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Forestry mulching is on the calendar for the first of December. As is gravel. Going to do an industrial underlayment and then 8" of gravel. I need to steal the neighbors Bobcat for a weekend, but I should be able to knock out the grading myself pretty easily.
Closed up the pool for the year last weekend. Aside from the headache that brings, I know that my pump is on its last legs so it will be replaced with a variable speed in the spring when we build a pool house, but this may be the last time I close it for winter. My cover is inherited from the prior owners and is about 5 years old, and is a little worse for wear. Im contemplating just running the pump 24/7 on the lowest setting. By my math, it should cost me roughly $4-5 a month, and eliminates a LOT of headache of closing. Moving water doesnt freeze and my pool is salt which helps lower the potential of freezing anyway. Im going to try and monitor the temp over the winter, but I cant imagine it gets much below 50*, maybe 45. I have a major project coming up that involves doors, walls and demolition. |
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Forestry mulching is on the calendar for the first of December. As is gravel. Going to do an industrial underlayment and then 8" of gravel. I need to steal the neighbors Bobcat for a weekend, but I should be able to knock out the grading myself pretty easily. Closed up the pool for the year last weekend. Aside from the headache that brings, I know that my pump is on its last legs so it will be replaced with a variable speed in the spring when we build a pool house, but this may be the last time I close it for winter. My cover is inherited from the prior owners and is about 5 years old, and is a little worse for wear. Im contemplating just running the pump 24/7 on the lowest setting. By my math, it should cost me roughly $4-5 a month, and eliminates a LOT of headache of closing. Moving water doesnt freeze and my pool is salt which helps lower the potential of freezing anyway. Im going to try and monitor the temp over the winter, but I cant imagine it gets much below 50*, maybe 45. I have a major project coming up that involves doors, walls and demolition. View Quote But...your post made me wonder... Won't the debris from winter make spring a living hell with an uncovered pool? Maybe not where you are. If you have no trees, even so, won't there be stuff that just blows in or drifts in with the snow/wind/whatever? Not trying to discount your choice at all. As I said, I know nothing of pools. It just made me wonder. Pool maintenance seems to be a time consuming thing. |
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So, I will admit, I was on the fence buying the house. Having never owned a pool, I had no idea what to expect. The owners left be holding a bag full of shit, pardon my french, because they used chlorine tabs constantly, so when I opened it the following spring (2016) I was met with the worst swamp imaginable. I learned a lot of hard lessons that year, especially about chemistry, algae and ammonia. I did two years of the BBB method (bleach, borax, baking soda) and then in 2018 switched it to salt.
Two things that have really cut down on my "maintenance": 1. switching to salt and 2. the robot. With salt, as long as the chlorine generator is on, it produces chlorine. Its like magic. Short of a once a week dose of acid, my water chemistry stays pretty well balanced. I usually have to add alkalinity (baking soda) after a good soaking rain. The robot mitigated what was one of the worst parts of the pool for me and that was the vacuum. So, in the winter once the leaves fall, as long as you vacuum it about once a week, it should be fine. Which for me, means go throw the robot in the pool and let it do its thing. Those two things took me from ready to fill it in with concrete to loving it over the past two years. Theres many a summer afternoon/evening spent with my daughter in the pool. All it takes is a 10-15 minute skim, and that part should be even better as well with the variable pump because it runs longer and skims longer. |
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So, I will admit, I was on the fence buying the house. Having never owned a pool, I had no idea what to expect. The owners left be holding a bag full of shit, pardon my french, because they used chlorine tabs constantly, so when I opened it the following spring (2016) I was met with the worst swamp imaginable. I learned a lot of hard lessons that year, especially about chemistry, algae and ammonia. I did two years of the BBB method (bleach, borax, baking soda) and then in 2018 switched it to salt. Two things that have really cut down on my "maintenance": 1. switching to salt and 2. the robot. With salt, as long as the chlorine generator is on, it produces chlorine. Its like magic. Short of a once a week dose of acid, my water chemistry stays pretty well balanced. I usually have to add alkalinity (baking soda) after a good soaking rain. The robot mitigated what was one of the