Wait…what?

Something’s nagging at me…

*glances at the calendar*

Wait…what?

*stares hard at the calendar*

Good gravy…a year.

*ponders that a bit*

We’ve owned the Old Vic for a year?

*fights down panic a bit*

Yep, a year. Where DOES the time go?

We closed on the Old Vic December 1, 2008.

We still believe we made the right choice.

Looking back, it’s a curious mix of a LOT accomplished and not getting enough done.

The major problems in the house are corrected. New electric service is in, new plumbing is on the way in, the utility room has been roughed in…we have lights and switches and doors galore! Woo!

What’s next? Well some bathroom work…the half bath under the stairs…the completion of the utility room…the house is livable now…maybe it’s time to move there.

Hmmmm.

We’re happy with the progress this year…and hope for even more next!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer
(good gawd…a year!?)

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Am I through with Home Depot?

I hope y’all (technical Texas term) had a great Thanksgiving.

We did. We spent Wednesday stuffing family full of food!

Thanksgiving Dinner

Thanksgiving Dinner

Friday…well…we spent Friday lazy-ing about the house, basically recovering from Thursday. Well, that and eating leftover turkey and ham sandwiches and pumpkin pie.

Mmmmmm…

BUT…we did head up to the Old Vic for the weekend to get something done.

I find myself wondering…Am I through with Home Depot?

We bought something like $350 worth of stuff last weekend…mostly wire and fixtures, as well as a few pop-in electrical boxes.

The three fixtures were for the outside lights at the rear of the house…two matching porch lights and a dusk-till-dawn floodlight fixture.

Three fixtures. Four returns. Sigh.

Now, please understand, I had no problems with the employees at the Home Depot…they were all courteous and handled my exchanges quickly and efficiently.

But…are we really in a world where everything has to be returned at least once to get a product that works?

The returns were even more annoying as the store is quite some distance from the Old Vic, and I was ready to hang the lights when I opened them.

The dusk-till-dawn fixture was the first. One of its most important features…the photo-cell…was missing from the package. We exchanged it. The new light was in a blister pack and since it took tools to get it open, I knew it had never been opened before.

This one had the photo-cell…but one of the sockets didn’t work. I, of course, had to completely assemble and hang it to find that out.

Turned out the ceramic was cracked. Sigh. Returned again. Two for two doesn’t inspire confidence in the quality of that fixture…so I decided I’d change my plans and “ponder” a different fixture for that location.

AhHa! I have this handy motion-detector light I bought (from Home Depot) early on in the project to replace a bad one that came with the house. I never replaced the bad one, as we eliminated it with the installation of the new stuff.

I opened the (previously unopened) box, did the requisite “some assembly required”, and hung the light. Gahhhh! One of its sockets didn’t work. Crud! Foiled again! What, I’m doomed to spend the entire weekend dinking with three light fixtures? Sheesh!

I was ready to hit the gun range, toss the thing like a Frisbee and yell “Pull!” but again, exchanged it and it finally works. The culprit? A wire that wasn’t crimped to the socket connector.

Next, the porch lights. Securely packed in what appeared to be undamaged boxes. Yet, one had a cracked glass. Once I discovered that I couldn’t even hang the other one, as they need to match and I had to make sure I could get the broken one replaced with another matching one (or I’d have to replace them both).

We exchanged that one on the way home, so I didn’t get them hung either. So, of the three fixtures I wanted to hang this weekend…the three I bought last weekend…I got NONE of them done.

I did get the substitute fixture hung (the motion detector one) but had to exchange it too.

From now on I’ll be opening every package I buy at Home Depot, on the spot, before I leave the store. Are they becoming the Wall mart of home improvement? The quality of their incoming product is either going down, or they are returning defective/damaged merchandise to the shelves (or both).

That does not provide a positive customer experience, no matter how courteous your employees are.

As an electrician, I’ve hung 50 fixtures in a day. How am I supposed to get anything done if I can’t manage to hang *three* in a weekend?

Am I through with Home Depot? Maybe. I don’t know. I’ve so much yet more to buy…

As to getting stuff done…I did finish another circuit up. We now have plugs in the Sunroom and the Master Bedroom! WooHoo!

