December 21, 2011
We’ve not been getting a lot of wins at Mesa Verde the last couple of days. On Monday I removed the crown molding in the living room and discovered that the living room wall is as detached from the ceiling joists as the rest of the house. We had the first foundation guy over and he said that he had been there three times and an engineer’s report was completed. Essentially the house is higher in the front and sinking towards the middle. This could get expensive.
On Monday Mark discovered the hard way that winterizing the pipes and a big old hair ball in the pea trap of a 33-year-old sink do not make for a pleasant combination. From the retching and rapid evacuation, plus the lingering odor I must say I have to agree. He also learned that water ants or whatever kind of ants live in moist areas like under the shower pan leave a nasty bite.
When we left Monday we had torn out the crown molding, sawzall’d out the shower pan and gutted both bathrooms. The one positive note was we determined that we’d have enough room to put a bathtub/shower in the master bathroom instead of just a small shower stall. This is good on two fronts, the first is that I discovered first hand that sometimes you really want a bathtub in your master bath, like when you have house guests and just want to get away. The second is that even with a tile surround a tub is less expensive than a cheap shower stall, and the reviews are much better.
Tuesday I got over my fear of the sawzall and demo’d the closet in the master bath and the frame for the master shower stall. Once we opened up the space Mark determined that if we put in an angled linen closet instead of a rectangle I would feel less claustrophobic walking in the bathroom door. An added bonus is that we don’t have to move the door to the bathroom.
Our big accomplishments on Tuesday were opening up the master bathroom, putting a temporary patch over the gable end vent to block one security threat, and capping some of the water lines, we’ve got a few more to go. We’re capping the lines so we can turn the water back on without risking flooding the place.
Our plans for today are to repair the top of chimney where the mortar has eroded, cut the tape at the top of the walls in anticipation of getting the foundation repaired and maybe if I have a big enough spray bottle I’ll start scraping popcorn off the ceiling. We are kind of limited in what we can do because the foundation repairs can wreak havoc on finish work. We really can’t start any interior finish work for one month after the foundation has been leveled. So it’s exterior work, rough plumbing and electrical.