worst parts of the pool for me and that was the vacuum. So, in the winter once the leaves fall, as long as you vacuum it about once a week, it should be fine. Which for me, means go throw the robot in the pool and let it do its thing. Those two things took me from ready to fill it in with concrete to loving it over the past two years. Theres many a summer afternoon/evening spent with my daughter in the pool. All it takes is a 10-15 minute skim, and that part should be even better as well with the variable pump because it runs longer and skims longer. View Quote If you have time, will you talk about WHAT was causing the swamp? (I mean I REALLY know NOTHING about pools.) But your comments have interested me. And what happens with the salt and the chlorine? I understand chemistry at a basic level, nothing too fancy, and a little more when it comes to soil science. But the complete ignorance of pools and the pool universe make me very curious. |
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The swamp is algae, which standing water will grow. Chlorine kills algae. Salt (2 NaCl) and water (2 H2O) are passed through the generator where a charge across titanium plates convers it to Cl2 and 2 NaOH and H2. Hydrogen gas burns off, the chlorine gas (which looks like fog in the generator) is absorbed into the water and the NaOH slightly raises the pH. Its one of the reasons for the constant addition of acid for saltwater pools. Ergo, chlorine from salt.
Now, I do usually have to add some salt every year, usually through function of summer storms. Evaporation will actually up the salt concentration but you lose a little every time it rains and you draw down, backwash and rinse the filter etc etc. This weekend I did something I had been meaning to do for a while. I recaulked every exterior window joint. Every. Single. One. Im 99% certain based on the gaps I saw that the prior owners never did it. The other thing I did is say to hell with motion lights outside. The two on the garage side of the house, really the only two left, were dead. One was on 100% of the time and the other wouldnt turn on if you drove a tank under it. But, you say, how will you deal with turning lights on and off every time you go outside? Well, thats the thing. I wont. I also bought a few extra z-wave switches as part of this deal because if you think about contextual automation (a big industry buzzword right now), there is, more times than not, a trigger or pretext that you can use. Example: I come hope and open garage door. The lights IN the garage are already automated, but in that same code, I add the outside lights. Boom. Flood lights. Heading out the back or sliding doors? Flood lights at the back of the house come on. Same for front lights. |
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The swamp is algae, which standing water will grow. Chlorine kills algae. Salt (2 NaCl) and water (2 H2O) are passed through the generator where a charge across titanium plates convers it to Cl2 and 2 NaOH and H2. Hydrogen gas burns off, the chlorine gas (which looks like fog in the generator) is absorbed into the water and the NaOH slightly raises the pH. Its one of the reasons for the constant addition of acid for saltwater pools. Ergo, chlorine from salt. Now, I do usually have to add some salt every year, usually through function of summer storms. Evaporation will actually up the salt concentration but you lose a little every time it rains and you draw down, backwash and rinse the filter etc etc. This weekend I did something I had been meaning to do for a while. I recaulked every exterior window joint. Every. Single. One. Im 99% certain based on the gaps I saw that the prior owners never did it. The other thing I did is say to hell with motion lights outside. The two on the garage side of the house, really the only two left, were dead. One was on 100% of the time and the other wouldnt turn on if you drove a tank under it. But, you say, how will you deal with turning lights on and off every time you go outside? Well, thats the thing. I wont. I also bought a few extra z-wave switches as part of this deal because if you think about contextual automation (a big industry buzzword right now), there is, more times than not, a trigger or pretext that you can use. Example: I come hope and open garage door. The lights IN the garage are already automated, but in that same code, I add the outside lights. Boom. Flood lights. Heading out the back or sliding doors? Flood lights at the back of the house come on. Same for front lights. View Quote Thank you! I actually get kind of excited when i correctly call the names of compounds, still, after all these years. Kitties: reads NaOH, and thinks "Sodium Hydroxide." Kitties: Wait, is that RIGHT? *googles* Finds NaOH is Sodium Hydroxide. Kitties: *fistpump* Heck yeah! FWIW, I would hate that "I walk out the back door, the flood lights come on" thing. What If I wanted to be clandestine? |
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I get that, and thats why after the house is "put to bed", none of the routines run.
