorrow, depending on how my body's feeling. That's some pretty odd positions.

ETA: A few hours ago I was itching to do more work. I almost started painting the bottom cabinets a 2nd coat, but it's actually quite cold in the house now and I wasn't feeling it.

But since I decided that 2 coats was enough inside the cabs, I took the opportunity to install my shiny new junction box/outlet/cover and get the electric for the range hood and the microwave operating again.



--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021 10:00 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

I will likely tell you some secrets that you might not use, so my suggestions might be fluid, able to match various tricks for your situation.

OK.

Quote:

Is your goal to just have grass up to the wall? bushes/scrubs? gravel, flower bins?
Not grass. Because of that incidental overhang I mentioned above, it's a real bitch mowing it. I don't know what my end goal would be, but it needs to keep the water away and stay put. Bare dirt with occasional tunnels right up against the foundation is terrible. I can't really do anything until I know the mole problem is gone.... or maybe I can?

Quote:

what is the elevation different between basement windows (or glass blocks) and the grass/dirt level?
Double pane up/down glass windows. Probably 5" to 8".

Quote:

To seed your brain, I'll try to describe an overall drainage plan for your outside, which is where most wet basement causes are.



Quote:

Except for sidewalk, driveway, stepping stones, etc, we want to have the 3 feet nearest the basement (and garage) to slope away from the structure, at least several inch drop. This can be done by adding dirt up against the wall/concrete, or raking away excess dirt from about 3 feet away from the wall.
I always do my best to grade the dirt away from the house after collapsing the mole tunnels.

One of the first things I'm doing this year once I start working outside is to trench out the dirt from the foundation that is above grade, clean it all good, and paint it with the black tar a few inches below grade, then fill it all back in.

I'm definatley open to any low-maintenance ideas you have for putting a border around the foundation that will keep water away. Like I said before, I don't want grass there for easy mowing, and if something can be put down there that would block the moles from coming close even better.

Quote:

How far below the dirt on the outside is your basement floor on the inside? you can measure from a window, how far below is dirt on outside, and floor on inside.


I measured it this morning while I was down there. About 44" to the window on the inside.

So probably in the mid to high 30's for the dirt level. I'd guess around 3 feet.

It occurs to me that I never mentioned the sump pump is in a crawl space and only has to push the water up about maybe 3 1/2 feet before it goes out the drain. The drain pipe is low compared to the windows on the livable side (the pipe goes through the foundation), but the dirt in the crawl grades down to the pump and then there's the extra depth of the well.


Hoo boy, it looks like you are running ahead of me on this facet, so I'll start on this one. Seems you have a number of issues we can resolve in varying ways, but I'll focus on this first, since you plan to dig at it soon.

One of the secrets is subterranean water control, channeling, sloping. This means just below the surface. I plan to tell you about 2 for lawns/dirt, since it doesn't sound like you have a lot of gravel drive/park area. If I forget to tell you about sub-surface gravel channel, be sure to remind me.

For now, the sub-surface control against the basement wall and the top treatment against the basement wall are not exactly the same thing, but they can be planned together and done at the same time.


To start, you might already know some of these things, but I'll explain in case you don't.
If you were to drop your garden water hose in the middle of your grass, the ground underneath normally becomes waterlogged in the shape of a cone, spreading wider the lower it goes. If the surface does not allow the surface water to spread, then the waterlogged subsurface dirt does not normally transition horizontally. We can use this to control things, and also later to divert water.

Consider next to your basement wall, say that surface water cannot get closer than 48 inches to your wall.

water
source,,,,48" of grass,,,,|
xxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx|
xxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| 4
xxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| 8
xxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx| "
xxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx|
4xxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxxx| b
8xxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxxx| a
"xxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxxx| s
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxxx| e
oxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxxx| m
fxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxxx| e
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxxx| n
gxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxxx| t
rxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxxx|
axxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxxx| w
sxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxxx| a
sxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xxx| l
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\xx| l
water drainage patternxx\x|
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx\|

Then that drainage pattern would not get to your wall until the bottom, where it meets your foundation, and your drainage tile takes in the water.
Imagine that is a 45 degree slope in the above image.

So one trick is to install a diversion/protector below the surface. Again, imagine this is a 45 degree slope of the diversion.


xx|,,,,,grass surface,,,,,,,
xx|
xx|\
xx|x\
b |xx\
a |xxx\
s |xxxx\
e |xxxxx\ ---diversion material
m |xxxxxx\
e |xxxxxxx\
n |
t |
xx|
w |
a |
l |
l |
----- <-- foundation

Quote:



In this way, if your distance from foundation up to grass surface is only 36", then a diversion material of about 24" size would extend about 18" from the wall, and protect your whole wall from most waterlogged dirt or water settling pattern. The top of the material rests against the wall (like against your tar), either flush with or usually below the surface a bit.
Now your water will find/make new channels to take the water away, not against your basement.
One material I've cheaply used was garbage bags, the leaf kind, cut open and laid flat single thickness. Having holes in it is mot a tragic problem, because the vast majority of the water is being diverted away from the wall.
But you might be concerned with moles. I really like cheap plastic or rubber sheets or runners. I go to Farm & Fleet, to the flooring section, and look for the stair runners, or carpet protector runner. Used to be less than a $ per foot, and in 2 foot width on the roll. This I would conjure to be adequate deterant to your moles - but no guarantee.

I hope that is explained well enough, the under surface part.

For the surface, conjure if you added about an inch or 2 of dirt (with grass on top) to all of the 3-foot border nearest your basement wall. For the vast majority of waterfall, this would keep surface water at bay, until the surface water flowed to someplace else, or soaked into the dirt.

One or both of those could give you thoughts on your upcoming digging.

For the surface treatment against the wall. Bushes, scrub, that mulch type stuff, big flat rocks, 1-2" stones, etc...
I understand you are planning to sell your house. This is something that contributes to "curb appeal" often. Remember that the new owner will have their own ideas about what they want - so just having something easy to convert could be good enough - like a blank slate. I think Signym may have ideas of these things, even though her water situation is about the opposite of ours.
Just grass is the least sturdy against unguttered roofs, which is what you had, and there was likely a line of bare dirt where the rain water dropped straight from the roof edge. Other plants absorb some water, while resisting weathering from dropping water.
Really, just keeping the abutment to the wall a higher elevation than a few feet from the wall will do you good. Having downslope area for water to run away is the goal.
I assume you were planning to use that garden divider stuff tp keep the grass away, makes mowing easy.





Man... I didn't even know you edited this post. When did you do that?


I wasn't planning on digging several feet down when I did the tar. I was only going to take a few inches away from the wall when I put the tar on... maybe half a foot.

That sounds like a great idea, but I don't know if I have the energy to do all of that digging. The back wall is 42' long, and if you add the porch it's about 65' long.

Yeah. When I didn't have gutters, there was a HUGE rut that formed along the back wall directly under the roof. Then, at the same time, it got higher along the foundation. I thought that was just displacement of the dirt, but it was actually the mole tunnels inside the area between the rut and the foundation.

Somewhere along the line, all of the grass died about 5" away from the wall. It makes mowing easy, but as windy as it gets around here I know I've lost dirt when it's dry because the ground keeps being displaced.

--------------------------------------------------

Give me liberty or just come shoot me in my house. I'm so over this ridiculous reality.

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