Back in the day, when I purchased my first home to live-in; that was Miami in the early 1990s, first mortgages with rates of 8 to 9% and 9% to 10% were typical. People will have to accept the possibility that we won't ever return to 3%. If sellers must sell, home prices will have to decline, and lower evaluations will follow. Pretty sure I'm not alone in my chain of thoughts.
If anything, it'll get worse. Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone want to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes.If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
Rebecca Noblett Roberts is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
One thing you quickly learn as a homeowner: if something breaks you either fix it or you find out that there is no one to call that doesnt cost a lot of money.
The scary thing is when mold is growing inside your central air conditioner, and you get mold toxicity and neurological and respiratory issues. Yet you can’t see inside the plenum or duct, and the HVAC technicians have your life in their hands. True story here in America.
Thank you, discarded piece of drainpipe, for assisting in preventing the house slowly turning into a swimming pool. You are truly doing a service and providing peace of mind while a permanent solution is in the works.
Lawrence, Might you ever choose to discuss the prevalence of crooked teeth in British people, or is that a forbidden subject? This has been true long enough that I dont think it’s probable that it can be blamed on the NHS, although I do wonder if they include orthodontia in their health coverage. I had braces as a child, as did one of my four children, so I’m not holding myself up as a paragon of perfection, teeth-wise. But it does seem a common occurrence among Brits.
@@melbrod3868 The cat can likely handle itself against an individual coyote. (A pack, would be another matter, but I doubt if there are many packs of coyotes in Chicago. The humans would likely band together to do something about them. Solitary individuals are much better at staying under the radar.) But there are other hazards for cats. Not least, humans.
As a homeowner of an old Scottish home, which is probably nearly as old as the U.S. I am well acquainted with the joys of rainfall ingress. There have been times during heavy rain where I had up to 6 buckets deployed on drip catching duty. I have just spent a couple of weeks surrounded by scaffolding, I have a brand new roof on my ancient pile. Not a drop of water has ingressed, but then again there hasn't been a drop of rain, inside or out. So my roof seems to be very effective as it has stopped the rain for the whole of Scotland!
I'd say thank you for your service, but I am neither a Scot nor do I hate rain. In fact, quite the opposite, I love the rain. But if I were a Scot who happened to hate or dislike the rain, I would thank you for your service of installing an anti-rain roof.
Discarded drain pipe, you are the best. You are managing to improve this man's situation, specifically regarding the distribution of water away from his basement. You are the example of what a drain pipe should be You're not discarded to me.
That discarded section of drain pipe is the hero we need AND the hero we deserve! I find it funny that it is set up with two downspout diverters being used to give it a proper slope.
Geez...thank you for telling me, I'll call Jeannie immediately, and tell her to stay home if she thinks they'll be hanging around! LOL. You're 100% correct however, they do like dogs and cats, squirrels, and even birds if they can catch them.
Seconding this, I live in a small town and we get packs of coyotes rolling through town now and again, and when they do several posters go up asking if anyone has "seen this cat". Depending on the size of dog coyotes can be a threat to them, or leave them alone, coyotes are oppotunists and generally wont take fights where the threat of injury is high, ie a full sized large breed dog.
@@ohotnitzaes, "smaller than a wolf" is kind of misleading, I mean they are, but wolves can be absolutely massive. Coyotes can get up to 50 lbs, and they operate in packs of 5 or 6.... their numbers are the really scary part.
Lived in an HOA townhouse community for 3 years and am SO glad I'm out. Fines for grass being an inch too high, fines for not using the correct paint on my doorframe, not being allowed to grow anything that isn't a shrub, no clothesline, no outdoor furniture without approval, no changes to your home's interior or exterior without approval (including remodeling the unfinished bathroom), no more than 2 pets per household (my neighbor was told to give up her dog by the HOA since she and her husband already had a dog and a cat or receive heavy monthly fines), no yard signs, no growing your own herbs or vegetables because it's considered "farming", the list goes on... I have a new house with my husband, 2 cats and a dog, a tomato and herb garden and we've remodeling our basement. We couldn't be happier.
Germany here: These (ridiculous) HOA rules are only used in allotment gardens where you are not allowed to live permanently. In normal neighbourhoods HOAs would have a bitter taste of a control authority of the infamous Nazi regime. HOAs are the perfect hotbeds for annoying Karens 😂
When we were looking to buy a home last year we were very particular about not buying in an HOA. It was harder than I thought it was going to be. We passed on even looking at several homes that we were interested in because of it.
Same thing with my parents when they bought their place. Then, over the 20 years since they bought it, new subdivisions - all with HOAs - sprung up around them (and yes, they all remain mostly empty).
Former Realtor here (and our last three homes were part of an HOA): Avoid them at all costs. You are paying them to limit what you can do with your property. Sure they ensure everyone’s home values stay high with clean yard regulations and such. But not worth it. Our current state rarely has any HOAs so buying here was easy. People naturally keep their yards nice. Just avoid HOAs for your sanity.
Don’t feel bad. We made the same rookie mistake with our new home. We were changing the central HVAC filter but weren’t taking into consideration how bad the wildfire smoke was that year. Which brings us to some advice: if your area is affected by the current Canadian wildfires, check your filters more often than you usually would.
Live in the country in central Illinois , surrounded by corn & bean fields , so we change filters more often than the packaging recommends , because of exposure to excessive dust , dirt , debris , chemical drift , etc. Also have dogs in 'n out of the house - extra dirt plus hair fr. their year 'round shedding . Ahhh... country livin' ... 🌽🌻🌳 💚
We just have a 1"-thick filter. I was surprised that Lawrence's house uses the, like, foot-thick industrial filters. (And, apparently, he has three A/C units? Or maybe he lives in a triplex?)
@@mlaursen Good point & now I'm curious about it too . I've house & pet-sat for large homes & homes that built on big additions hence needing two A/C units ; also wondering about the the huge filter !
Even more weird is that clotheslines used to be standard in the US, so these bans are a pretty recent thing, I've never lived in a place that tried to ban them. Of course, trying to get your clothes out & dried with no bird poop on them before it rains was always fun...
I'm sure clotheslines are still used in arid parts of the country, but for the midwest and east coast, they never really worked well because of the humidity. Once dryers became ubiquitous, people stopped using clothes lines.
As someone who lived in a house where the basement was always at risk of flooding despite our sump pump, shout out to the discarded piece of drain pipe for doing the best it can
If you have a sump pump, make sure you have a sump pump endorsement on you insurance. It's the only way to have flood damage paid for on a normal policy.
One time, I walked into our family room and found a huge swarm of ladybugs on the ceiling in a corner. Hundreds of them. They had apparently come in through (to me) invisible cracks around our sliding glass door. It was like they were having a convention. But what to do? If I sprayed them or smashed them, the ceiling would have to be repainted. And it was evening--there was no way I would be able to get a ladybug removal expert out to my house in the country that night. If there even is such a person. So I gave up and went to bed. The next morning I got up to check on my little visitors and found them all moving together across the ceiling towards the sliding glass door. I knew a victory when I saw it, so I opened the door wide and they all left.
@@TheSouthIsHot if it was a swarm it is likely they were not Ladybugs, but probably Asian Beatles which are actually a nuisance, sure they will prey on some other insects, but for the most part they just damage your property. For the OP look at your ceiling if it has a yellowing discoloration you had asian beetles and you should get an exterminator to treat your house/yard to get rid of potential eggs.
@@samanthab1923 maybe but the "ladybugs" we get in the south really are not ladybugs, but a Japanese beetle hybrid experiment by the US government, and Clemson University from the late 50's that was meant to help pollination of crops, but they have been nothing but a nuisance over the decades, and they stink when they land on your skin like a stink bug, so I say the hell with them!!
A good example of how America is different, all over the country. You said about clothes lines not being common, here. I live in Pennsylvania, near the Maryland line. Clothes lines are INCREDIBLY common, all across both states, and into the Virginia's, up into New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Ohio. Plus, we have lots of Amish communities. They use clothes lines, even in the middle of winter. So yeah, that one was odd to hear for somebody over on the east coast. Very common thing.
Many years ago,whilst in Australia,I used a clothesline for the first time. One of the soon to be dry garments was a pair of boxer underwear,that hat a Tartan pattern on it. The next morning that single item was gone. A few hours later,I noticed a Scottish backpacker who suspiciously no longer made eye contact with me. True story.
Well, at least you didn't 🐾 find fruit bats or possums in your tartan boxers....🦇 Also. You might have asked wich clan the backpacker hailed from ! 🩳 🧑🦰👣 😆
Lawrence: If you didn't already see it somewhere else, you also need to clean the fins in the outdoor unit with the big fan. Just take a hose and spray them off until they are clean. Just as your restricted airflow caused the lines to freeze, if the fins are caked with dirt, the condenser will not be able to get rid of the heat it pulled out of your house. If you want to spray from the inside of the unit, disconnect the power on the wall first.
I would recommend the use of a power washer with a fan spray attachment, once you've moved aside the top/fan. Lawrence will need (badly want) a power washer anyway, and electric one works well for this, and it will blow the dirt out from the fins instead of into the center of the fins. Or just get a professional to do it, not a bad thing to consider when it probability needs a service anyway. A/C systems can freeze up due to low Freon levels too, but only someone with a gauge set can check those levels.
@@Montgomerygolfgator been a while since I worked in apartment,s but I think checking the levels is possible without a license, but buying and filling the coolant is not. I'm a bit scared the find out how much those suckers cost now... Was over 200 for certain collants nearly 10 years ago. Gotta be careful about the washer though. you don't need a power washer to clean the fins, and pressure that's too high will bend/damage them, so best to just use a normal hose.
One of the best things we did was to set up automatic maintenance appointments for our heating and cooling. Professionals come in twice a year to clean everything out and make sure it's ready for the season. If something does go wrong unexpectedly, we're at the top of the list for repairs because we have a contract with them. It's nice to have one less thing to worry about.
My worst house events: 1) groundhog moving in under the foundation (hazard of rural living) and 2) leftover plumbing shortcuts and electrical hazards installed by the previous owners, both of which cost me a lot stress and money to repair when they revealed themselves are very inopportune times.
HOAs have been the bane of my homeowning existence. Usually they are run by neighbors who may have a slight control issue. In a neighborhood where all the townhomes are exactly alike, the HOA has jurisdiction over what color you paint your door, if you can add shrubbery in your front yard, the height of your grass, where you store your garbage can, how long a car can be parked on the street in front of your house. Big Brother is watching.
The fact that HOAs exist still baffles me, our HOA fee is $305 and they don't do a goddamn thing. They aren't breathing down people's necks which is nice except we pay $305 for literally NOTHING, they don't take care of the parkways or the parks. Nothing, it's bull.
The neighborhod I've been living in since 2007 wanted to start a HOA and I shot it down right away. It had to be 100% all the homeowners and the street wasn't even filled yet, maybe 1/2 the houses were built. I experienced a HOA and swore no one would ever have the power to tell me what i can and can't do on my own property especially when school and property taxes are about $8,000 +/year.
America: home of the Free. Unless you want to dry your clothes or paint your house purple or grow some dandilions for the bees. Or strike without being legally mandated back to work or have a legal pet boa or go to school without worrying about being shot or go to school as a girl and have bare shoulders because its hot out or end a dangerous pregnancy or in some states dress differently than your assigned gender, or get lifesaving medicine at the reasonable cost the rest of the world pays or be paid a decent fair wage for your work... the list goes on. Land of the free my ass.
Good on you for avoiding the HOA nightmare. When I was house hunting "no HOA" was requirement 1. Nobody is telling me how often I need to mow my lawn carnsarn it. 🤠
Try not *having* a lawn to mow. You’ll reduce your carbon footprint, you’ll do good for wildlife, it will be a lot prettier to look at, and it will be WAY less work.
I am in Florida and we have too many HOAs. The idea is good, but the lack of regulations can be a nightmare when you have an incompetent board of director or a mean one. Some are ok, but thing can turn sour overnight. It helps in some degree to keep an standard in the community but we have situation that it goes to far. Worse part is that unpaid dues can get you foreclosed. 😢
I'm an American and I had no idea that clothes lines were banned in some places. I grew up on a farm where in the summer we used them and my first apartment, which was a room in a house, had freaking high power bills and my Mom said it was because of the dryer. Well, I started using the clothes line and convinced the landlord I didn't have to pay a part of the electric bill and then all my roommates started using it also. Dryers are a a big convenience but when you're poor they're a drain on finances. You know, because I'd rather eat than have a dryer.
I'm in Australia and everyone here uses clotheslines, assuming they have a backyard. I was surprised to learn that Americans just don't use them anymore.
@dragonite87 there are some places here where it would be basically impossible for 4-8 months of the year because it's either a deep freeze outside with 3 feet of snow on the ground or it's just cold dreary raining wet and icky outside... no place to be drying clothes outside
@@SeanMahoneyfitnessandart Don't forget about the birds! Ohio weather but mom liked to hang the sheets. Starlings & mulberry bushes equal mom shouting with clenched teeth "Those damn $&!'/ birds!"
A phrase that will strike terror into the heart of any homeowner -- "property taxes". Your home can be paid off, and the government can take it away if you don't pay your taxes.
Around us there's a pretty strong correlation between places that are nice to live and property tax rates. No one wants to pay higher taxes but they all choose to move to places with higher taxes!
Just curious. What area are you? Did you find the real estate transaction to be different from England? I know the commission laws are different. Love your content!
Economists and business leaders were voicing concerns at the start of 2023 that the year could be a difficult one. JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said that the Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates to 6% to fight inflation, higher than the peak level between 5% and 5.5% in 2023 that most Fed officials penciled in after their December meeting. Although I read an article of people that grossed profits up to $500k during this crash, what are the best stocks to buy/short now or put on a watchlist.
You can't survive in the American South without air conditioning. You're spot on about those nasty HOA's, though. It's like a whole neighborhood full of Karens intent on ruining any chance of happiness for those around them.