But outside of that, usable light is a commodity here. People at work dont understand what I mean by this because they live in a city, and there are streetlights/ambient light that bleeds at night, and well, you can walk outside and see things. Thats not the case for me. I walk outside and its pitch black. Its one of the reasons I have lights on everything. Theres nothing worse than having to do anything in the pitch black and/or not enough light category. Buuuuuut it is also one of the reasons I own night vision, so... |
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So, things have been quiet on the homestead. I had to postpone the forestry mulching due to some circumstances, BUT, those circumstances also mean I have a new job.
And that new job means I am working from home about 99% of the time... So it was kind of worth it. I still have a list of things Id like to accomplish, but first and foremost are going to be something Ive procrastinated on which was solved tonight. I did the absolute most adult thing you could do in your adult life. I. Bought. Kitchen. Appliances. I didnt go with gas for the stove (although I heavily considered it) for two reasons. One is the venting. Gas stoves/ovens put out A LOT of heat. Our kitchen in the summer is HOT. The other was simplicity. In the event of a power outage, I have a means to cook. Yes it would have bought me a little convenience, but the cost vs. convenience wasnt quite there in my opinion. My next major expenditure will be a replacement pressure tank. Its time to put a bow on that once and for all which will hopefully buy me 10+ years of trouble free service. |
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So, things have been quiet on the homestead. I had to postpone the forestry mulching due to some circumstances, BUT, those circumstances also mean I have a new job. And that new job means I am working from home about 99% of the time... So it was kind of worth it. I still have a list of things Id like to accomplish, but first and foremost are going to be something Ive procrastinated on which was solved tonight. I did the absolute most adult thing you could do in your adult life. I. Bought. Kitchen. Appliances. I didnt go with gas for the stove (although I heavily considered it) for two reasons. One is the venting. Gas stoves/ovens put out A LOT of heat. Our kitchen in the summer is HOT. The other was simplicity. In the event of a power outage, I have a means to cook. Yes it would have bought me a little convenience, but the cost vs. convenience wasnt quite there in my opinion. My next major expenditure will be a replacement pressure tank. Its time to put a bow on that once and for all which will hopefully buy me 10+ years of trouble free service. View Quote |
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Yes and yes. In other news, today begins a project Ive had in mind for quite some time and finding myself unemployed (basically) until Jan 6th, will give me plenty of time to work on... So it begins... https://i.imgur.com/vPCuwZm.jpg Who wants to take a guess whats about to happen? View Quote |
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Single inswing door.
I get that French doors and sliders are "pretty" but damn if they aren't GIANT security risks. So yeah, that is very much part of this project too. Part of it also is the built ins. I need a place to store/hang stuff. Almost like a mud room. And this will accomplish that goal. Once the colder months set in, a hat, jacket and gloves are daily outside attire so this would be where I store and hang them. |
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Single inswing door. I get that French doors and sliders are "pretty" but damn if they aren't GIANT security risks. So yeah, that is very much part of this project too. Part of it also is the built ins. I need a place to store/hang stuff. Almost like a mud room. And this will accomplish that goal. Once the colder months set in, a hat, jacket and gloves are daily outside attire so this would be where I store and hang them. View Quote |
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*huge snip* Some things I learned today: Houses are never "square" in any sense of the word. I cant tell you how many sheets of paper I used to adjust hinges and how many shims I used to get that thing in there. Nor can I elaborate on how many curse words were uttered. *snip* View Quote a-I could be dead wrong with my assumption about builders, but hey...they do have to hang doors and sell the damn house. Square saves a LOT Of time. b-I do understand--I mean I really understand-- that houses move, but Jeez-o-flip. c-Hanging doors correctly never was easy. I feel your pain, and I have uttered those words. (I can use f*ck as a comma. Just sayin.). I would not kick you in the nether regions. I would pat you on the shoulder, bring over tools, and beer (maybe wine, if your wife will be there later and we can hang out.) Good job. |
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Man, 2020 has not been kind so far.
