Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Going with the flow

You may be wondering what we've been up to. "A lot of different, exhausting things" would be the answer.

But the title of the post pretty much sums up my life (and the new house) lately: going with the flow.

The Jeld-Wen push-out casement windows across the front porch were installed pretty much without incident. We like them very much. So does the cat, who prefers to enter through windows rather than doors, a trick Roy taught her.

To bring you up to date, we've been working every weekend with our "hired hands": Douglas, Andrew, and Will (not all at once, usually 1-2 workers in 2 or 3 sessions). We've tackled yard work and more yard work, and more and more and more digging out of tree roots to expose them for whacking on. Ever tried to kill an elm tree by cutting it down and grinding out its stump below the surface of the soil so you can't even tell there was a tree there? Well, that just makes it that much more determined to live, so it sends up scads of suckers all over the place, and in a ring around the buried deep stump remains. Same with crape myrtles. And we had lots of both. And we've been painting stuff inside.

But, back to the subject matter. We were rolling merrily along on Memorial Day when Roy & Andrew started to take down the cabinets in the utility room (the ones covering up the window and routing the dryer vent out said window)...and there was nasty mold on the wall and ceiling behind two of the cabinets. Yeah, I said MOLD. Andrew went home at the end of his shift, Roy & I went home and had lunch, stunned, then we returned and cut out a stud cavity so we'd have a better idea of what we were looking at. Turns out it would be more mold of many hues, on the front and back of the interior sheetrock, exterior sheetrock, studs, insulation, etc. That was beyond our abilities to clean up properly, so we called in a mold assessment consultant for a remediation plan.

Why did we have a room full of mold you ask? Well, as it turns out, the vent stack for the washing machine was installed completely bass-ackwards, with the flange of the vent above the shingles in the valley, so that when it rained, the water just poured into the wall cavity. Oh, and the stack had no "leading" either, but that was a secondary issue.

The good news is, the mold situation has just been cleaned up and we received our remediation certificate last night.

That one roof issue led to us calling in a roofer to inspect the entire roof. We'll suffice it to say that $875 later, all of the leading on the vent stacks has been replaced (the squirrels had chewed through all of them!), the central heater has a correct vent that won't be pumping noxious CO into our attic all winter, and I forget what else.

The good news is, our shingles are in good shape.

So, what else...oh, yes, on June 14, we were supposed to get our new countertops. On June 13 at 3pm, I called to confirm they were coming and they were. At 5pm, I received a frantic phone call from the company...there had been an accident. The forklift operator had backed into the rack containing our countertops. I just started laughing, which confused the poor lady. What else was I going to do? I was still in shock from the mold and trying to deal with that.

Then, last Friday, when I was meeting with the mold consultant for the follow-up air sample testing, our Simonton windows were delivered to the house, with the owner of the company we bought them from on site to receive them...and he asks, "so, would you like a tan window for your front bedroom?"...yes, 8 of the 9 windows were appropriately white, like we'd ordered, but the last one we'd changed the design of, had defaulted to tan, and he hadn't caught it. So, no new front bedroom window for now.

And that brings us up to June 29, when the first of the Simonton windows will be installed. We can't wait!