Yep in the deep south it's dangerous to not have AC, and even with AC, and good house insulation we have our fans running a good chunk of the year because of the humidity that can make 80 feel like 90+ some days, and I've even seen days where it was 100+ where it feels like 121, and we get heat stroke warnings. Also far as HOA's I'm glad I live in a small somewhat rural town, where HOAs have never been a thing, and no one here would ever want one, in my neighborhood we all just do our best to keep our homes, and yards looking the best we physically can, and if someone needs help with something we pitch in, and do what we can to help out. screw HOAs!!
Yeah I was a bit taken aback when he described 75 degrees as uncomfortably hot. That's what I cool my house down to at night so I can get to sleep, and I keep it a few degrees higher during the day so my energy bill doesn't get too crazy.
i can attest to the HOAs... i was the president of the HOA board (272 homes, 2 pools, and clubhouse plus the roads) the rules are crazy.... i had a member harassing another member over their cat... she said the neighbor's cat was "stalking" her kids... yep, had to deal with the most insane issues ... now i live in the middle of nowhere USA, in a "hollar" out past the last briar patch and love it
Drainage away from your foundation is always a key thing in my book. You'd be surprised what a difference just modest extension, leading rainwater just 4 or 5 feet from the house can make. Also, a frozen up AC coil can also be a sign of a low refridgerant charge. But pick your servicer carefully. One may charge you just a hundred dollars or so for a service and top off the charge, while another will try to sell you a $10,000 complete system replacement for the same problem.
Down south in Texas, we direct water TO our foundations (concrete slab). Some homes have foundation watering systems. No basements here. We need to keep the foundation evenly moist to prevent sinking.
It's really good to be handy when you own a house. A plumber will charge a minimum just for showing up, which means you could pay $150 to replace a washer in a dripping faucet. HOAs often have busybodies who will threaten to fine you if your grass is a quarter inch too long.
Plumbers don't replace 10 cent washers in dripping faucets. They replace the entire faucet, and install a cutoff valve on your winterized faucet and bill you $400.
Here is an issue in America that you wouldn't get in the UK. I remember as a kid I used to live at a higher elevation in the mid west. During certain times of year, deer would come down from the higher parts of the mountain. This would occasionally cause traffic issues and with the deer came mountain lions. I distinctly remember a few occasions where kids weren't allowed to play outside due to cougar sightings in the neighborhood.
I was told recently that one of my childhood shows is on Britbox. You have me sorely tempted, and when the pen/paper/budget time comes again, I have high chances of using your code!
My mom once lived in a townhouse whose HOA manager (sigh yes this exists) lived right next door, and they had such rules as 1 white backed curtains only, no dark or bold colors, no prints 2 only one car in the driveway lest you get a permit for a second one 3 the garage door has to be closed unless you’re getting in or out or doing some brief yard tending 4 guests may not park in the street overnight And on and on and on And how they loved issuing citations. Every “house” was beige. Or else. Gross. She doesn’t live there anymore.
I got yelled at by the hoa lady one morning. " Get your things inside - no personal items outside, per the rules". I had just started renting this condo, had read the bit about no outside furniture/grills/strollers/bicycles. Understood. However, I was drinking my coffee, gathering books and sorting papers to head to the library on my 3 × 5 little stoop between my front door and my car. I didn't say anything, just threw everything in the front seat and got organized in the car. Hoa managers have deep seeded control issues and i'm glad your mom got the heck out of there !! I will avoid hoas like the plague once I'm out of here.
While it shouldn't be a rule, I recommend the white backed curtains since each room can have its own colour inside but it looks uniform from the outside, where you don't see the room differentiation. It also lets the curtains do a better job insulating, great in winter and summer!
We don’t have a HOA in our neighborhood, we have a Karen. She’s backyard neighbors with my next door neighbor. She once called the city to complain about the gazebo next door neighbor was building in her backyard, so neighbor could sit outside, drink her coffee & watch her dogs play. The Karen said it obstructed her view. Her view of what you might ask? Her view of the back of neighbor’s house.
Neighbor Karen since planted tall hedges across the backyard. She's always been this way. Even when her daughter & I were kids , acting like her poo doesn't stink.
HOAs are a uniquely American creation. It is strange how one society gives you a great deal of freedom in one area and restricts it in another area. In most non-Western countries in the world, they may have what are called "neighborhood societies" which serve somewhat the same function as HOAs but have NO enforcement powers. If you own your home, nobody can tell you what color to paint it, how big your lawn can be, what decorations you can use outside, lights and so forth. Also, nobody can file "liens" against your property. This concept simply does not exist. I once saw a story back in the 1990s in Texas where an elderly widow had her house taken from her by the HOA because she failed to check her mail for some violations of the deed restrictions. She had the beginnings of Alzheimer's and did not check her mail anymore. The HOA sent her several notices and since she never complied, they filed a lien against the home and eventually took it from her. The story broke in the media, and I don't recall how it was resolved. What a nightmare! For all the freedoms Americans have, this sounds rather weird that an HOA can legally take away someone's home. And yet, while most countries prohibit civilian ownership of firearms, the US is in the opposite direction in this area. Go figure.
@@tibzig1 You may be interested in some of the videos where HOAs have practically stolen people's houses. One military guy was getting deployed. (Afghanistan I think). Before he left, he informed the HOA, USPS, & all the people who should know. He arranged for yard care. He even asked neighbors to park in his driveway once in awhile. Sometime after he deployed, the HOA President & VP decided to say that he had abandoned the house & put liens against it by posting notices on his door. I think they claimed it was for overdue HOA fees. Some how, they got it pushed through court real fast, the HOA was given ownership & they sold the house to the sister of the HOA President for about 25% of the real value & she moved in. The soldier comes home & SURPRISE! Except.....his HOA fees were paid by automatic deductions. The house & lawn had never fallen into to disrepair & in the state he lived in, there was some sort of law or clause about when a soldier is deployed, no one can take the house by liens. Not only did he get his house back, the HOA was made bankrupt by the settlement, it had to be disbanded & the HOA President & her VP both lost their homes from the civil suit. All the neighbors had a huge block party & thanked him for getting the 2 wicked witches out of their neighborhood & private lives.
It’s SUCH a great feeling when you can fix your ac yourself. Might even be the best feeling a homeowner can have. Calling out an HVAC tech and having them work on it for 4 hours only to learn your entire system needs to be replaced is a nightmare. Glad you guys will be staying cool!
Just had a bee keeper open up my garage celling and pulled out a 5 gallon bucket of bee hive and the accompanying bees. We noticed when there were about 100 bees flying in and out of the corner of our garage at any given time. It's a great sign because our area had a very mild winter and wet early spring, so the honey bees are thriving and hives are growing!
My Dad used to do that as a hobby - bee keeping. His name was on a list for the cops or the fire department to call when there was a swarm. He'd collect the swarm and take them in the trunk of his car over to my uncle's place who would have several empty brood boxes waiting. My uncle had a bunch of acreage and also raised bees. We'd get honey from our own hives each year.
@@laurie7689 For several years in the late spring my parents had a swarm of bees that would come and live on the tall brick pillar at the back of their house. They'd be there for days. I helped my dad get in touch with the local beekeeping society and someone was always happy to come out and collect them. The first year of COVID he couldn't get in touch with anyone and told me, "Those bees are making your mother nervous, so I think I'm going to spray them." I told him if he did, I'd come over there and spray him! He didn't know about the problems bees and other pollinators are having, once I explained he held off. The bees left after a few more days but they've never returned.
So nice to see someone happy about bees and passing on good news. They've been struggling. I wish everyone knew just how critical bees are to the food supply, maybe they'd get more help.
As the owner of a former rental house you have my deepest sympathy. I also really appreciate the way you recount your adventures in housing. I do get a laugh. When I recount my issues I tend to sound like Gordon Ramsey with a particularly incompetent trainee.
Clotheslines are still a thing in the American countryside and in small towns. However, you get softer clothes from the dryer. And especially nice in the winter, they come out of the dryer all toasty warm. 🥰
75 degrees is toasty?! Here in Singapore, no one has central air, split systems are used here. 75 would be considered cool. When we do use the airconditioners, we normally have it set to around 75. Though, in movie theaters and offices, the temperatures seem to usually be set to 60 degrees, which is absolutely insane, prompting people to wear jackets to avoid freezing to death.
I'd freeze at 75F! We keep our A/C at 78F in the summer, which isn't as bad as it might sound since that's 20-30 degrees less than the outside temperature.
As a homeowner with a house that has 5 hvacs - we started replacing most of the hvacs with mini splits - where you have a cassette(unit) in each room. It's not the prettiest - but so nice to keep each room the temp needed - plus it has some feature that if it's really humid it will dry that out. I live in an extremely humid state so that's a big plus.
HVAC guy here. Minisplits are great for applications where you can’t fit ductwork into the structure. Beyond that, though, they’re a PITA to repair. Also get ready for another round of “your refrigerant has been banned by the EPA and you’ll need to replace this system soon.” because they’re already working on that.
Information for those not familiar with "mini-splits", like me: I googled it and saw a few entries that said things like this from a heating and cooling place in Wichita, KS: "Having mold in your ductless mini split unit is a disgusting problem, and unfortunately, a rather common one. Ductless Mini Split systems can be filled with dirt, debris, and mold if they are not properly maintained. Left ignored, the inside of your ductless mini split could become a home for mold and mildew. Feb 8, 2022"
@@TiredMomma depends on who designs the system really. I've seen one house that had a mini split to pre-dry or warm, depending on season, the fresh air coming into a house, that was then through 3 separate units before entering the house. Those were not the only units. This house had 16 outdoor condensing sections, and 11 electrical panels I think. Maybe 12. And that's just what I can say about the house.
Hi Lawrence, I enjoy your channel and the humor you add with it. A major caution about the coyotes is that they will attack and eat pets, especially cats. As for dogs, they’re very crafty in that they first try luring the dog away with playing, then will attack and eat the dog once it’s lured away from the yard. The best thing is to keep your pets in at night and if your dog needs to go out at night, go outside with them to keep watch over them. And avoid letting your cat out at night. Best regards.
Something i really reccomend looking into with you central AC system is getting an ultra violet light or ionizer installed in your furnace to protect your evaporator coil (inside box above furnace with the copper tubes going into it). That coil gets the humidity out of the air and is wet constantly and can grow mold and fungus in it, which can cause airflow restrictions and allergies. Putting a UV light overtop of that indoor coil will benefit your allergies and breathing issues if you have any and kill any mold and fungus that might be growing in it
Also, before adding AC, or even if you already have it, look into a good "whole house" fan. They install in the ceiling below the attic. I open my windows at night, turn on the fan for about 10 minutes, turn it off and the house is delightfully cool. In the morning close all the windows. If the heat's really extreme I might leave it on all night. Still cheaper than AC. I've got it down to using AC for usually only about 2 or 3 weeks each summer.
@@veramae4098 I grew up with a "whole-house" fan, we called it the attic fan. Works great, to a point. But it doesn't cut the humidity that makes it impossible to get comfortable at night.
Something to consider when installing a UV filter, especially if doing it yourself, is that UV light can cause damage to some air handler components and materials and is also a safety hazard, especially to the eyes, so caution is needed when installing and for use.
Our second house dated back to the early 1900s. Your house looks like it was constructed no later than the 1940s.Older homes have charm and personality. We loved our old house. What no one tells you is that they are behavior disordered. There is a ton of upkeep with them; and for every home improvement or repair you may well find more expense because someone repaired on the cheap the last time something went wrong.
When I decided to buy a house here in NewEngland USA I made it a point to buy one no older than me. It does have central air conditioning, that I never had before. And I had to add water softening. It also has an attached garage another thing I never had before. I owned my previous home for years but it was a mobile home in a park. just as bad as an HOA sometimes. And of course, they didn't earn the lot rent, in my opinion. Not a bad place but you can't beat owning you own piece of land, even if it is small.
i dont agree. i had a new home that was constantly in need of maintanence. the least maintainy house i ever had was built in 1840. it was so much better in every way. except it needed more heating.
@@toadwine7654 Oh, I wasn't saying that buying newer would be better. What do I know about that. I have only had my new house for a couple months. So far I love it. I could have bought a BRAND NEW mobile home and had it put on my lot, but I still wouldn't own the land. And it would be moving without moving. I think I made the best choice.
@@lonelyp1 Hate to be a downer, but if you pay property taxes, you only have the illusion of owning that land. If you truly want to own the land, then you need to look into what is called "Land Patents". It's quite the process but gives you rights on "your land" that others can't imagine.
Knowing someone who knows the right and good people is so key. The general contractor who did our reno is now our go-to guy whenever stuff needs repair that we cannot fix. Glass repair, plumbing, electrical--he knows the best people who won't rip you off.
Growing up, my father only rented a few times, and only for short periods - he considered a purchased house an investment, where renting was like flushing money down the toilet. But then 4 of the houses we owned he sold for nearly double what he bought them for, so for all intents and purposes, we lived there for just the cost of the maintenance. My dad was raised on a farm where they always did their own fixing. The key is to know the working life of all your appliances and home systems. Buy your filters, light bulbs, and such in bulk. When you know your oven, water heaters, hvac, dishwasher, or other things are getting old, start looking for sales - like black Friday sales. Relaxing it before it fails, means you can usually sell the old appliance for at least a little bit instead of paying to have it disposed of. If you have an older house whose pipes aren't well insulated (and even if you've been told they are) make sure you let your faucets drip when the outside temp is below freezing. If your pipes freeze, this allows for the expansion and the pipes won't burst. My dad had the "maintenance schedule" in his head because he'd done it so long, but I have to have a calendar to keep track. Cleaning gutters twice a year, covering the outside faucets for winter, washng the outside of windows so they don't get mineral buildup, replacing critter traps in the attic and crawlspace, checking for termites, carpenter ants, and dry rot. In Texas, we had to water the foundation during prolonged hot dry spells because the ground would crack, and crack your foundation too. In the northwest, we'd pressure wash the roof to get the moss and tree debris off so it didn't rot the roof. I think a lot of problems are first time homeowners who have never experienced or been taught how to maintain a house so you are less likely to have disasters. It's very likely, these days, that when you buy a house, the previous owners didn't know how to maintain it. My dad looked for that neglect and usually brought the price of the house down by noting them. What didn't get fixed, he addressed after moving in. If you can't afford $100 - $200/ month on maintenance, you probably bought too much house for your budget. Whether you spend that or not, you should set it aside for the big jobs - painting, gutter replacement, appliance replacement, reroofing, re-flooring, etc.. Seems like my dad was good at choosing houses that needed some improvement, like a fence, or a couple trees, or finishing the basement, that added value to the property. He was REALLY good at planting a beautiful lawn. Ugh, I'm getting old and rambling with my reminiscence. 🙃
@jeanjaz- Don't apologize. I found your post entertaining & informative. But it got me thinking that the best house warming present you could give to a first time home owner would be some good DIY books on home maintenance. There are so many things that need to be done that if you've never owned a home, it may not even occur to you.