Ill post some updates soon. |
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I've really enjoyed reading this thread. I had it pulled up in a separate tab, but forgot about it. Slow day at work (courts are closed right now) gave me time to read it. Thank you very much for writing this, I've really gotten a lot of ideas. Especially the plumbing.
I could have sworn your HVAC guy was my cousin, but he's about an hour south of you. On your garbage can rack, would a set of fork pockets on the bottom be useful? I didn't see a follow up to that project, you had mentioned basically making it into a small trailer. Wasn't sure if adding some fork pockets would be an additional asset if you needed to move it with the tractor. Great thread! |
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Quoted: I've really enjoyed reading this thread. I had it pulled up in a separate tab, but forgot about it. Slow day at work (courts are closed right now) gave me time to read it. Thank you very much for writing this, I've really gotten a lot of ideas. Especially the plumbing. I could have sworn your HVAC guy was my cousin, but he's about an hour south of you. On your garbage can rack, would a set of fork pockets on the bottom be useful? I didn't see a follow up to that project, you had mentioned basically making it into a small trailer. Wasn't sure if adding some fork pockets would be an additional asset if you needed to move it with the tractor. Great thread! View Quote Thought about that, but I dont actually own forks. Keep meaning to buy some but I havent as of yet. The intent was to tow it with a car/truck/atv on trash day. In other news, things have been moving along here. Will try to update this weekend. |
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Quoted: Thought about that, but I dont actually own forks. Keep meaning to buy some but I havent as of yet. The intent was to tow it with a car/truck/atv on trash day. In other news, things have been moving along here. Will try to update this weekend. View Quote Look forward to the update! |
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So, to those who were kind enough to PM, thank you. Your words were greatly appreciated.
Just a personal update... At the end of January, a friend of mine passed from cancer. She was a month older than me, and if you want something thatll remind you of your mortality, thatll do it. Six weeks later, my grandma passed at the ripe old age of 97. If my Grandpa knew what was good for him he was standing at the Pearly Gates waiting to greet her. Another six weeks later, and one of my closer friends from college passed from surgery related complications. And Lord knows, everyone has heard about the pandemic. I know I am certainly tired of hearing about the pandemic... But, that is not to say things stopped around my house. They most certainly slowed down with my daughter being out of school, work schedules changing with my wife, and having to prep my Grandmas house to hit the market. Oh, the stories I could tell about working on a house built in 1946.... So lets get on with some updates, shall we? |
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Wow what a lot of work!
I'm so very sorry about your grandma and the others you have lost. Hard spring you had. Your work is excellent, and Kreg makes great stuff. I happen to have a very long wish list of Kreg stuff. |
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Do you have any close up pictures of the hardware you used for it, including how you anchored it to the concrete?
I recently came across this YouTube channel called Premier Outdoor Living. They do some pretty neat stuff including decks and pergolas. Some of the techniques they use I have never seen before and the project looks odd until they finish and it looks great. They must be in an area that doesn't freeze as some of the patio work they do would have have major frost heave after a year. https://www.youtube.com/c/Premieroutdoorlivingllc/videos |
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This is a DIY guy did an outdoor kitchen that looks pretty good. The technique could be used to build any type of custom outdoor kitchen.
INSANE Outdoor Kitchen Build - Building An EPIC Deck Pt. 5 |
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Quoted: Do you have any close up pictures of the hardware you used for it, including how you anchored it to the concrete? I recently came across this YouTube channel called Premier Outdoor Living. They do some pretty neat stuff including decks and pergolas. Some of the techniques they use I have never seen before and the project looks odd until they finish and it looks great. They must be in an area that doesn't freeze as some of the patio work they do would have have major frost heave after a year. https://www.youtube.com/c/Premieroutdoorlivingllc/videos View Quote |
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Had the day off today, and got sucked into this thread.