But, oh, I should mention…when we got home to the suburban “blah” house…the 50 watt sodium light that lights up our driveway…the one I bought from Home Depot just months ago, has died. The last one lasted over a decade.

Sigh.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical, Miscellaneous | 2 Comments

A very Happy Thanksgiving indeed…

We always have things to be thankful for…and Thanksgiving reminds us of that.

It’s also a great excuse to get together with family and cook enough food to feed everybody twice!

It’s not a bad time to sit back a moment and think of something that you, in particular, are thankful for.

My life has been hard work, rewarded by wonderful things and amazing experiences. What am I thankful for? There’s so much, most years I don’t know where to start.

This year is easy. Really easy.

So what am I thankful for?

I’m thankful we got the call yesterday…

“Biopsy results–not malignant.”

It’s been a tense week.

Her.

Her.

Not sure what I’d do without her…

Thanks to Wanderer for the pic.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Miscellaneous | 1 Comment

Why they fall down *slowly*…

Yet more electrical work. Not much to show…as in “interesting pictures”. Basically I’ve been crawling through attics trailing yellow wire all behind me like some sort of giant mutant spider.

*shudder* On second thought…strike that mental image…I do NOT want to know what orifice that three-stranded copper, PVC sheathed “web” comes out of.

There’s more than a thousand feet of wire in this house now. Scary, since I’m only about 1/4 of the way done. (thinks about the upstairs)…If that.

BTW…wire has gone WAY up in price again. 12/2 w/ground NM was $36/roll (250 feet) this summer. It’s now nearly $70. Yikes! Maybe I *DO* want to know what orifice…

Anyway, I thought I’d show a minor detail of construction that illustrates why these houses last so long. I won’t say they don’t fall down…we all know that anything man builds starts falling down before he’s even done with it…but these houses fall down *very* slowly.

Did they have some magical construction secrets long lost to the ages? Did the Egyptians come help after they finished the pyramids?

Nah. They had a wonderful lack of finesse and modern design standards.

Say that they wanted to hold up a porch? Did they do an environmental impact study, load calculation, soil strata study, computer simulation, hire 4 city engineers, commission an architect, call a couple building inspectors, and rent a small dog and two tennis balls from the orient?

Nope. What they did is look “over there”, point at a big honkin’ chunk of wood, and say, “That looks like it’ll hold. Use 4 of ’em.” Then they added a couple more just for symmetry or visual interest.

So. What was I talking about again?

Oh, yeah. Wiring and why these houses fall down very slowly.

It’s like this. I had to cut a 4″ hole in the side of my house so I could install the wiring box for the porch light. *One* of the porch lights anyway. There seem to be rather a lot of them.

There were two tell-tale holes in the spot I selected where, once-upon-a-time, a knob and tube light (long gone) had lived.

I got out my trusty 4″ hole saw and started cutting. And cut. And cut. And kept cutting. And some more. And deeper still. I’m out of “hole drilling” mode and into “core sample” territory by now. The torque on the *big-honkin’-drill* is starting to cause me to strain a bit. The city is bringing auxiliary power plants on-line to make up for the load on the grid from the big yellow Dewalt drill.

Shortly, I’m wondering if I’m drilling some sort of space-time-wormhole doo-dad that’s gonna come out somewhere in Barcelo.

Man. Won’t they be surprised when I run a wire through Barcelo for my porch-light…

*POP*

Oooo! Finally! A hole! The standard kind…I think…a bit deeper than I expected but no wormhole or speed-of-light calculations involved.

All that work, just to get through the sheathing on this house. Not all the way through the wall mind you…just through the exterior sheathing and into the cavity between the studs.

Solid wood. Two inches thick!

The exterior siding is cypress…ONE inch thick cypress! Even where it’s thinnest (it has a profile) it is nearly 3/4″ thick.

Under that is 1×12″ tongue-and-grove (western red cedar) mounted diagonally. Another full 1″ of wood.

Here’s the plug.

The plug...TWO inches thick! Just for the sheathing!