I actually enjoyed your rambling. In fact, I wouldn’t even call it rambling because every thing you said was on topic, informative, and well stated. Thanks much for sharing!
Your dad was spot on… I try to tell my husband these things, that maintenance is required but he’s just shrugs so I point things out. Our fridge is getting old and I’m thinking it could go out any time so we should shop the sales for a new one and sell this one for 50. We’d get something for it, and the person buying it can invest some to fix it when it does die (it’s about 15 years old and a good brand). My husband just says to let it die… I’m like, what a waste Some men have no common sense 😅
I recently moved to the USA from the UK and have bought my first American home too. It is unusually old for America, having been built in 1871. It looks a little like the scary house in the movie, Psycho! Interestingly, the previous owner’s name was Bates!!! 🙀 Trying to get head around all of the machinery in the basement is a nightmare! Two furnaces/AC units, all manner of pipes and ducting and something very odd indeed, a water softener! That thing confuses the heck out of me and regularly decided to make the most horrendous noises at 3am, making us think that we accidentally locked a wounded Bear in the basement! Much fun!
I love my clothesline. The biggest expenses and problems I've had with it so far are paying +/- $6.00 every few years to replace the lines and once I had move it to a new spot because the trees became too effective of a windbreak and the wind wasn't getting anywhere near my clothes.
HOA's are a nightmare. My best friend's mom wanted to extend her driveway by 2 ft. They told her no, it would devalue her property. That was after the neighbors were calling the police because my best friend was parking on the road, because the driveway only had room for 1 car. The police came out and said it was perfectly legal to park there. Meanwhile, the same complaining neighbor extended theirs with no problem. A lot of times they are run my power hungry control freaks who love to make people's lives miserable.
Do HOAs have regular meetings for the entire neighbourhood? Are they democratic in any way? In my country we don’t have them, except for apartment buildings. Those generally are only to organise maintenance for the building and its shared spaces.
@@DanDanDoe It depends on the HOA. Mine for example has annual meetings for the entire neighborhood. Additionally, the board has meetings (that anyone can attend) on the 4th Thursday of every month. When there are positions open for new board members, anyone can volunteer and the entire neighborhood votes on the candidates.
I suppose I'm lucky with my HOA. I live in a condo complex and there aren't that many restrictions. There are only a couple restrictions I find a little odd. 1. You can't have a flag/banner that's too large hanging on your patio/deck. I don't remember the exact restriction, but no one has said anything about my American flag, so I don't worry about it. Oddly enough, there are zero restrictions on hanging plants. Many of my neighbors have pants all over their decks. 2. You cannot work on your car, unless it's in your garage (assuming your unit came with one). The caveat is that you can work on your car in the open if it's for "an emergency". The rule doesn't specify what constitutes an "emergency" so people work on their cars anyway (myself included).
My goodness, that is a massive(!) furnace filter. Okay, this is related to your 1st and 3rd topics: Our AC did not work when DH tried it out in April (prior to the hot weather). We called our very good HVAC man. He came out, did his thing, and found that a wasp had built a nest inside the ductwork. He got rid of it, and the AC has been it’s hard-working self since then. for the temporary fix for water drainage diversion! HOA……. We live in very rural county in southcentral Kentucky with a total population of about 10,000. If I asked my coworkers about an HOA, their response would be “What is that?”
2:48 “The box thing” in the garden is called the condenser unit. This unit consist of the compressor, for compressing their refrigerant gas, as well as the condenser coil. Also in this unit is the condenser fan. This fan pulls air through the coil, expelling the heat from the coil, essentially expelling the heat transfer from your house via the refrigerant within your system. There’s some thermal dynamics involved as to how that work, which is interesting to me. It’s probably boring and complicated to most people. Which is why most people pay people like me to fix you A/C, furnace, or air handler.
LOL, the clothes line was in every yard when I was a kid. I know it makes me OLD. My mom taught me the proper way to hand the sheets, the shirts, jeans etc. She had her rules for hanging our clothes for sure. Oh, first rule, take a damp cloth to wipe off the clothes line to make sure the clean clothes were hanging on a clean clothes line.
Ah. The smell of line-dried sheets! I used to wash all my skirts and hang them out on the line in the back yard. I'm sure it was a hoot for the neighbors, but it was a quick process. The only problem is that I get dizzy looking up to clip the clothes and trip on tree roots.
Indeed, considering the number of birds that like to sit on the line. Here in Italy I don't have a garden, but clothes driers hanging on the balcony and I do wipe the line for the same reason.
I am a neighbor in Kentucky, relatively new homeowner, and my A/C went out last May... as in 2022. I've had probably 6 contractors out to look at it (4 of them under my home warranty), and no one will fix it because it's in the crawlspace. So even though the unit is not even 4 years old, we are preparing to go through another summer without central air. Thank goodness for the portable unit I bought for my bedroom. Also, right there with you on your feelings about HOAs... they're the devil and will never live in a neighborhood with one.
Stop telling the HVAC companies you have a home warranty. We hate working with home warranties they never pay enough which might be why you can’t get anyone to fix it.
I'm a KY homeowner, get yourself a reliable HVAC person, pay them and get it fixed - then you can fight with the warranty folks. Of course you can get a mini split for the house which will cost a ton, but much easier to have work on. I know from experience.
I lived in IL in an HOA community for 24 yrs. The only issue we had ONE time was we got a notice/letter telling us that our paper yard waste bag needed to be removed. The only problem was we got the letter on Friday and the paper yard waste bag was picked-up by our weekly garbage truck on Tuesday morning at 7:15 AM! I had clipped bushes on Sunday afternoon and put the yard waste bag in front of the single garage door so I could put it out Monday night for Tuesday morning pickup. I had done this for years with no problem. I called the HOA/property management company and explained about what day our garbage service day was. She told me the newbie driving around our community and others and noting "violations" had been told to stop being so excessive with violations. She told me many other homeowners had called and had similar "issues" but I had been the nicest call she had received that morning. Yeah.... I bet I was the nicest and didn't use any obscenities to her! LoL 😂😜! HOAs can be good. It's just the people enforcing the rules have to use COMMON SENSE and discretion in applying the rules on others.
I'm from the UK, moved to the US this year and have just bought my own first American house in, wait for it, Illinois! So these homeowner videos are of great interest, keep up the good work!
Illinois property taxes are very high. If you move to other states, your taxes will drop dramatically. Just something to consider. Also places like Iowa and Wisconsin have much lower crime rates and stronger economies so you'll be able to resell your house for more.
Thank you drain pipe. Your parents must be very proud of you. Although it did take a few years, and your attempt at becoming an internet influencer instead of graduating made us all roll our eyes.
I thought that too till I moved to the Midwest. Between typical insects, chiggers, and Satan-spawned, squirrel-back-ride-hitching fleas, I quickly learned it was no longer a worthwhile luxury in those parts. Stupid vermin. 😡
@@privatelyprivate3285 You forgot the pollen. My purple sheets turned yellow and crunchy the one time I thought I might be kinder to the environment by line drying. I feel like mother nature peed on them and gave me the middle finger.
Don't leave your pets outside at night, think of the coyotes. Thank goodness for Britbox, it helped me to remain sane thru the Pandemic, as did RUclips.
As a homeowner, I learned long ago to expect and budget for at least one major house expense a year, whether that's replacing the roof, paving the driveway, upgrading the electrical or plumbing system, building a deck, replacing the HVAC (Heating, Ventilation & Air Conditioning) system, etc. I found it to be a good rule of thumb, and if nothing major was needed, allowed for a room remodel and/or replacing appliances.
That is a realistic way to provide for keeping up your home, which is your biggest investment (I call mine my "nursing home insurance"!) That's what I do. One thing at a time, one thing every year.
Ah, yes. The joys of home ownership. Like when I bought my house and during the first heavy thunderstorm, my fireplace began to weep. Inconsolably. Sigh..
I can relate as I inherited my grandparents place that was built in the mid 50's, and last year we had to have the fireplace resealed, and capped because of leaks, and man that was a pain in the wallet, now in the winter we put one of those electric radiant fireplace style heaters in the insert
Yeah lots of homebuyers don't ask about a fireplace inspection. You don't want to light fires without one, in case there are cracked pipes or a squirrel's nest inside.
I'd never by a house in an HOA but I live in one of those "right to dry" States so it could be a reflection of an attitude of my lifestyle/surroundings. I'd end up very cranky and not enjoying my life in my own home if someone knocked on my door telling me which flowers, etc. I can plant. nope, not for me!
I live in Florida and the lowest we set our air conditioning is 72, and people are always cold when they come in. When you said 75 outside and you were toasty, it made me lol.
72 !!! Yikes . I think my teeth chattered LOL I've lived in Florida for 60 years, the ac goes on only if it's in the mid 90s outside. Set to 80-82 inside. Less bothered by the heat outside that way. Growing up, we had fans, never a/c. However, i am a wimp come florida winter. When it drops to 50, i barely leave the house ! 😂
I live in Oklahoma and our AC is set to 75 in the summer. It's hilarious he thinks that's toasty. I don't start feeling toasty until at least 78 inside!
If you lost your AC on a 75 degree F day consider yourself very lucky. Normally the AC picks the hottest day of the year to roll over and die. Expect the furnace to die on the coldest day in January.
Lots of folks do not maintain their HVAC system ,Change filters on a regular basis ,Clean your out door compressor ,your plastic pipe that carriers water from the AC ,and furnace if A high efficiency needs to be cleaned too bleach works well . Save the Bees !! we need them .
So you fixed the AC by changing the filter? I would keep an eye on it, I don't think it is through acting up. I'm for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, HOA's don't really equate with that.
It is possible to "fix" an ac by changing the filter. AC systems require a minimum amount of air flow to work and the coils can ice up if there is no airflow.
5:13 "discarded piece of drain pipe" Not a drain pipe, nor is it any other kind of pipe. I know this, because I am familiar with the official specifications for pipe, and several criteria for pipe are unmet. I list those criteria below. I couldn't quite tell, but it looks like it could be a piece of rain gutter. What I was able to tell for certain is that those two pieces of green plastic upon which you laid it are - guess what? - rain diverters! Also known variously as splash blocks, decorative gutter downspout extensions, splashguards, foundation water diverters, and rain gutter guards, they are available at your local home center or online - but you already have two of them. And please, stop shopping at the home center with the initials HD - they are evil incorporate. Government Pipe Specifications Written by Pastor Tim Published: 02 October 2008 PrevNext 1. All pipe is to be made of a long hole, surrounded by metal or plastic centered around the hole. 2. All pipe is to be hollow throughout the entire length - do not use holes of different length than the pipe. 3. The I.D. (inside diameter) of all pipe must not exceed the O.D. (outside diameter) - otherwise the hole will be on the outside. 4. All pipe is to be supplied with nothing in the hole so that water, steam or other stuff can be put inside at a later date. 5. All pipe should be supplied without rust - this can be more readily applied at the job site. N.B. Some Vendors are now able to supply pre-rusted pipe. If available in your area, this product is recommended as it will save a lot of time on the job site. 6. All pipe over 500 ft (153m) in length should have the words "long pipe" clearly painted on each end, so the Contractor will know it is a long pipe. 7. Pipe over 2 miles (3.2 km) in length must have the words "very long pipe" painted in the middle, so the Contractor will not have to walk the entire length of the pipe to determine whether or not it is a long pipe or a very long pipe. 8. All pipe over 6" (152 mm) in diameter must have the words "large pipe" painted on it, so the Contractor will not mistake it for small pipe. 9. Flanges must be used on all pipe. Flanges must have holes for bolts quite separate from the big hole in the middle. 10. When ordering 90 degrees, 45 degrees or 30 degrees elbow, be sure to specify right hand or left hand; otherwise you will end up going the wrong way. 11. Be sure to specify to your vendor whether you want level, uphill or downhill pipe. If you use downhill pipe for going uphill, the water will flow the wrong way. 12. All couplings should have either right hand or left hand thread, but do not mix the threads - otherwise, as the coupling is being screwed on one pipe, it is unscrewed from the other. Created: 02 October 2008 Last Updated: 13 July 2011
We bought some property and had a house put on it last year. The only problem so far is not having the green stuff on the ground called grass. We finally got around to seeding the lawn, then a wonderful drench of a rainstorm washed a lot of it into areas it needn't be. But, alas! The grass has started germinating! We still have some bare spots. Those will be dealt with this fall. Also, we are not in a HOA development! Yay!
Coyotes are looking for some mammals to eat... like your pets! Please keep your pets inside at night (I'm sure you do!)! I live in the Tensaw Delta of Mobile Bay in Alabama. We have them too & they are very active this time of year (April-June) as they have just had their litter. Cheers!🍷
For your cotton covered AC condensor unit. Highly recommend getting a Leaf blower that also has a leaf bagging arrangement. They are great for cleaning up the cotton and other tree droppings.
Be sure to clean your gutters in the late fall as clogged gutters will also cause water issues. I'm in Chicagoland and have mine done the week before Thanksgiving just after all the leaves have fallen. There's also Leafguard which keeps debris out, then you never have to clean them yourself.