Thank you for taking the time to write out everything so a moron like myself can understand it . My wife and I just moved to Idaho and we're currently trying to find land to build our next farm. I learned a lot from you, so thank you. Once we find land I'll start a thread like this for our own build, but it won't be as well written as yours. We sold our farm in Washington to escape all the craziness over there, and have been living in a condo sense November and I'm going crazy with nothing to do outside. I'll keep checking in on your thread when time permits. I hope the rest of this year gets better for you, and everyone else. 2020 has sucked. Godspeed |
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Quoted: Had the day off today, and got sucked into this thread. Thank you for taking the time to write out everything so a moron like myself can understand it . My wife and I just moved to Idaho and we're currently trying to find land to build our next farm. I learned a lot from you, so thank you. Once we find land I'll start a thread like this for our own build, but it won't be as well written as yours. We sold our farm in Washington to escape all the craziness over there, and have been living in a condo sense November and I'm going crazy with nothing to do outside. I'll keep checking in on your thread when time permits. I hope the rest of this year gets better for you, and everyone else. 2020 has sucked. Godspeed View Quote @zukguy Welcome to the Homestead/Farm/Garden forum. We are glad to have you. Look forward to your thread, and don't EVER be afraid to share or ask anything you need to know.. There is a LOT of knowledge here. I'm pretty olde. That's old with an e, which is ancient actually...and I still come here to ask and learn. The members here have never disappointed, and never called me stupid for asking. This is a good place to be and however long it takes, we will all be watching for your thread. |
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Grow some flowering vines up the fence and over that pergola and you will have real olde-world peaceful garden happening.
Seriously that is gorgeous and you did an awesome job. Great posts. Glad you are okay and making such good progress! 2020 sucks, but you are making the most of it! ETA: OH and Simpson Strong Tie stuff rocks! I used those to swing the ceiling in an old house. Solid. |
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Now, since the weather is not a million degrees, I am taking to knocking out fall projects. I have been lazy and havent put the finishing touches on the generator house, so that is coming including re-doing the top cover. That and the trash cart are Saturday projects that will be easy.
But, there are some larger projects. 1. After pulling the well pump and having done its replacement last summer, I decided to go with a larger pressure tank. That has presented me with two options. Option A is under house placement like the current tank, Option B is building a pump house at the well head. After looking at Option A long and hard, I would need to remove the crawlspace door AND frame, and then dig what amounts to a 6" deep trench to get the thing in there. Then, on top of that, I would need to relocate it to the other end of the crawlspace where the sumps are due to its vertical height. That involves a LOT of black pipe and electrical wire and that really has me leaning towards option B. Our winters are fairly temperate here. My theory is a well built, sealed and insulated house would have very little chance of freezing. Even on the most frosty of nights, it would be easy enough to run a drop cord and heat tape. 2x8 walls, a good Tyvek wrap and tape, cellulose insulation behind blue foam board, and I think itll be good to go. Ive been sitting on this one for a year and it needs to get done. 2. Chicken coop and pen. My plan is to place it in front of the barn and have a large run. My questions on doing this primarily are 1) how many birds do we need, 2) does anyone have a source for good coop plans that I have not happened across yet, and 3) in terms of the run, how do you fence and cover it to keep them happy and/or keep predators out? The spot in question gets a healthy amount of sun all day, so I would imagine some form of shade will be necessary as well. Id like to have this ready to go by springtime when chicks come around again. 3. The barn... I have let this one anguish quite a bit after the initial push to get walls up and utility room built because that GREATLY alleviated the issue of not having floor space/storage, but now its time to finish it for good. Part of that will involve a lift for ceiling fans and new lights. I actually contemplated doing this over the summer during some downtime, but the lumber prices at the time were prohibitively expensive, and that seems to be relaxing a little based on my most recent tour down the lumber aisle at Lowes. The other aspect of the barn that will be addressed is the large door side. I dont care what it costs, I am having a concrete pad poured there this fall before it gets too cold. |
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What about the outdoor kitchen? Is that still on your project list or is that on hold since the nights are getting cooler and people won't be outside as much?