The plug...TWO inches thick! Just for the sheathing!

Solid defined.

Inside the house is another 1″ thick layer of the 1×12″ western red cedar (laid horizontally this time) under whatever wall covering they selected (typically wallpaper).

So, that’s three solid inches of wood and a 4″ wall cavity between the inside and the outside.

I find it very amusing to contrast this to the sheathing on my modern house. Well, it has a brick veneer…but the brick is attached to the wall to hold the brick up. Sigh. Where it’s not brick it has 1/4″ thick wafer-ee-bordy stuff. Oh, and some plastic. I’ve already had to replace much of it. Weeee!

The Old Vic has been standing for well over 100 years. The suburban “blah* has been standing for about 25 years.

I wonder which one will fall down first?

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Carpentry/Structure, Electrical, Miscellaneous | 2 Comments

More Wiring…

Y’all might recall this post a few days ago about an attic hatch and some lights in the sunroom.

The mentioned LIGHTS in the Sunroom from the previous post.

Let there be LIGHT!

Let there be LIGHT!

Well, with my new found attic hatch-e-ness I got more wiring done this weekend.

There’s a LOT of attic in this house. I hope I don’t ever get stuck. I am not…by any definition, a small man. It would take the fire-department, jaws of life, chainsaws, forklifts, three naked women, a tazer, and 200 pounds of lard to get me out.

I got new lights completed in the utility, the ceiling fan box for the sunroom, accent light circuits for both rooms, and period fixture runs are also installed. For obvious reasons the can light covers and other fixtures will not install until the ceiling is painted.

A note about the painting…it’s beadboard so I’ll be spraying both the primer and finish coats. Why install the can lights then? Well, I need and like light. It changes the entire atmosphere of the house. Besides, masking these things for spraying is VERY easy. Got a plunger? Perfect size AND has a convenient handle that’s just the perfect length (or a broomstick will screw into one if you need longer).

“Pop”…”Hisss”…”Pop”…”Hiss”…”Pop”…”Hiss”

Yep. I’ve done this before.

I had completely cut the knob and tube circuit a couple weeks ago and used this opportunity to remove anything that was left of it.

The wife was teasing me…as she heard me thumping around in the attic griping about various dangerous things I was finding there. Zip cord. Bare wires. Pinched wires. Old wiring laying unprotected against the ceiling, but still connected to the main knob and tube feed (the fixture had been wired back up with butt splices and zipcord). Apparently banging my head on low beams and cursing was also involved.

The zip cord was very interesting…I’m not sure when it dates from but it is very dangerous. It is SOLID core wire, perhaps 18 gauge or so, in real rubber insulation.

Over the years the rubber insulation has degraded to where it is just cracking off, but the dangerous part was really the solid core. Wires would push out of the insulation where it was bent, and they would break if bent very many times. In addition, I found some of it that had been “over-stressed” at some point…and bending the zip cord at about 75 degrees would just snap it in two. It is with great pleasure that I can say there is no more of this stuff in the house!

The ceiling fan in the Sunroom was the most work. At one time it was a single bulb/hanging wire-type fixture I would guess, and was attached to the knob and tube and a wall switch. Later, probably in the 70’s judging by the fan, a ceiling fan was installed.

It was very-well braced up in the attic with lots of wood and VERY big nails. It took crow-bars and big hammers just to dislodge that construction, which I had to move since there was no wiring box incorporated. I expect we could have hung a good sized engine block from that fan!

Anyway, I’m not sure I believe that I was griping whilst thumping around in the attic…or grumping even.

Instead…I believe anyway…I was, quite happily and with great verve ripping all that stuff out and substituting my own, new, up-to-code and safe stuff.

The old wiring. Not everything old should be preserved

The old wiring. Not everything old should be preserved

Interestingly, the original knob and tube installation would have still been quite safe but for several factors:
1) It was never intended for anything but lighting. It had been added onto and spliced with improper methods and materials over the years. I found bad BAD stuff from several different eras.
2) Many of the insulators were broken. Not sure why, as the remains didn’t seem to be there with the broken ones.
3) As stuff had been added on, the protection (fuses) had been “upgraded” to carry the current and were overrated for the installation, even assuming it had not been improperly modified.