The first thing my dad told me and my new brjde when we bought our 1st house is to always have a significant stash of cash the house can eat. And eat it did. 28 years later, his words still haunt me as does the tens of thousands of dollars spent on the house.
Try an older mobile home. When you factor in the smaller size of the furnace enclosure, different duct sizes, different floor register sizes, minimal insulation, etc. and the fact that you live in a metal-clad box in a region with a record high of 115F and a record low of -29F, even replacing a dead furnace can be fun. When you end up with a custom Rheem Heat Pump designed with all of the above taken into account and sized to accommodate the normal highs and lows rather than the seasonal averages, you end up with a $17k installation...
I gave the same advice to a friend. If your mortgage is $2500/mo, also set $500 aside for repairs/unexpected sundries. After living in my house for 25 years, i calculated i spent double the cost of the home's purchase price on repairs. Homeownership is great as long as the house doesn't own you. If you can afford it, buy new when you can.
@@kevincrosby1760 Heat pumps have been proven to not do all that they claim. They are not as efficient or cost effective as they have been made out to be. There are several YT videos from people who are not happy with the Heat pump they had installed.
@@avalerie4467 agreed. Just like anything else we spend significsnt funds on, it's an investment. I'm 50 and just retired, so our house and paying it off is part of our retirement plan. If you think about it, most people spend a huge part of their life paying on a mortgage. Why wouldnt you protect your investment?
YAY rain gutter 🎉 you are the hero of the day! Those are some challenging home owner scenarios Lawrence! Sending gobs of good fortune energy your way! You deserve a break today!! Much love to you, your wife and your lovely pup and cat 💖 from a big fan in CT
I do love how you showed a small wolf rather than a coyote😂 and just so you know any predator can be a problem for pets. My neighbors Chihuahua recently got picked up by an eagle and killed. Even after I repeatedly warned them. Not to mention I live in Florida and we have to worry about Gators climbing the fence
My hot water heater just recently had a pipe burst upon which all 55 gallons of water drained out…into the attic on my second story. Oh the joys of home ownership, Laurence.
@@christinebutler7630 We hate our tankless heater. It's so far from the master bathroom (duh, didn't see THAT coming!) that we have to let the water run for a couple minutes until it gets hot. Wish we'd at least gotten a hybrid!
I would never buy in a HOA. So good call on your part. For new gutters we went with KGuard, easy financing and no interest if paid back in 18 months. We are saving for a new HVAC system. Hopefully it will happen this summer! I love your house!
Our city actually puts out a recommended list of people who can fix a variety of issues about your home: plumbers, electricians, painters, plasterers, and many other service people. It's been a very helpful little booklet.
Had to holler at the hubby for discussing money in front of the appliances. Back in March our furnace and our hot water heater both went within 24 hours of each other. Luckily tax return went in our bank account shortly after.
One thing that was wild when I spent a semester in London was the fact that while my host family owned a dryer, they never used it. My jeans were so loose by the time I came home after five months of hang drying them. I missed the perks like light clothing shrinkage and warm bedsheets (drying on the radiator can only do so much).
I was a homeowner for 16 years. Fortunately, I rarely had any interaction with my HOA except for them raising my dues. However, the home repairs were too high and the taxes kept going up. Since I live in Raleigh, NC I was able to sell my house last year at a 100% profit. I am now renting an apartment. Granted apartment rentals are extremely high but when you consider that I do not pay a mortgage, property tax or HOA dues, it comes out even. One really nice benefit is when the sink got clogged, maintance came out and fixed it without any extra cost to me. Anyway, enjoy your home. You've and your lovely wife have definitely earned it.
(Not) Thinking like this is what keeps people from getting ahead in life. You quite simply cannot save money long term by renting. How do you think your landlord is paying all those costs you're "saving" like repairs, taxes, and mortgage? He's paying them out of your rent, with some profit left over to go in his pocket. Landlords don't lose money renting their properties. They make money. How would that be possible if you could save money by renting?
There's a large urban population of coyotes in the Chicago area. They aren't much of a bother and don't like being around people, and can help with keeping populations of rabbits and other critters in check. The only thing you need to worry about with the coyotes is your puppy. Just make sure that you are outside with your pup when you let them outside to do their business, especially at night. Because coyotes can snatch up a small pet for super.
I haven’t been to England for 20 years, but I just think they remember enjoying the different architecture even from home to home. But a couple of things struck me as dumb. One being the presence of a hot water heater on the second floor of the house. I had relatives who were getting some work done outside and somebody bent the drain pipe to the hot water heater and their entire house filled up with water. Many thousands of dollars in damage.
You should keep that temporary drain gutter permanently. It has the advantage that you can move it out of the way whenever you need to, such as during yard work or any other activity in the yard, and just put it back when you're done. A permanent pipe will sometimes be in the way.
When I lived in the UK, there were some homeowner surprises, as well... mostly related to plumbing. The first thing I noticed was that when I turn on a little hot water and a little cold water, in order to get a warm stream, I did not get a warm stream. I got an icy cold stream and a scalding hot stream coming out of the same faucet, yet still separate. It turns out this is by law. When I asked a friend how I was supposed to get warm water to wash my face, I was told, "That is what the basin is for." I said, "OK, I can live with that in my own home, where I can make sure the basin is clean. What about public toilets where people spit and probably piss in the sinks?" His reply was, "Thanks a lot. Now I can never wash my face in a public toilet again." One day, the hot water stopped working. Nothing would come out of most of the faucets, except one. I called a plumber. He looked at me kind of crosseyed and asked, "What? You've never experienced vapor lock before?" No. I hadn't. He showed me the trick to force cold water backwards into the hot water pipes. This is a trick that you couldn't do with a mixer faucet... but then I have never needed to with mixer faucets. The plumber was nice and did not charge me for teaching me this trick that every child in the UK already knows. One day, the water coming out of my faucets was brown. Very brown. I was about to call someone when my neighbor came by to warn me to not drink the water. Apparently, a construction crew had hit a water main and mud was getting into the system. She told me that they were fixing the system and that after it was fixed I would need to run the water until the water cleared. After the system was repaired, I opened all of my taps and let the water run... and run... and run... It did not seem to be getting better. I asked my neighbor if her water was clear and she said that it was. Then she told me about "the tank". In the UK: no water towers. Instead, everyone has their own reservoir in the attic to provide water pressure. So I went up to inspect the tank. There was about 3 inches of mud in the tank. My neighbor said that was not uncommon and that if I let the water continue to run, eventually the water would clear and the mud would just be a sediment in the tank... nothing to worry about. For me, this was unacceptable. I drained the tank. Then I removed the mud. Then I flushed the tank several times. My neighbor was stunned. First because she had never heard of anyone cleaning their tank and second from the huge pile of mud that I had removed from the tank - about 3 buckets full. She was also concerned about the smell of the mud - it was pretty foul. I learned later that several of my neighbors had their tanks cleaned over the next couple of weeks. On a related note. After I cleaned the tank and refilled it, the rafters of the house creaked for days from the restoration of the weight of the water. I kept half expecting the tank to come crashing through the ceiling at any moment.
@@TheMcspreader As near as I can tell the regulations concerning NRVs were introduced in 2014. The house I lived in was built in the mid 1980's and I lived there in the mid to late 1990's.
"...she had never heard of anyone cleaning their tank...the smell of the mud - it was pretty foul....several of my neighbors had their tanks cleaned..." It sounds like word traveled fast and a bunch of people went from a state of 'ignorance is bliss' to a state of 'we are drinking poo and it has got to go!'. Question: How does one open one of these tanks to clean it?
@@WildBikerBill Mine was just an open tank in the attic. No lid, or anything. Crazy. I turmed off the feed valve, drained the tank through the plumbing, reached in with a makeshift shovel, and filled buckets. When most of the mud was gone, I turned the feed back on (still draining) and used a brush to scrub it down.
@@scytaleghola5969'No lid, or anything' - Wow. I was imagining something like a standard American water heater and wondering how on earth do you get inside to clean it? But nothing at all - so any dust, dirt, or other filth blowing in the air, or bugs, or animals could leave almost anything behind. I think I would put some sort of rubber trim over the top edge, then a metal sheet across the top to at least semi-seal it from the environment.
Not being in an HOA was our number one requirement when we started shopping for houses. And, yes, coyotes are thick in IL. On the one hand it's good for keeping the rodent and trash panda (raccoon) population down, on the other anything small to medium critter sized is at risk of becoming a coyote snack, so you have to be careful about pets and smaller livestock. (One recently tried to get one of my sister's kids--as in goats.)
Lawrence, have you done a video on any changes your English pronunciation has undergone since you moved to the States? Also, do you think you'll ever do another Brit vs. American pronunciation battle with the wife? Those were fun!
Ooooh, Lawrence, you've actually given me an interesting tidbit of information. Yes, you frequently toss out info tidbits like pet snacks, but they're usually MidWest-specific bits. Now, from your helpful map of states that are clothesline protective, I know that my state jumped on that bandwagon, which somehow silently slipped by me, which I don't think is the usual way of bandwagons. This is only important because I have a nostalgic memory of the clotheslines in my backyard, that are probably not there, anymore. But, still, I can mention it to my mama, who will smile and go into one of her stories of the old days. Priceless.
This reminds me precisely why we sold our home. I am enjoying no-maintenance at the moment. As for the boiler room , I highly recommend finding an HVAC company that will come out twice a year to service/clean/check the furnace in the early fall and air conditioner in the spring. It is worth every penny. Plus if they miss something, you then have a record and can hold them accountable for any repairs. Good luck.
We have a house with older clay pipes- and recently discovered that tree roots are growing inside them, flooding our basement (which is half our living space) and causing a huge problem
Yikes I'm sorry. I remember the same thing happened to my parents house when I was a teen. I remember the plumbing was out of order for quite a few weeks.
for the roots.. go to a local rental place get a power sewer auger with a root cutter, find the main clean out, remove the cap and feed the cutter in... that will clean them out... not easy or clean , but, cheaper than hiring someone to do it,, after that get root killer ( copper sulphate) you just add it once a month to a toilet and flush . keeps the roots from growing back
My parents' house has this problem. They hired someone to clean out the roots, and it hasn't been a problem in years. Unfortunately, to actually put in a new pipe would cost a fortune, as the city won't pay for the portion under the street, so my parents would have to pay to dig up the road and then to repave it.
The Virginia deer are too. My yard is deer super highway. I've spent the last 3 years experimenting with what they will and will not eat. Now I have way less deer, because they don't like my menu!
It seems to me that the USA has not cottoned on to the concept of a soakaway! Why discharge a rainwater pipe so close to the building that the water finds its way into the basement? Connect the pipe to an underground drain and terminate it 5m from the building in a soakaway where the water will just permeate the ground harmlessly.
Squirrels love to eat daffodil bulbs! I grew up in Seattle in the 1960’s-70’s and we, and most of our neighbors had clotheslines. My take is that as both spouses began to work outside the house from the later 1970’s on, the clothesline gave way to drying everything in the dryer. It was easier and quicker to just pull things from the washer and toss them in the dryer in the evening after work.
Good Lord, Laurence! 75 degrees is not hot! It's been 96 degrees already here in sunny Tennessee this year..Once long ago in the dark ages when I was a kid, we visited my father's brother just west of El Paso, Texas! It was so hot there (100+) that when we hung out all the baby diapers on the line, by the time we had hung up the last one the first one on the line was already dry! Yes, it was hot as Hades, AND the humidity was hovering around 1%. Now that's hot and dry!
I am a first time homeowner; I moved from West Coast(Oregon) to the East Coast(Georgia) to a city I'd never even visited before. Although not quite "Lost in the Pond", it's definitely been something of a culture shock. Your videos about the joys and nightmares of owning a home have definitely resonated with me. And while I've never had to deal with an onslaught of squirrels, I've had my own share of nasty surprises. I've found myself on more than one occasion thinking " If Lawrence had to deal with this, he'd been grateful for the squirrels!" PS- I put up a clothes line shortly after moving in and I think that they are absolutely wonderful. Although I recently purchased a fancy new clothes washer and dryer and I've been somewhat concerningly enamored with them. The first time I ran a load through the washing machine, I literally sat on the floor watching the clothes go round and round for a good fifteen minutes or so. Not so marvelous as an episode of "Lost in the Pond" but a marvel nonetheless.
I’m in SW WA (and am from SE Alaska) & the majority of the “modern” houses (circa 1970s) and all the older houses here don’t have AC either. There are lots of heat pumps which don’t do well above 85 degrees or below 31 degrees 🤣. Also, HOA aren’t something I’m familiar with either. The USA is such a massive country that a USA vs Britain comparison doesn’t always work. Perhaps a NE USA or a Midwest USA vs Britain would work better. So many of the things Lawrence describes are also things that I am not familiar with either 🤷🏻♀️
I grew up in Bolingbrook, IL (SW suburbs of Chicago), in a house that I think was built in the 1960s, and it had a retractable clothesline in the backyard. The clothesline was kept in a spring-loaded spool attached to the back wall of the house. You just pulled it out and attached it to a freestanding post at the back of the yard when you wanted to use the line. My parents only used it in fair weather as a convenience, not out of some urgent need to avoid using the dryer in our basement - though a bit of cost saving certainly also appealed. Bolingbrook was named after the family name of two English kings, Henry V and VIII (Bolingbroke). As a child, I was told that many of the village's oldest streets were named after English authors.
Laurence - be sure to take a garden hose and was down those 'box things' outside the house too. If you can stick the hose down inside them and wash the inside of the walls out even better. This will also help keep your central air system running well. We try to wash ours down after every time we mow the lawn.
I kind of found it funny that you were hot at only 75. That's just spring temp. Ah yes all the critters that visit the homeowners property. Coyotes are mostly running around after dark so I wouldn't worry to much as long as you keep your pets inside then. We have them in Pa and they are good for keeping a rodent population down. Glad to hear the squirrel problem got solved. We had that freezing in our air conditioner before, it usually happens to us when it's really hot like in the 90's.
