Saturday, February 19, 2011

I love my casa, but sometimes . . .

The casa on a good day
OK, so this blog might seem a little lovey-hatey about the casa.  Sometimes there's a good (no, great) deal of stress in living in a 70 (80?) year old house.  I mean, you learn to put up with the fact that any remodeling will have to adjust to non-squared corners, various building supplies found along the way by the original builders, and crumbling lathe and plaster walls.  That is known from the outset, so you just sigh and deal with it all.  What tends to wear on a person are the little things you deal with when not in remodel mode.  The plumbing, for instance, has had various upgrades along the way.  I remember staying here one summer as a child while my dad and his brother remodeled grandma's bathroom (a small room of the kitchen that originally was a pantry when facilities were used outside the house.)  I remember very vividly the fight they had to get the new, steel tub through the half-sized doorway.  Then the consternation they expressed when the tub was about 3 inches too short for the space.  (They left it like that, by-the-way, and when we moved in Corey built a little wooden spacer to cover that icky, everything-fell-behind-the-tub-and-grew-feelers space.)  I could mention many other stories, but let's just leave it with this:  whenever something goes wrong at the casa (electrical, plumbing, etc) we always assume the worst.  It's not because we're pessimistic.  It's because, through experience, we've learned that this old house needs more maintenance than most.

So, a major concern has been the fact that our water pressure has been steadily dwindling since last fall.  We originally thought it was the pressure tank not being set correctly, so Corey spent one Saturday with a rented air compressor and some tools trying to calibrate the on/off switch.  No change.  When we woke up one morning before Christmas to a lake in our driveway (see previous post), we thought we'd found the culprit--a leak in the line.  Not so.  The plumber that arrived said that wouldn't do it (it was on the neighbor's coming into the line side) and also, the pressure tank was running just fine.  So for the past 2-3 months we just watched and waited as the water  pressure got lower and lower.  We'd start filling the tub 15 minutes before we needed it; I'd plan a load of laundry for an hour and a half of washing; there was no way we could wash our hands or the dishes if either of those other two uses were happening.  We were holding out for warmer weather and the hopes we'd be able to afford a new pressure tank, complete with the $75 an hour plumber to install it.  Then something truly amazing occurred . . .

I was getting ready for work yesterday morning and the thought came to me, "I wonder if something could be wrong with the water softener?"  (I'd just watched an "Ask This Old House" episode on DIY where they fixed a water softener.) Somewhere, in the back of the earliest memories of living at the casa, I'd witnessed something . . . but I couldn't quite place the memory.  I mentioned it to Corey (my "Do it Now" boy) who went immediately to close the bypass valve.  While there, he removed the little banjo filter for the water going into the softener.  Eureka!  The amount of water pressure we then had was astounding to us.  We literally turned on all the taps and stood back watching in amazement.  Oh my gosh!  It took a while to process the information.  You mean it was a small, 1 1/2 x 3 inch cylindrical filter full of rust and other hard water minerals that caused all the concern?  You mean we were able to replace it for around $10 and a trip to AgWest?  How relieved we were . . . how blessed we are . . . how vindicated am I for watching DIY?

1 comment:

  1. It's absolutely amazing that for once you were able to fix it so easily and cheaply (I'll knock on wood just to be safe). From a date you told me once, I could have sworn that house was closer to 90 years old. You should figure out exactly how old it is. Or maybe I should just go down to county records. Being able to say you live and maintain a century old home would be some be would get.

    And now I think you can definitely say you better keep watching DIY shows and such, for the sake of the budget. :)

    ReplyDelete