No worries any more though…it’s on its way to the landfill with a heartfelt “Godspeed” from me.

The switches for the Sunroom. Can lights, Victorian bowl-thing light, fan, and accent lights.

The switches for the Sunroom.

The switches for the Sunroom.

The Utility room lights. The box in the center is for the Victorian bowl-thingy that will match the one in the Sunroom, AND the one in the Mudroom (all adjacent)

The utility room lights

The utility room lights

Note, cutting can lights into an old and dust/grit covered beadboard ceiling is NASTY work, and getting them right requires careful measurement and layout, making double sure that nothing in the attic interferes. Humans see lines and patterns, so it’s more important that the lights relate to each other than some part of the room, although that must be close to symmetric or it will draw unwanted attention.

Properly done, folks won’t even notice these lights, even whilst said lights happily go about providing most of the ambient lighting for the rooms in question.

A good weekend…got a lot done…yet some quirk of my personality is making me feel like I didn’t do enough. What’s with that?

Next week I’ll be tackling some plug circuits, the carbon-monoxide and smoke alarm circuits for this area, and, if I get to it…outside lights for the deck and driveway!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 1 Comment

Veterans Day

Thanks to all that have honorably served.

Thanks to all that have served.

Thanks to all that have served.

You did it right.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Glutton. For. Punishment.

(deep breath)
A project that’s related to the Old Vic project that’s not quite on topic but since it’s a project and I tinker on it and this one will definitely be related to the other one…

There’s a tower ya see. (shrugs) What was I supposed to do?

So, ya’ll (technical Texas term) may know I own a house with a tower on it…since you’re here I expect you read a little about it.

A pic (because I can muhahahahaha):

The Old Vic

The Old Vic

A circa 1903(ish) Queen Anne Victorian. We’ve had it a year this December 1. Lots ‘O things going on. New electric. New plumbing (started). Rebuilding an old second kitchen that was an old screened-in-porch that was an old step-off-porch into a new utility room. One of 47 windows rebuilt.

Heat. Air.

It’s going…maybe a little slower than I hoped, but it’s progressing nicely.

Now…to the title of this post…

Apparently…I am a glutton for punishment.

Hmmm. Make that Glutton. For. Punishment.

We just put a contract on a 1880(ish) commercial building right on the historic square. With any luck we’ll be closing on it about Dec 1 this year.

It has a tower, ya see. How could I resist?

Old house. Tower. Needs a little work.

Building. Tower. Needs a little work.

Seemed to make sense at the time…

I may have a skewed definition of the phrase “little work”.

Lots more work to do now. We have big plans for this place.

A pic (or couple):

New Project

New Project

New Project

New Project

More after we close the sale!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer (got the evil lair/well on my way to world domination)

Posted in On the Square, Town History | 4 Comments

*blinks* By the gods! We can see!

The attic over the sunroom and utility room had a very small opening, rudely hacked into the beadboard ceiling. It was so narrow I couldn’t even get my shoulders through it without contortions…much less the rest of my rather rotund self… The hole wasn’t square either and simply had a wood piece that was pulled over the hole to close it. I wanted something a little nicer.

I guess that’s why the old time families had lots of kids! Send a few of them up there to get it done. If ya loose one, well, what the hey. Send up some more! 😀

Anyway, I put in a new attic door…in beadboard. Not painted yet as we haven’t done the rest of the ceiling yet.

New attic door (and larger too!)

New attic door (and larger too!)

I did all that so I could get up there and pull some new circuits. I say “I”…but I had unexpected help this weekend too. Thanks Mike!

First, I ripped out all the knob and tube…and years of associated zip cord splices and add-ons. Scary stuff. Very satisfying and very glad it’s gone. Not everything old should be preserved.

Got my circuits run. And lo and behold…LIGHTS! Blessed lights! When we got the house, this room was lit by a single light bulb. There are now more bulbs in this room alone than there were in the entire house when we bought it!

New lights!

New lights!