Speaking of critters, don't worry about possums. They only look scary because they have that marsupial "that is too many teeth my god" thing going on, but they'll just hiss at you and then go back to cleaning up ticks.
U.S. homeowner here- when my dryer broke down, I stretched some rope across my garage and pointed a 20" fan at it to dry my clothes. I still do that sometimes for items that aren't supposed to be dried in a dryer. I don't have an HOA, but the cost of putting a clothesline in my yard wouldn't be worth it since I rarely need one. And many common problems with dryers can be resolved cheaply on your own, like mine just needed a $50 part that was easily accessed and replaced.
When you were putting the gutter below the downspout pipe, underneath it I glimpsed 2 green objects. Didn't get a close enough look, but I'm pretty certain those are intended to do what you are using the gutter piece to do. Place one of them beneath the down spout and it diverts the water away from the house.
Did you notice the green things you stuck the discarded drain pipe on? Those are supposed to be used for that exact purpose. Also, did you call a furnace room a boiler room?
The problem is that over time the heights of things change and those green channels don't make enough of a ramp or the force of the rain is so hard that the curved attached extensions fall off if you don't put in screws. I gave in to the ugly corrugated spout extensions. Once the water drains several feet away from the foundation the basement stays dry.
The vast majority of British houses use radiators for heating, which, obviously, require hot water, which is supplied by a boiler. US houses generally use hot air to heat the rooms and thus require a furnace.
@@acmeopinionfactory8018 I'm aware. I was just being a smartass. Plus, I don't know anyone in the midwest who refers to a furnace room as a boiler room.
Back in the day, when I purchased my first home to live-in; that was Miami in the early 1990s, first mortgages with rates of 8 to 9% and 9% to 10% were typical. People will have to accept the possibility that we won't ever return to 3%. If sellers must sell, home prices will have to decline, and lower evaluations will follow. Pretty sure I'm not alone in my chain of thoughts.
If anything, it'll get worse. Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone want to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes.If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
I will be happy getting assistance and glad to get the help of one, but just how can one spot a reputable one?
Rebecca Noblett Roberts is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search for her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
One thing you quickly learn as a homeowner: if something breaks you either fix it or you find out that there is no one to call that doesnt cost a lot of money.
You also marvel at the way emergencies requiring expertise beyond what you can Google laways occur on weekends and/or national holidays.
Just spent $3K over the past several months getting my AC and Sprinkler system up to snuff.
As my dad always said, "A man's home is his hassle".
Amen, brother, amen!
The scary thing is when mold is growing inside your central air conditioner, and you get mold toxicity and neurological and respiratory issues. Yet you can’t see inside the plenum or duct, and the HVAC technicians have your life in their hands. True story here in America.
Thank you, discarded piece of drainpipe, for assisting in preventing the house slowly turning into a swimming pool. You are truly doing a service and providing peace of mind while a permanent solution is in the works.
Indeed. Three cheers for discarded drain pipe. 🙂
It isn't discarded, it's been put there on purpose.
Lawrence, Might you ever choose to discuss the prevalence of crooked teeth in British people, or is that a forbidden subject? This has been true long enough that I dont think it’s probable that it can be blamed on the NHS, although I do wonder if they include orthodontia in their health coverage.
I had braces as a child, as did one of my four children, so I’m not holding myself up as a paragon of perfection, teeth-wise. But it does seem a common occurrence among Brits.
Coyotes are no joke. Supervise your puppy at all times when outdoors. Believe it or not, coyotes can, and do, climb fences.
And don't let your cat roam outside. Coyotes eat small pets.
And have rabies which is deadly for humies as well.
However, most coyotes are afraid of humans and will steer clear if they spot one. They will decimate the bunny population, though.
@@melbrod3868 The cat can likely handle itself against an individual coyote. (A pack, would be another matter, but I doubt if there are many packs of coyotes in Chicago. The humans would likely band together to do something about them. Solitary individuals are much better at staying under the radar.)
But there are other hazards for cats. Not least, humans.
Coyotes in Chicago?
As a homeowner of an old Scottish home, which is probably nearly as old as the U.S. I am well acquainted with the joys of rainfall ingress. There have been times during heavy rain where I had up to 6 buckets deployed on drip catching duty. I have just spent a couple of weeks surrounded by scaffolding, I have a brand new roof on my ancient pile. Not a drop of water has ingressed, but then again there hasn't been a drop of rain, inside or out. So my roof seems to be very effective as it has stopped the rain for the whole of Scotland!
😂
Our attic is peppered with buckets. Aluminum shingle from the 1940s. I was supposed to last _forever_ :.(
@@bansheedearg😂 Nothing lasts forever,
OMGS, this comment made me laugh waaaay too hard 😂😂😂😂😂😂👍
I'd say thank you for your service, but I am neither a Scot nor do I hate rain. In fact, quite the opposite, I love the rain. But if I were a Scot who happened to hate or dislike the rain, I would thank you for your service of installing an anti-rain roof.
Poor Laurence!!!! 75 degrees!!!!
I live in Florida. WE CALL THAT WINTER!!!! :-)
I caught that too. 75 isn’t uncomfortable. Most won’t even turn on the AC for that.
Discarded drain pipe, you are the best. You are managing to improve this man's situation, specifically regarding the distribution of water away from his basement.
You are the example of what a drain pipe should be
You're not discarded to me.
That discarded section of drain pipe is the hero we need AND the hero we deserve!
I find it funny that it is set up with two downspout diverters being used to give it a proper slope.
Thank you random drain piece.
Salam kenal saudaraku🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩
he literally placed it atop of two water diverters that were facing the wrong way...
Discarded drain pipe, you are superior to that vapid rain diverter, is too flat to do an adequate job during a heavy downpour. You are the best .
Coyotes eat best friends and second best friends. So, please be sure to take care when the pets are outside.
Geez...thank you for telling me, I'll call Jeannie immediately, and tell her to stay home if she thinks they'll be hanging around! LOL. You're 100% correct however, they do like dogs and cats, squirrels, and even birds if they can catch them.
They are a lot bigger than they seem on TV, too. But Britain has foxes, those just seem smaller.
Seconding this, I live in a small town and we get packs of coyotes rolling through town now and again, and when they do several posters go up asking if anyone has "seen this cat".
Depending on the size of dog coyotes can be a threat to them, or leave them alone, coyotes are oppotunists and generally wont take fights where the threat of injury is high, ie a full sized large breed dog.
@@ohotnitzaes, "smaller than a wolf" is kind of misleading, I mean they are, but wolves can be absolutely massive. Coyotes can get up to 50 lbs, and they operate in packs of 5 or 6.... their numbers are the really scary part.
We got them and wolves in Connecticut
Lived in an HOA townhouse community for 3 years and am SO glad I'm out. Fines for grass being an inch too high, fines for not using the correct paint on my doorframe, not being allowed to grow anything that isn't a shrub, no clothesline, no outdoor furniture without approval, no changes to your home's interior or exterior without approval (including remodeling the unfinished bathroom), no more than 2 pets per household (my neighbor was told to give up her dog by the HOA since she and her husband already had a dog and a cat or receive heavy monthly fines), no yard signs, no growing your own herbs or vegetables because it's considered "farming", the list goes on...
I have a new house with my husband, 2 cats and a dog, a tomato and herb garden and we've remodeling our basement. We couldn't be happier.
An HOA is what happens when you give Karens legal power.
I will never live in a HOA for that reason. I will do with my house and yard as I please for the most part.
Germany here: These (ridiculous) HOA rules are only used in allotment gardens where you are not allowed to live permanently. In normal neighbourhoods HOAs would have a bitter taste of a control authority of the infamous Nazi regime. HOAs are the perfect hotbeds for annoying Karens 😂
When we were looking to buy a home last year we were very particular about not buying in an HOA. It was harder than I thought it was going to be. We passed on even looking at several homes that we were interested in because of it.
It is hard.. We live in an HOA.. it's a deal with the devil.
Realtors in two states warned against HOAs---I passed on a nice house due to the HOA, which is inescapable.
Same thing with my parents when they bought their place.
Then, over the 20 years since they bought it, new subdivisions - all with HOAs - sprung up around them (and yes, they all remain mostly empty).
HOAs are like East Germany. The Stasi… I mean the board wants everyone to spy on everyone and rat them out for any rules violations.
Former Realtor here (and our last three homes were part of an HOA): Avoid them at all costs. You are paying them to limit what you can do with your property. Sure they ensure everyone’s home values stay high with clean yard regulations and such. But not worth it. Our current state rarely has any HOAs so buying here was easy. People naturally keep their yards nice. Just avoid HOAs for your sanity.
Don’t feel bad. We made the same rookie mistake with our new home.
We were changing the central HVAC filter but weren’t taking into consideration how bad the wildfire smoke was that year. Which brings us to some advice: if your area is affected by the current Canadian wildfires, check your filters more often than you usually would.
Live in the country in central Illinois , surrounded by corn & bean fields , so we change filters more often than the packaging recommends , because of exposure to excessive dust , dirt , debris , chemical drift , etc. Also have dogs in 'n out of the house - extra dirt plus hair fr. their year 'round shedding . Ahhh... country livin' ... 🌽🌻🌳 💚
You notice how it’s mostly liberal land burning or effected think about it
Good advice! I had to change mine today after only two weeks. It was absolutely filthy!
We just have a 1"-thick filter. I was surprised that Lawrence's house uses the, like, foot-thick industrial filters.
(And, apparently, he has three A/C units? Or maybe he lives in a triplex?)
@@mlaursen Good point & now I'm curious about it too . I've house & pet-sat for large homes & homes that built on big additions hence needing two A/C units ; also wondering about the the huge filter !
Even more weird is that clotheslines used to be standard in the US, so these bans are a pretty recent thing, I've never lived in a place that tried to ban them. Of course, trying to get your clothes out & dried with no bird poop on them before it rains was always fun...
I'm sure clotheslines are still used in arid parts of the country, but for the midwest and east coast, they never really worked well because of the humidity. Once dryers became ubiquitous, people stopped using clothes lines.
@@uigradmy mom used a clothesline in upstate NY in the early 70s.
As someone who lived in a house where the basement was always at risk of flooding despite our sump pump, shout out to the discarded piece of drain pipe for doing the best it can
That drain pipe is the unsung hero.
If you have a sump pump, make sure you have a sump pump endorsement on you insurance. It's the only way to have flood damage paid for on a normal policy.
Same
Thank you discarded drain pipe 👀🤣
evryobody gangsta till the spare pipe starts suckin
One time, I walked into our family room and found a huge swarm of ladybugs on the ceiling in a corner. Hundreds of them. They had apparently come in through (to me) invisible cracks around our sliding glass door. It was like they were having a convention. But what to do? If I sprayed them or smashed them, the ceiling would have to be repainted. And it was evening--there was no way I would be able to get a ladybug removal expert out to my house in the country that night. If there even is such a person. So I gave up and went to bed. The next morning I got up to check on my little visitors and found them all moving together across the ceiling towards the sliding glass door. I knew a victory when I saw it, so I opened the door wide and they all left.
Lady Bugs are good luck. Never kill one.
Ohmygosh, you actually THOUGHT ABOUT spraying or smashing Ladybugs?😲 They are beneficial insects. Not to mention adorable.
@@TheSouthIsHot if it was a swarm it is likely they were not Ladybugs, but probably Asian Beatles which are actually a nuisance, sure they will prey on some other insects, but for the most part they just damage your property. For the OP look at your ceiling if it has a yellowing discoloration you had asian beetles and you should get an exterminator to treat your house/yard to get rid of potential eggs.
@@samanthab1923 maybe but the "ladybugs" we get in the south really are not ladybugs, but a Japanese beetle hybrid experiment by the US government, and Clemson University from the late 50's that was meant to help pollination of crops, but they have been nothing but a nuisance over the decades, and they stink when they land on your skin like a stink bug, so I say the hell with them!!
Leaving behind mini beer bottles and bongs, no doubt.
A good example of how America is different, all over the country. You said about clothes lines not being common, here. I live in Pennsylvania, near the Maryland line. Clothes lines are INCREDIBLY common, all across both states, and into the Virginia's, up into New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Ohio. Plus, we have lots of Amish communities. They use clothes lines, even in the middle of winter. So yeah, that one was odd to hear for somebody over on the east coast. Very common thing.
Urban vs rural maybe?
Many years ago,whilst in Australia,I used a clothesline for the first time.
One of the soon to be dry garments was a pair of boxer underwear,that hat a Tartan pattern on it.
The next morning that single item was gone.
A few hours later,I noticed a Scottish backpacker who suspiciously no longer made eye contact with me.
True story.
I don't blame him, I imagine keeping your undergarments clean is difficult to do traveling in a kiln 😂🙃
@@GelatinCoffee Was the Scott traveling in a kiln or kilt
(Giggle)
@@lurch789my thought exactly
Well, at least you didn't 🐾 find fruit bats or possums in your tartan boxers....🦇
Also.
You might have asked wich clan the backpacker hailed from !
🩳 🧑🦰👣 😆
Lawrence: If you didn't already see it somewhere else, you also need to clean the fins in the outdoor unit with the big fan. Just take a hose and spray them off until they are clean. Just as your restricted airflow caused the lines to freeze, if the fins are caked with dirt, the condenser will not be able to get rid of the heat it pulled out of your house. If you want to spray from the inside of the unit, disconnect the power on the wall first.
I would recommend the use of a power washer with a fan spray attachment, once you've moved aside the top/fan. Lawrence will need (badly want) a power washer anyway, and electric one works well for this, and it will blow the dirt out from the fins instead of into the center of the fins.
Or just get a professional to do it, not a bad thing to consider when it probability needs a service anyway. A/C systems can freeze up due to low Freon levels too, but only someone with a gauge set can check those levels.
@@Montgomerygolfgator been a while since I worked in apartment,s but I think checking the levels is possible without a license, but buying and filling the coolant is not. I'm a bit scared the find out how much those suckers cost now... Was over 200 for certain collants nearly 10 years ago.