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Quoted: What about the outdoor kitchen? Is that still on your project list or is that on hold since the nights are getting cooler and people won't be outside as much? View Quote |
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Got an email from the parts house that the well tank I had ordered that was on backorder should be in their hands next week, so I made the pilgrimage to Home Depot on Saturday to obtain supplies.
Have you guys looked at lumber lately? It's RICH. 10 bucks for a 2x6. $38 for a sheet of 7/16 OSB. I tallied up what it would take to finish framing the barn, and I'm not sure I want to do it right now after that. I mean, I don't know how long this will last so I may not have another choice but holy crap. |
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Quoted: Got an email from the parts house that the well tank I had ordered that was on backorder should be in their hands next week, so I made the pilgrimage to Home Depot on Saturday to obtain supplies. Have you guys looked at lumber lately? It's RICH. 10 bucks for a 2x6. $38 for a sheet of 7/16 OSB. I tallied up what it would take to finish framing the barn, and I'm not sure I want to do it right now after that. I mean, I don't know how long this will last so I may not have another choice but holy crap. View Quote We're about to break ground on a house. I was luckily able to get my framers to lock in my price at pre panic prices, but I am hearing that it may come down in late October, or possibly spring. I'm not holding my breath though. |
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Quoted: Got an email from the parts house that the well tank I had ordered that was on backorder should be in their hands next week, so I made the pilgrimage to Home Depot on Saturday to obtain supplies. Have you guys looked at lumber lately? It's RICH. 10 bucks for a 2x6. $38 for a sheet of 7/16 OSB. I tallied up what it would take to finish framing the barn, and I'm not sure I want to do it right now after that. I mean, I don't know how long this will last so I may not have another choice but holy crap. View Quote I've been holding off on a lot of projects thinking it would "come back down." But there always seems to be a hurricane somewhere. Or some other disaster that keeps it stupid. |
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Quoted: So, today around noon, I got a message from my boss. We are a team of 2 (down from 5 earlier this year), but he basically said "You need a break, go fuck off for the rest of the day". I kindly obliged. This was the result. https://i.imgur.com/bBE6jji.jpg This weekend I intend on building the structure, Lord willin' and the creek dont rise (aka the weather is decent), and the tank should be here directly. View Quote Well house? |
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Quoted: I've been holding off on a lot of projects thinking it would "come back down." But there always seems to be a hurricane somewhere. Or some other disaster that keeps it stupid. View Quote @ Kitties-with-Sigs tell me about it! Not only prices but also availability. In March I committed to a bid and began having a house built. It rained for 6 weeks and they started in June, not April. Not only have prices skyrocketed but I've had deck rails, windows, decking, siding and few other things become unavailable requiring substitutes [each one more expensive than the bid] to be found. |
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Guys, I need help. BAD.
For the past week or so we have had an annoyance of gnats in the house. We had a cool snap last night, which will be much more of a cold snap this weekend (i.e. frost) but the gnats are EVERYWHERE. I literally swatted 25 while cooking dinner tonight. What can I do? |
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Quoted: Guys, I need help. BAD. For the past week or so we have had an annoyance of gnats in the house. We had a cool snap last night, which will be much more of a cold snap this weekend (i.e. frost) but the gnats are EVERYWHERE. I literally swatted 25 while cooking dinner tonight. What can I do? View Quote What are they? Fruit gnats? If you leave a peach or a banana on the counter, do they swarm on it? |
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Honestly, I'm not entirely sure. They are all over the place.
They're in the kitchen but I've also had them in my office today too. |
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