There’s still a Victorian-ee bowl-light and ceiling fan thingee to go in the center of the room…but I’ve more crawling around in the attic to do first.

Oh, and I’ve got some fancy covers for these…Sort of Victorian attitude. Yeah, can lights aren’t exactly period…but they are just part of the picture anyway. Remember for lighting. General/Ambient. Task. Mood. These are the general/ambient.

Period lighting for this house would be exceptionally easy. Electricity was added after it was built. There was NO period lighting (in electric anyway). We’re not going back that far.

But lord have mercy…we can SEE in this room! It is truly amazing just what a difference a bit of light can make. Mood, atmosphere, everything is better.

Except the paint. Ghack…makes the puke yellow and pepto-bismal pink clash a bit. Paint coming soon!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 1 Comment

Casper the Maine Coon

Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It’s the transition that’s
troublesome.

– Isaac Asimov

I lay on the floor beside him, providing what little comfort I could as he struggled to simply breathe, but the thought that kept clawing its way through my head…over and over again…was that ‘this is what it comes down to’; In the end, no matter how close your friends, no matter who is with you, no matter how earnest or willing your companions are, in the end we all die alone.

He was exhausted. It wouldn’t be long now. I hated knowing that.

Impotent. Unequipped. Helpless. I am a builder. A doer. A fixer. It’s a rare thing for me, that moment when there simply is nothing else I can do.

And I hate the feeling. I hate the consequences even more. Nowhere to turn. No help to summon. It’s just down to me knowing the outcome is inevitable and bad…and knowing there is absolutely nothing left to be done.

It leaves a horrible taste. It simply feels too much like giving up.

Folks often look to me to get something done. To make something happen. Expectations. Sometimes I simply cannot. Sometimes it’s beyond my abilities. Sometimes I just don’t know what to do. Sometimes there is nothing left to be done. He was looking to me for help. So was my wife. I disappointed them both.

***

Casper, the 22-pound Maine Coon, has been my constant companion for something over 14 years. He adopted me at my Mom’s house when I was down for a visit. This tiny little spindly kitten climbed my leg and shirt…doggedly persisting when I pulled him off and set him in the floor, returning unsteadily and looking so much like some kind of a wind-up toy that I had to laugh. Pulling him off my shirt was rather like pulling Velcro apart.

Three or four times I pulled all of his pointy bits out of my shirt (rrrrrrriiiiiiiippppp), put him down, and he came right back, climbing the same path. When I let finally him proceed he climbed all the way to my shoulder and then promptly curled up and fell asleep, purring like motorcycle running on bad gasoline. That is to say, “not quietly”. I mean, it was clearly audible across the room! His purr was bigger than he was!

His weight measured in ounces, his body was no bigger than a coke can but his tail…oh what a tail! Easily twice the length of the rest of him, it was striped like a raccoon’s and its normal state was distinctly, spectacularly, puffed up. It was a bold feature and he knew it, and for the rest of the weekend when he wasn’t sleeping on my shoulder he was parading around with the tail raised to the sky with the end curled over like a question mark.

That would become his trademark…that question mark. That outsized tail, along with enormous paws for such a tiny kitten would herald his growth into the 22-pounds of muscle he would eventually become.

A man’s cat, if there is such a thing. Friendly, approachable, and yet fiercely protective of the wife and our household. A cat still, make no mistake, looking over his shoulder at me with disdain if I tried to call him inside, but he would come running if the wife called…

Strong and solid…with rippling muscles under all that fur. It never ceased to surprise me how dense and muscle packed he was when I had to pick him up. He was always exceedingly careful and as far as I know, never harmed or so much as deliberately scratched anybody. A casual strength.

He was lord over the dogs when we had one…when the dogs bothered to notice that is.

He even took it on himself to protect the pack of little girls next door (one family, 8 kids in 8 years, all but the last girls)…one day I heard a commotion outside…happily screaming kids running down the street, and I happened to look out to see what they were playing with.