Gotta be careful about the washer though. you don't need a power washer to clean the fins, and pressure that's too high will bend/damage them, so best to just use a normal hose.
One of the best things we did was to set up automatic maintenance appointments for our heating and cooling. Professionals come in twice a year to clean everything out and make sure it's ready for the season. If something does go wrong unexpectedly, we're at the top of the list for repairs because we have a contract with them. It's nice to have one less thing to worry about.
@@Montgomerygolfgator no. Just no. You'll bend the fins. Nobody listen to this dude. Use a regular hose.
It might be full of that cottonwood crap.
My worst house events: 1) groundhog moving in under the foundation (hazard of rural living) and 2) leftover plumbing shortcuts and electrical hazards installed by the previous owners, both of which cost me a lot stress and money to repair when they revealed themselves are very inopportune times.
HOAs have been the bane of my homeowning existence. Usually they are run by neighbors who may have a slight control issue. In a neighborhood where all the townhomes are exactly alike, the HOA has jurisdiction over what color you paint your door, if you can add shrubbery in your front yard, the height of your grass, where you store your garbage can, how long a car can be parked on the street in front of your house. Big Brother is watching.
The fact that HOAs exist still baffles me, our HOA fee is $305 and they don't do a goddamn thing. They aren't breathing down people's necks which is nice except we pay $305 for literally NOTHING, they don't take care of the parkways or the parks. Nothing, it's bull.
Let's just call it like it is, it's mostly Karens running HOAs. A lot of times it's basically paying the bully to bully you on your own property.
The neighborhod I've been living in since 2007 wanted to start a HOA and I shot it down right away. It had to be 100% all the homeowners and the street wasn't even filled yet, maybe 1/2 the houses were built. I experienced a HOA and swore no one would ever have the power to tell me what i can and can't do on my own property especially when school and property taxes are about $8,000 +/year.
America: home of the Free.
Unless you want to dry your clothes or paint your house purple or grow some dandilions for the bees. Or strike without being legally mandated back to work or have a legal pet boa or go to school without worrying about being shot or go to school as a girl and have bare shoulders because its hot out or end a dangerous pregnancy or in some states dress differently than your assigned gender, or get lifesaving medicine at the reasonable cost the rest of the world pays or be paid a decent fair wage for your work... the list goes on. Land of the free my ass.
Never, ever buy in an HOA.
Good on you for avoiding the HOA nightmare. When I was house hunting "no HOA" was requirement 1. Nobody is telling me how often I need to mow my lawn carnsarn it. 🤠
Try not *having* a lawn to mow. You’ll reduce your carbon footprint, you’ll do good for wildlife, it will be a lot prettier to look at, and it will be WAY less work.
@@j.heilig7239 Learn that not every joking comment needs to be part of your holy crusade. You are part of the problem.
I am in Florida and we have too many HOAs. The idea is good, but the lack of regulations can be a nightmare when you have an incompetent board of director or a mean one. Some are ok, but thing can turn sour overnight. It helps in some degree to keep an standard in the community but we have situation that it goes to far. Worse part is that unpaid dues can get you foreclosed. 😢
Every town around me has ordinances that require you to keep your lawn cut or be fined and sent a large bill when they mow it for you.
@@TheGreenGrower618 I'm guessing ... New Jersey?
Many thanks to the misc. discarded piece of drain pipe! You have saved the day again as a temporary solution. Bravo!
I'm an American and I had no idea that clothes lines were banned in some places. I grew up on a farm where in the summer we used them and my first apartment, which was a room in a house, had freaking high power bills and my Mom said it was because of the dryer. Well, I started using the clothes line and convinced the landlord I didn't have to pay a part of the electric bill and then all my roommates started using it also. Dryers are a a big convenience but when you're poor they're a drain on finances. You know, because I'd rather eat than have a dryer.
I'm in Australia and everyone here uses clotheslines, assuming they have a backyard. I was surprised to learn that Americans just don't use them anymore.
@dragonite87 there are some places here where it would be basically impossible for 4-8 months of the year because it's either a deep freeze outside with 3 feet of snow on the ground or it's just cold dreary raining wet and icky outside... no place to be drying clothes outside
@@SeanMahoneyfitnessandart Don't forget about the birds! Ohio weather but mom liked to hang the sheets. Starlings & mulberry bushes equal mom shouting with clenched teeth "Those damn $&!'/ birds!"
@marshawargo7238 I can see that leading to some re-washings lol ...
@@dragonite87 99% of my fellow Americans are "mentally ill." Don't you fellas down under know anything!? Eh, I have go see my therapist now!
A phrase that will strike terror into the heart of any homeowner -- "property taxes". Your home can be paid off, and the government can take it away if you don't pay your taxes.
And it’s crazy how much that varies from state to state. Texas property taxes about killed me.
Around us there's a pretty strong correlation between places that are nice to live and property tax rates. No one wants to pay higher taxes but they all choose to move to places with higher taxes!
At least as of a couple weeks ago they have to pay you the money from the auction (minus what you owed).
The UK has council tax - which is levied on the occupier of a property, so if you rent in the UK YOU get the tax bill and not your landlord.
@@mikebarnes2294 Yep, not a property tax and one of the reasons that UK house prices are so out of control.
Just curious. What area are you? Did you find the real estate transaction to be different from England? I know the commission laws are different. Love your content!
I’ve begun to notice all the American idioms I use and hear without realizing it. Check out the origin of the expression “to tie one on”
Hi Laura , Are you an Expert Advisor ? i just went through your channel.What are you into?
@@adamweah8037 Yes i am , My certifications are on google . you could read up by searching my name
Economists and business leaders were voicing concerns at the start of 2023 that the year could be a difficult one. JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said that the Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates to 6% to fight inflation, higher than the peak level between 5% and 5.5% in 2023 that most Fed officials penciled in after their December meeting. Although I read an article of people that grossed profits up to $500k during this crash, what are the best stocks to buy/short now or put on a watchlist.
@@floydchusset3143 There are so many stocks and other assets to put on watchlist right now ,The market is in a favorable position at the moment
You can't survive in the American South without air conditioning. You're spot on about those nasty HOA's, though. It's like a whole neighborhood full of Karens intent on ruining any chance of happiness for those around them.
Yep in the deep south it's dangerous to not have AC, and even with AC, and good house insulation we have our fans running a good chunk of the year because of the humidity that can make 80 feel like 90+ some days, and I've even seen days where it was 100+ where it feels like 121, and we get heat stroke warnings.
Also far as HOA's I'm glad I live in a small somewhat rural town, where HOAs have never been a thing, and no one here would ever want one, in my neighborhood we all just do our best to keep our homes, and yards looking the best we physically can, and if someone needs help with something we pitch in, and do what we can to help out. screw HOAs!!
@@CommodoreFan64 Meanwhile over here in California, the Humidity tops out at 30% most days, but in exchange you get temps up to about 112 each year...
Yeah I was a bit taken aback when he described 75 degrees as uncomfortably hot. That's what I cool my house down to at night so I can get to sleep, and I keep it a few degrees higher during the day so my energy bill doesn't get too crazy.
i can attest to the HOAs... i was the president of the HOA board (272 homes, 2 pools, and clubhouse plus the roads) the rules are crazy.... i had a member harassing another member over their cat... she said the neighbor's cat was "stalking" her kids... yep, had to deal with the most insane issues ... now i live in the middle of nowhere USA, in a "hollar" out past the last briar patch and love it
@@CommodoreFan64 I spent an entire Summer in Florida without AC. I have no idea how I got through it.
Drainage away from your foundation is always a key thing in my book. You'd be surprised what a difference just modest extension, leading rainwater just 4 or 5 feet from the house can make.
Also, a frozen up AC coil can also be a sign of a low refridgerant charge. But pick your servicer carefully. One may charge you just a hundred dollars or so for a service and top off the charge, while another will try to sell you a $10,000 complete system replacement for the same problem.
Down south in Texas, we direct water TO our foundations (concrete slab). Some homes have foundation watering systems. No basements here. We need to keep the foundation evenly moist to prevent sinking.
Unfortunately, my 24 year old A/C uses Freon that you can't get anymore, so I can't get it topped off. Gotta replace it.
@@Beanzoboy You should never have to "top off" refrigerant. If it gets low, then there's a leak that should be fixed.
Cvc
@@chrishebert5672 I'm well aware of that, but it's a *lot* cheaper than 12k to replace the whole set.
LOL! The "bee" in "garage" = "garbage"! I don't know why but I couldn't stop laughing. Subscribed!
It's really good to be handy when you own a house. A plumber will charge a minimum just for showing up, which means you could pay $150 to replace a washer in a dripping faucet.
HOAs often have busybodies who will threaten to fine you if your grass is a quarter inch too long.
Plumbers don't replace 10 cent washers in dripping faucets. They replace the entire faucet, and install a cutoff valve on your winterized faucet and bill you $400.
Here is an issue in America that you wouldn't get in the UK. I remember as a kid I used to live at a higher elevation in the mid west. During certain times of year, deer would come down from the higher parts of the mountain. This would occasionally cause traffic issues and with the deer came mountain lions. I distinctly remember a few occasions where kids weren't allowed to play outside due to cougar sightings in the neighborhood.
and bear season
I think your Mom was worried about a different kind of cougar
We moved from Illinois to Washington State.. kids were on lockdown one day cuz of a bear siting across the street from the school.
I’m always on the lookout for cougars. Around here they usually hunt in wine bars
I can confirm that in Britain we have no dangerous wild animals other than Brexiters
I was told recently that one of my childhood shows is on Britbox. You have me sorely tempted, and when the pen/paper/budget time comes again, I have high chances of using your code!
My mom once lived in a townhouse whose HOA manager (sigh yes this exists) lived right next door, and they had such rules as
1 white backed curtains only, no dark or bold colors, no prints
2 only one car in the driveway lest you get a permit for a second one
3 the garage door has to be closed unless you’re getting in or out or doing some brief yard tending
4 guests may not park in the street overnight
And on and on and on
And how they loved issuing citations.
Every “house” was beige. Or else.
Gross.
She doesn’t live there anymore.
Land of the free!?
I got yelled at by the hoa lady one morning. " Get your things inside - no personal items outside, per the rules".
I had just started renting this condo, had read the bit about no outside furniture/grills/strollers/bicycles. Understood.
However, I was drinking my coffee, gathering books and sorting papers to head to the library on my 3 × 5 little stoop between my front door and my car. I didn't say anything, just threw everything in the front seat and got organized in the car.
Hoa managers have deep seeded control issues and i'm glad your mom got the heck out of there !!
I will avoid hoas like the plague once I'm out of here.
@@frankmitchell3594 Not everywhere is HOA covered, you have the freedom to not buy into the association. I certainly will never buy into one
While it shouldn't be a rule, I recommend the white backed curtains since each room can have its own colour inside but it looks uniform from the outside, where you don't see the room differentiation. It also lets the curtains do a better job insulating, great in winter and summer!
All HOA properties are a no go for me. They seem to be run by what the English call: "Jumped up little Hitlers."
We don’t have a HOA in our neighborhood, we have a Karen. She’s backyard neighbors with my next door neighbor. She once called the city to complain about the gazebo next door neighbor was building in her backyard, so neighbor could sit outside, drink her coffee & watch her dogs play. The Karen said it obstructed her view. Her view of what you might ask? Her view of the back of neighbor’s house.
Oh, that's a really lovely story!!
Makes me wonder if the problem wasn't looking at the gazebo but which window into their home she could no longer peep into.
Neighbor Karen since planted tall hedges across the backyard. She's always been this way. Even when her daughter & I were kids , acting like her poo doesn't stink.
HOAs are a uniquely American creation. It is strange how one society gives you a great deal of freedom in one area and restricts it in another area.
In most non-Western countries in the world, they may have what are called "neighborhood societies" which serve somewhat the same function as HOAs but have NO enforcement powers. If you own your home, nobody can tell you what color to paint it, how big your lawn can be, what decorations you can use outside, lights and so forth. Also, nobody can file "liens" against your property. This concept simply does not exist.
I once saw a story back in the 1990s in Texas where an elderly widow had her house taken from her by the HOA because she failed to check her mail for some violations of the deed restrictions. She had the beginnings of Alzheimer's and did not check her mail anymore. The HOA sent her several notices and since she never complied, they filed a lien against the home and eventually took it from her. The story broke in the media, and I don't recall how it was resolved. What a nightmare! For all the freedoms Americans have, this sounds rather weird that an HOA can legally take away someone's home. And yet, while most countries prohibit civilian ownership of firearms, the US is in the opposite direction in this area. Go figure.
@@tibzig1 You may be interested in some of the videos where HOAs have practically stolen people's houses. One military guy was getting deployed. (Afghanistan I think). Before he left, he informed the HOA, USPS, & all the people who should know. He arranged for yard care. He even asked neighbors to park in his driveway once in awhile. Sometime after he deployed, the HOA President & VP decided to say that he had abandoned the house & put liens against it by posting notices on his door. I think they claimed it was for overdue HOA fees. Some how, they got it pushed through court real fast, the HOA was given ownership & they sold the house to the sister of the HOA President for about 25% of the real value & she moved in. The soldier comes home & SURPRISE! Except.....his HOA fees were paid by automatic deductions. The house & lawn had never fallen into to disrepair & in the state he lived in, there was some sort of law or clause about when a soldier is deployed, no one can take the house by liens. Not only did he get his house back, the HOA was made bankrupt by the settlement, it had to be disbanded & the HOA President & her VP both lost their homes from the civil suit. All the neighbors had a huge block party & thanked him for getting the 2 wicked witches out of their neighborhood & private lives.
It’s SUCH a great feeling when you can fix your ac yourself. Might even be the best feeling a homeowner can have. Calling out an HVAC tech and having them work on it for 4 hours only to learn your entire system needs to be replaced is a nightmare. Glad you guys will be staying cool!
Just had a bee keeper open up my garage celling and pulled out a 5 gallon bucket of bee hive and the accompanying bees. We noticed when there were about 100 bees flying in and out of the corner of our garage at any given time. It's a great sign because our area had a very mild winter and wet early spring, so the honey bees are thriving and hives are growing!
YAY!!
Protect the pollinators!
Bees are fascinating
My Dad used to do that as a hobby - bee keeping. His name was on a list for the cops or the fire department to call when there was a swarm. He'd collect the swarm and take them in the trunk of his car over to my uncle's place who would have several empty brood boxes waiting. My uncle had a bunch of acreage and also raised bees. We'd get honey from our own hives each year.
@@laurie7689 For several years in the late spring my parents had a swarm of bees that would come and live on the tall brick pillar at the back of their house. They'd be there for days. I helped my dad get in touch with the local beekeeping society and someone was always happy to come out and collect them. The first year of COVID he couldn't get in touch with anyone and told me, "Those bees are making your mother nervous, so I think I'm going to spray them." I told him if he did, I'd come over there and spray him! He didn't know about the problems bees and other pollinators are having, once I explained he held off. The bees left after a few more days but they've never returned.
So nice to see someone happy about bees and passing on good news. They've been struggling. I wish everyone knew just how critical bees are to the food supply, maybe they'd get more help.
Thank you for having them removed and not exterminated.
As the owner of a former rental house you have my deepest sympathy. I also really appreciate the way you recount your adventures in housing. I do get a laugh. When I recount my issues I tend to sound like Gordon Ramsey with a particularly incompetent trainee.
Clotheslines are still a thing in the American countryside and in small towns. However, you get softer clothes from the dryer. And especially nice in the winter, they come out of the dryer all toasty warm. 🥰
75 degrees is toasty?! Here in Singapore, no one has central air, split systems are used here. 75 would be considered cool. When we do use the airconditioners, we normally have it set to around 75. Though, in movie theaters and offices, the temperatures seem to usually be set to 60 degrees, which is absolutely insane, prompting people to wear jackets to avoid freezing to death.
I live in Manitoba, Canada and 75F/23C is considered just perfect. We've had several weeks of 30C/86F already this year. Our igloos are melting.😂
I'd freeze at 75F! We keep our A/C at 78F in the summer, which isn't as bad as it might sound since that's 20-30 degrees less than the outside temperature.
@@ToniHinton Reminds me of when I lived in the deserts of Arizona! The temperatures could go above 112 degrees several months out of the year.
@@ToniHinton I melt at 78 F!!!! The melting point of coconut oil - give me 60's and a little shade and I'm fine.
He was joking about it being hot.
As a homeowner with a house that has 5 hvacs - we started replacing most of the hvacs with mini splits - where you have a cassette(unit) in each room. It's not the prettiest - but so nice to keep each room the temp needed - plus it has some feature that if it's really humid it will dry that out. I live in an extremely humid state so that's a big plus.
Plus it's heatpump solution for when it's not extremely cold out.
5?!? How big is your house?!
Even a 4 bed 2 story home only gets 1 unit.
HVAC guy here. Minisplits are great for applications where you can’t fit ductwork into the structure. Beyond that, though, they’re a PITA to repair. Also get ready for another round of “your refrigerant has been banned by the EPA and you’ll need to replace this system soon.” because they’re already working on that.
Information for those not familiar with "mini-splits", like me: I googled it and saw a few entries that said things like this from a heating and cooling place in Wichita, KS:
"Having mold in your ductless mini split unit is a disgusting problem, and unfortunately, a rather common one. Ductless Mini Split systems can be filled with dirt, debris, and mold if they are not properly maintained. Left ignored, the inside of your ductless mini split could become a home for mold and mildew. Feb 8, 2022"
@@TiredMomma depends on who designs the system really. I've seen one house that had a mini split to pre-dry or warm, depending on season, the fresh air coming into a house, that was then through 3 separate units before entering the house. Those were not the only units. This house had 16 outdoor condensing sections, and 11 electrical panels I think. Maybe 12. And that's just what I can say about the house.
Hi Lawrence, I enjoy your channel and the humor you add with it. A major caution about the coyotes is that they will attack and eat pets, especially cats. As for dogs, they’re very crafty in that they first try luring the dog away with playing, then will attack and eat the dog once it’s lured away from the yard. The best thing is to keep your pets in at night and if your dog needs to go out at night, go outside with them to keep watch over them. And avoid letting your cat out at night. Best regards.
Something i really reccomend looking into with you central AC system is getting an ultra violet light or ionizer installed in your furnace to protect your evaporator coil (inside box above furnace with the copper tubes going into it). That coil gets the humidity out of the air and is wet constantly and can grow mold and fungus in it, which can cause airflow restrictions and allergies. Putting a UV light overtop of that indoor coil will benefit your allergies and breathing issues if you have any and kill any mold and fungus that might be growing in it
Wow, cool idea! Thanks for sharing that! I do have allergies, and mold is one of them.
Also, before adding AC, or even if you already have it, look into a good "whole house" fan. They install in the ceiling below the attic.
I open my windows at night, turn on the fan for about 10 minutes, turn it off and the house is delightfully cool. In the morning close all the windows. If the heat's really extreme I might leave it on all night. Still cheaper than AC.
I've got it down to using AC for usually only about 2 or 3 weeks each summer.
@@veramae4098 I grew up with a "whole-house" fan, we called it the attic fan. Works great, to a point. But it doesn't cut the humidity that makes it impossible to get comfortable at night.
Something to consider when installing a UV filter, especially if doing it yourself, is that UV light can cause damage to some air handler components and materials and is also a safety hazard, especially to the eyes, so caution is needed when installing and for use.
Our second house dated back to the early 1900s. Your house looks like it was constructed no later than the 1940s.Older homes have charm and personality. We loved our old house. What no one tells you is that they are behavior disordered. There is a ton of upkeep with them; and for every home improvement or repair you may well find more expense because someone repaired on the cheap the last time something went wrong.
When I decided to buy a house here in NewEngland USA I made it a point to buy one no older than me. It does have central air conditioning, that I never had before. And I had to add water softening. It also has an attached garage another thing I never had before. I owned my previous home for years but it was a mobile home in a park. just as bad as an HOA sometimes. And of course, they didn't earn the lot rent, in my opinion. Not a bad place but you can't beat owning you own piece of land, even if it is small.
i dont agree. i had a new home that was constantly in need of maintanence. the least maintainy house i ever had was built in 1840. it was so much better in every way. except it needed more heating.
@@toadwine7654 Oh, I wasn't saying that buying newer would be better. What do I know about that. I have only had my new house for a couple months. So far I love it. I could have bought a BRAND NEW mobile home and had it put on my lot, but I still wouldn't own the land. And it would be moving without moving. I think I made the best choice.
@@lonelyp1 Hate to be a downer, but if you pay property taxes, you only have the illusion of owning that land. If you truly want to own the land, then you need to look into what is called "Land Patents". It's quite the process but gives you rights on "your land" that others can't imagine.
Knowing someone who knows the right and good people is so key. The general contractor who did our reno is now our go-to guy whenever stuff needs repair that we cannot fix. Glass repair, plumbing, electrical--he knows the best people who won't rip you off.
Growing up, my father only rented a few times, and only for short periods - he considered a purchased house an investment, where renting was like flushing money down the toilet. But then 4 of the houses we owned he sold for nearly double what he bought them for, so for all intents and purposes, we lived there for just the cost of the maintenance.
My dad was raised on a farm where they always did their own fixing.
The key is to know the working life of all your appliances and home systems.
Buy your filters, light bulbs, and such in bulk. When you know your oven, water heaters, hvac, dishwasher, or other things are getting old, start looking for sales - like black Friday sales. Relaxing it before it fails, means you can usually sell the old appliance for at least a little bit instead of paying to have it disposed of.
If you have an older house whose pipes aren't well insulated (and even if you've been told they are) make sure you let your faucets drip when the outside temp is below freezing. If your pipes freeze, this allows for the expansion and the pipes won't burst.
My dad had the "maintenance schedule" in his head because he'd done it so long, but I have to have a calendar to keep track.
Cleaning gutters twice a year, covering the outside faucets for winter, washng the outside of windows so they don't get mineral buildup, replacing critter traps in the attic and crawlspace, checking for termites, carpenter ants, and dry rot. In Texas, we had to water the foundation during prolonged hot dry spells because the ground would crack, and crack your foundation too. In the northwest, we'd pressure wash the roof to get the moss and tree debris off so it didn't rot the roof.
I think a lot of problems are first time homeowners who have never experienced or been taught how to maintain a house so you are less likely to have disasters.
It's very likely, these days, that when you buy a house, the previous owners didn't know how to maintain it. My dad looked for that neglect and usually brought the price of the house down by noting them. What didn't get fixed, he addressed after moving in.
If you can't afford $100 - $200/ month on maintenance, you probably bought too much house for your budget. Whether you spend that or not, you should set it aside for the big jobs - painting, gutter replacement, appliance replacement, reroofing, re-flooring, etc..
Seems like my dad was good at choosing houses that needed some improvement, like a fence, or a couple trees, or finishing the basement, that added value to the property. He was REALLY good at planting a beautiful lawn.
Ugh, I'm getting old and rambling with my reminiscence. 🙃
@jeanjaz- Don't apologize. I found your post entertaining & informative. But it got me thinking that the best house warming present you could give to a first time home owner would be some good DIY books on home maintenance. There are so many things that need to be done that if you've never owned a home, it may not even occur to you.
I actually enjoyed your rambling. In fact, I wouldn’t even call it rambling because every thing you said was on topic, informative, and well stated. Thanks much for sharing!
Your dad was spot on… I try to tell my husband these things, that maintenance is required but he’s just shrugs so I point things out. Our fridge is getting old and I’m thinking it could go out any time so we should shop the sales for a new one and sell this one for 50. We’d get something for it, and the person buying it can invest some to fix it when it does die (it’s about 15 years old and a good brand). My husband just says to let it die… I’m like, what a waste
Some men have no common sense 😅
I recently moved to the USA from the UK and have bought my first American home too. It is unusually old for America, having been built in 1871. It looks a little like the scary house in the movie, Psycho! Interestingly, the previous owner’s name was Bates!!! 🙀
Trying to get head around all of the machinery in the basement is a nightmare! Two furnaces/AC units, all manner of pipes and ducting and something very odd indeed, a water softener! That thing confuses the heck out of me and regularly decided to make the most horrendous noises at 3am, making us think that we accidentally locked a wounded Bear in the basement!
Much fun!
It depends on your location. In Pennsylvania houses built in the 1800s are common.
Hard water sucks! It ruins all it touches, washing machines, hair, you name it.
Believe me, you want the softener...
Good luck
Ahh, I love old house machinery, then again, I love to tinker and fix things, hehe.
I love my clothesline. The biggest expenses and problems I've had with it so far are paying +/- $6.00 every few years to replace the lines and once I had move it to a new spot because the trees became too effective of a windbreak and the wind wasn't getting anywhere near my clothes.
HOA's are a nightmare. My best friend's mom wanted to extend her driveway by 2 ft. They told her no, it would devalue her property. That was after the neighbors were calling the police because my best friend was parking on the road, because the driveway only had room for 1 car. The police came out and said it was perfectly legal to park there. Meanwhile, the same complaining neighbor extended theirs with no problem. A lot of times they are run my power hungry control freaks who love to make people's lives miserable.
Do HOAs have regular meetings for the entire neighbourhood? Are they democratic in any way? In my country we don’t have them, except for apartment buildings. Those generally are only to organise maintenance for the building and its shared spaces.
@@DanDanDoe It depends on the HOA. Mine for example has annual meetings for the entire neighborhood. Additionally, the board has meetings (that anyone can attend) on the 4th Thursday of every month. When there are positions open for new board members, anyone can volunteer and the entire neighborhood votes on the candidates.
I suppose I'm lucky with my HOA. I live in a condo complex and there aren't that many restrictions. There are only a couple restrictions I find a little odd.
1. You can't have a flag/banner that's too large hanging on your patio/deck. I don't remember the exact restriction, but no one has said anything about my American flag, so I don't worry about it. Oddly enough, there are zero restrictions on hanging plants. Many of my neighbors have pants all over their decks.
2. You cannot work on your car, unless it's in your garage (assuming your unit came with one). The caveat is that you can work on your car in the open if it's for "an emergency". The rule doesn't specify what constitutes an "emergency" so people work on their cars anyway (myself included).
And a lot of HOAs won't let you replace your lawn with something more eco-friendly...
My goodness, that is a massive(!) furnace filter.
Okay, this is related to your 1st and 3rd topics: Our AC did not work when DH tried it out in April (prior to the hot weather). We called our very good HVAC man. He came out, did his thing, and found that a wasp had built a nest inside the ductwork. He got rid of it, and the AC has been it’s hard-working self since then.
for the temporary fix for water drainage diversion!
HOA……. We live in very rural county in southcentral Kentucky with a total population of about 10,000. If I asked my coworkers about an HOA, their response would be “What is that?”
2:48 “The box thing” in the garden is called the condenser unit. This unit consist of the compressor, for compressing their refrigerant gas, as well as the condenser coil. Also in this unit is the condenser fan. This fan pulls air through the coil, expelling the heat from the coil, essentially expelling the heat transfer from your house via the refrigerant within your system. There’s some thermal dynamics involved as to how that work, which is interesting to me. It’s probably boring and complicated to most people. Which is why most people pay people like me to fix you A/C, furnace, or air handler.
LOL, the clothes line was in every yard when I was a kid. I know it makes me OLD. My mom taught me the proper way to hand the sheets, the shirts, jeans etc. She had her rules for hanging our clothes for sure. Oh, first rule, take a damp cloth to wipe off the clothes line to make sure the clean clothes were hanging on a clean clothes line.