I beheld an amazing sight. Casper, loping down the street at a very good clip, dragging one of those cartoony, six-foot long stuffed toy snakes. He was being chased by the pack of little girls. I shook my head and went back to what I was doing. The girls tell me that it was his sworn duty to protect them from stuffed animals and anytime they brought one outside Casper made off with it. He was fond of Nerf footballs as well.

***

And he lay there dying. We hadn’t realized he was sick until the day before. He was always so strong. He seemed down. He wouldn’t come in, even for the wife, but he didn’t run away either. She picked him up and carried him in. When I picked him up he let me hold him, not trying to get down. That’s when we knew he was really sick. He liked contact, but never before to be held.

Carey took him to the vet, a caring and competent man. Severe respiratory infection. “One sick cat.” Says the vet.

They provided antibiotics, but they take time to work. They guessed midnight would be the turning point.

He got worse. Severely worse after hours on Friday. Help was too far away…any that could actually help that is. Do they even do intubation on pets? That’s all that could have saved him. A tube in the lungs delivering oxygen and the drugs to open them up.

Help was an hour or better away. Death was only minutes. Death won.

***

They tell us not to anthropomorphize our pets…that is, not to apply human emotions or traits to the actions or behaviors of our animals.

It’s a message lost. I was raised on Disney. And I know better anyway.

***

There was fear in his eyes. That’s why I said in the beginning that we all die alone. There was nothing I could do, no comfort I could provide, that would ease the fear. This battle and the consequences were his alone. We both knew he had already lost.

There are those that believe death is a transition…a release…a better place. I’m one of them. But make no mistake…death is a thing to be fought…tooth and nail…to the very last. He fought, but he lost. I could not even ease his transition.

With a single forlorn cry…his first in the incident…he took his last breath and stretched out…grasping with his claws at the rug. Ultimately alone.

He was gone.

A part of me is too.

***

Understand, I’ve been around. I’ve lost pets before. I’ve not attached an unhealthy significance to them. I’ll deal. Life goes on and all that.

Nevertheless, each one takes a little bit of me with it. Not sure why I keep on with new ones.

Still, even now the newish kitten that adopted us a couple weeks ago (with my Mom’s help of course) is snoozing upside-down and half on the keyboard, getting pets, purring, and making this more difficult to type even whilst making my day a little brighter.

Maybe that’s why.

See you on the other side buddy. Some good friends preceded you. Say hello to them for me.

Casper, 1995-2009 (that's a yard stick behind him)

Casper, 1995-2009 (that's a yard stick behind him)

Casper

Casper

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Pets | 1 Comment

Halloween was a blast!

This was our first Halloween in the Old Vic…we had no idea what to expect, but figured it was a worthy house to have a fun Halloween in and we’d decorate a bit.

In our surburban “blah” house in Garland, Halloween had faded away. The number of kids sliding each year and the effort they put into the costumes fading into nothing.

Even so, in our new small town, we figured (and it turns out, rightly so) that it would be a good holiday.

I wove a spider web out of 150′ of rope light, and then had to have a spider suitable to go with it.

A few pumpkins that we somehow never got around to converting to jack-o-laterns added some fall festiveness, and a bunch of red lightbulbs cast an appropriately eerie glow over the entire thing.

I was a pirate, and the wife was a cat-lady (Rowr!). Sorry, no pics of us (we forgot). Maybe next year!

We figure we’ll add one major decoration each year. This was it for this year, as time was limited for setting things up. In future years we’ll light the tower as well.

We had LOTS of kids. Well over 100. Probably closer to 200. Most had great costumes and showed that they had made some effort. All were polite and behaved. Many “knew” the house was haunted.

Some were “eyes on the prize” and didn’t notice the giant spider till after they had scampered up the porch and gotten their treat. Others would talk to it…one adorable little girl dressed as a witch noticed the broom and witches’ hat trapped in the spider web and got right up in the spider’s face and scolded it, “You aren’t eating THIS witch!”

One little boy (toddler) in dragon pajamas grabbed it by the pincers and said, “No! Bad spider!”

All in all, a good time. We probably gave out 50 pounds of candy, insuring dentists everywhere will have work in the coming year.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Wierd and Wonderful, Yard | Leave a comment