You’re the first person I’ve ever seen being this up besides myself . Lol! Where i used to live the cloth line would collect all sorts of gunk
What were the other ones? I’d love to learn how to use it properly haha
Ah. The smell of line-dried sheets! I used to wash all my skirts and hang them out on the line in the back yard. I'm sure it was a hoot for the neighbors, but it was a quick process. The only problem is that I get dizzy looking up to clip the clothes and trip on tree roots.
Indeed, considering the number of birds that like to sit on the line. Here in Italy I don't have a garden, but clothes driers hanging on the balcony and I do wipe the line for the same reason.
How do you properly hang t-shirts on a clothesline?
I am a neighbor in Kentucky, relatively new homeowner, and my A/C went out last May... as in 2022. I've had probably 6 contractors out to look at it (4 of them under my home warranty), and no one will fix it because it's in the crawlspace. So even though the unit is not even 4 years old, we are preparing to go through another summer without central air. Thank goodness for the portable unit I bought for my bedroom. Also, right there with you on your feelings about HOAs... they're the devil and will never live in a neighborhood with one.
Stop telling the HVAC companies you have a home warranty. We hate working with home warranties they never pay enough which might be why you can’t get anyone to fix it.
I'm a KY homeowner, get yourself a reliable HVAC person, pay them and get it fixed - then you can fight with the warranty folks. Of course you can get a mini split for the house which will cost a ton, but much easier to have work on. I know from experience.
Most A/C units are either in the crawlspace or the attic. That's where they put them.
I lived in IL in an HOA community for 24 yrs. The only issue we had ONE time was we got a notice/letter telling us that our paper yard waste bag needed to be removed. The only problem was we got the letter on Friday and the paper yard waste bag was picked-up by our weekly garbage truck on Tuesday morning at 7:15 AM! I had clipped bushes on Sunday afternoon and put the yard waste bag in front of the single garage door so I could put it out Monday night for Tuesday morning pickup. I had done this for years with no problem. I called the HOA/property management company and explained about what day our garbage service day was. She told me the newbie driving around our community and others and noting "violations" had been told to stop being so excessive with violations. She told me many other homeowners had called and had similar "issues" but I had been the nicest call she had received that morning. Yeah.... I bet I was the nicest and didn't use any obscenities to her! LoL 😂😜! HOAs can be good. It's just the people enforcing the rules have to use COMMON SENSE and discretion in applying the rules on others.
I'm from the UK, moved to the US this year and have just bought my own first American house in, wait for it, Illinois! So these homeowner videos are of great interest, keep up the good work!
Illinois property taxes are very high. If you move to other states, your taxes will drop dramatically. Just something to consider. Also places like Iowa and Wisconsin have much lower crime rates and stronger economies so you'll be able to resell your house for more.
Again… why the communist state of Illinois?!?! Any place is better than Illinois, except California. Move to God’s country: Indiana. Then commute.
@@Eric-xh9ee Realtor?
@@jaxxon98 are you asking if I'm a realtor? I've lived in the area my whole life. No, I'm not a realtor.
Thank you drain pipe. Your parents must be very proud of you. Although it did take a few years, and your attempt at becoming an internet influencer instead of graduating made us all roll our eyes.
He is a University Graduate, I don’t know what you are talking about.
Rule number 1 for buying a home. Never buy a home that is encumbered by an HOA or CC&R's, NEVER. I am glad you figured that out.
Getting into a bed that has had sheets dried outside is one of life's little pleasures. Ahhh, pure bliss.
I thought that too till I moved to the Midwest. Between typical insects, chiggers, and Satan-spawned, squirrel-back-ride-hitching fleas, I quickly learned it was no longer a worthwhile luxury in those parts. Stupid vermin. 😡
@@privatelyprivate3285 , haha. Right.
@@privatelyprivate3285 You forgot the pollen. My purple sheets turned yellow and crunchy the one time I thought I might be kinder to the environment by line drying. I feel like mother nature peed on them and gave me the middle finger.
Boris the spider enters the chat.
Maybe it’s where I live but when I tried line-drying outside the laundry was so stiff and uncomfortable. 😩
Don't leave your pets outside at night, think of the coyotes. Thank goodness for Britbox, it helped me to remain sane thru the Pandemic, as did RUclips.
You're right, I should protect the coyotes from my wolfdog.
True almost anywhere..... Is front porch hunting permitted? 😂
My 3 Great Pyrenees keep the coyotes away. I'm too old worry about cougars, they're more interested in the frat boys down the street.
As a homeowner, I learned long ago to expect and budget for at least one major house expense a year, whether that's replacing the roof, paving the driveway, upgrading the electrical or plumbing system, building a deck, replacing the HVAC (Heating, Ventilation & Air Conditioning) system, etc. I found it to be a good rule of thumb, and if nothing major was needed, allowed for a room remodel and/or replacing appliances.
That is a realistic way to provide for keeping up your home, which is your biggest investment (I call mine my "nursing home insurance"!) That's what I do. One thing at a time, one thing every year.
Ah, yes. The joys of home ownership. Like when I bought my house and during the first heavy thunderstorm, my fireplace began to weep. Inconsolably. Sigh..
My parents’ brick house had weep holes. During Hurricane Alicia, my dad was mopping up water coming in through the weep holes.
Many of us can relate!
I can relate as I inherited my grandparents place that was built in the mid 50's, and last year we had to have the fireplace resealed, and capped because of leaks, and man that was a pain in the wallet, now in the winter we put one of those electric radiant fireplace style heaters in the insert
@Commodorefan64 lucky you inherited and still complaining 😂❣️👍🏼🚨💝
Yeah lots of homebuyers don't ask about a fireplace inspection. You don't want to light fires without one, in case there are cracked pipes or a squirrel's nest inside.
I'd never by a house in an HOA but I live in one of those "right to dry" States so it could be a reflection of an attitude of my lifestyle/surroundings. I'd end up very cranky and not enjoying my life in my own home if someone knocked on my door telling me which flowers, etc. I can plant. nope, not for me!
I would get junior's submachine gun out.....That's what I'd call FREEDOM!
He came all the way to America to get sponsored by a British company.
He has come full circle.
This is the way.
LOL yeah.
Yes, but he had to work his way back into Britain's good graces first 😉
.... that sells a British product in the US? Why wouldn't he?
I live in Florida and the lowest we set our air conditioning is 72, and people are always cold when they come in. When you said 75 outside and you were toasty, it made me lol.
72 !!! Yikes . I think my teeth chattered LOL
I've lived in Florida for 60 years, the ac goes on only if it's in the mid 90s outside.
Set to 80-82 inside.
Less bothered by the heat outside that way.
Growing up, we had fans, never a/c.
However, i am a wimp come florida winter. When it drops to 50, i barely leave the house ! 😂
75 is a good spring day where we keep the windows open and Central Air off.
I live in Ohio and I too was surprised at him saying 75 was too warm. My AC is usually set to 75. And AC doesn't go on until at least 80 outside.
I live in Oklahoma and our AC is set to 75 in the summer. It's hilarious he thinks that's toasty. I don't start feeling toasty until at least 78 inside!
If you lost your AC on a 75 degree F day consider yourself very lucky. Normally the AC picks the hottest day of the year to roll over and die. Expect the furnace to die on the coldest day in January.
Lots of folks do not maintain their HVAC system ,Change filters on a regular basis ,Clean your out door compressor ,your plastic pipe that carriers water from the AC ,and furnace if A high efficiency needs to be cleaned too bleach works well . Save the Bees !! we need them .
So you fixed the AC by changing the filter? I would keep an eye on it, I don't think it is through acting up. I'm for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, HOA's don't really equate with that.
It is possible to "fix" an ac by changing the filter. AC systems require a minimum amount of air flow to work and the coils can ice up if there is no airflow.
@@nealkonneker6084 Yeah, I know, I am still suspicious though.
5:13 "discarded piece of drain pipe" Not a drain pipe, nor is it any other kind of pipe. I know this, because I am familiar with the official specifications for pipe, and several criteria for pipe are unmet. I list those criteria below.
I couldn't quite tell, but it looks like it could be a piece of rain gutter. What I was able to tell for certain is that those two pieces of green plastic upon which you laid it are - guess what? - rain diverters! Also known variously as splash blocks, decorative gutter downspout extensions, splashguards, foundation water diverters, and rain gutter guards, they are available at your local home center or online - but you already have two of them. And please, stop shopping at the home center with the initials HD - they are evil incorporate.
Government Pipe Specifications
Written by Pastor Tim
Published: 02 October 2008
PrevNext
1. All pipe is to be made of a long hole, surrounded by metal or plastic centered around the hole.
2. All pipe is to be hollow throughout the entire length - do not use holes of different length than the pipe.
3. The I.D. (inside diameter) of all pipe must not exceed the O.D. (outside diameter) - otherwise the hole will be on the outside.
4. All pipe is to be supplied with nothing in the hole so that water, steam or other stuff can be put inside at a later date.
5. All pipe should be supplied without rust - this can be more readily applied at the job site. N.B. Some Vendors are now able to supply pre-rusted pipe. If available in your area, this product is recommended as it will save a lot of time on the job site.
6. All pipe over 500 ft (153m) in length should have the words "long pipe" clearly painted on each end, so the Contractor will know it is a long pipe.
7. Pipe over 2 miles (3.2 km) in length must have the words "very long pipe" painted in the middle, so the Contractor will not have to walk the entire length of the pipe to determine whether or not it is a long pipe or a very long pipe.
8. All pipe over 6" (152 mm) in diameter must have the words "large pipe" painted on it, so the Contractor will not mistake it for small pipe.
9. Flanges must be used on all pipe. Flanges must have holes for bolts quite separate from the big hole in the middle.
10. When ordering 90 degrees, 45 degrees or 30 degrees elbow, be sure to specify right hand or left hand; otherwise you will end up going the wrong way.
11. Be sure to specify to your vendor whether you want level, uphill or downhill pipe. If you use downhill pipe for going uphill, the water will flow the wrong way.
12. All couplings should have either right hand or left hand thread, but do not mix the threads - otherwise, as the coupling is being screwed on one pipe, it is unscrewed from the other.
Created: 02 October 2008
Last Updated: 13 July 2011
🤣🤣🤣☮️
We bought some property and had a house put on it last year. The only problem so far is not having the green stuff on the ground called grass. We finally got around to seeding the lawn, then a wonderful drench of a rainstorm washed a lot of it into areas it needn't be. But, alas! The grass has started germinating! We still have some bare spots. Those will be dealt with this fall. Also, we are not in a HOA development! Yay!
Coyotes are looking for some mammals to eat... like your pets! Please keep your pets inside at night (I'm sure you do!)!
I live in the Tensaw Delta of Mobile Bay in Alabama. We have them too & they are very active this time of year (April-June) as they have just had their litter. Cheers!🍷
For your cotton covered AC condensor unit. Highly recommend getting a Leaf blower that also has a leaf bagging arrangement. They are great for cleaning up the cotton and other tree droppings.
Good idea! There's so much cottonwood fluff in the air right now
Gonna have to use garden hose wash it off. Start at the stop and it will roll down like your making hay bail.
LOL! As long as the HOA doesn’t have a ban on leaf blowers.
Hvac Professional here. I can confirm that water hose works best for cleaning off cotton wook fluff. I hate that stuff
Be sure to clean your gutters in the late fall as clogged gutters will also cause water issues. I'm in Chicagoland and have mine done the week before Thanksgiving just after all the leaves have fallen. There's also Leafguard which keeps debris out, then you never have to clean them yourself.
The first thing my dad told me and my new brjde when we bought our 1st house is to always have a significant stash of cash the house can eat. And eat it did. 28 years later, his words still haunt me as does the tens of thousands of dollars spent on the house.
But you still have a home.🙂
Try an older mobile home. When you factor in the smaller size of the furnace enclosure, different duct sizes, different floor register sizes, minimal insulation, etc. and the fact that you live in a metal-clad box in a region with a record high of 115F and a record low of -29F, even replacing a dead furnace can be fun. When you end up with a custom Rheem Heat Pump designed with all of the above taken into account and sized to accommodate the normal highs and lows rather than the seasonal averages, you end up with a $17k installation...
I gave the same advice to a friend. If your mortgage is $2500/mo, also set $500 aside for repairs/unexpected sundries.
After living in my house for 25 years, i calculated i spent double the cost of the home's purchase price on repairs.
Homeownership is great as long as the house doesn't own you.
If you can afford it, buy new when you can.
@@kevincrosby1760 Heat pumps have been proven to not do all that they claim. They are not as efficient or cost effective as they have been made out to be. There are several YT videos from people who are not happy with the Heat pump they had installed.
@@avalerie4467 agreed. Just like anything else we spend significsnt funds on, it's an investment. I'm 50 and just retired, so our house and paying it off is part of our retirement plan. If you think about it, most people spend a huge part of their life paying on a mortgage. Why wouldnt you protect your investment?
YAY rain gutter 🎉 you are the hero of the day! Those are some challenging home owner scenarios Lawrence! Sending gobs of good fortune energy your way! You deserve a break today!! Much love to you, your wife and your lovely pup and cat 💖 from a big fan in CT
I do love how you showed a small wolf rather than a coyote😂 and just so you know any predator can be a problem for pets. My neighbors Chihuahua recently got picked up by an eagle and killed. Even after I repeatedly warned them. Not to mention I live in Florida and we have to worry about Gators climbing the fence
My hot water heater just recently had a pipe burst upon which all 55 gallons of water drained out…into the attic on my second story. Oh the joys of home ownership, Laurence.
Tankless on demand water heaters are awesome
@@christinebutler7630 We hate our tankless heater. It's so far from the master bathroom (duh, didn't see THAT coming!) that we have to let the water run for a couple minutes until it gets hot. Wish we'd at least gotten a hybrid!
I would never buy in a HOA. So good call on your part. For new gutters we went with KGuard, easy financing and no interest if paid back in 18 months. We are saving for a new HVAC system. Hopefully it will happen this summer! I love your house!
Our city actually puts out a recommended list of people who can fix a variety of issues about your home: plumbers, electricians, painters, plasterers, and many other service people. It's been a very helpful little booklet.
It's a good idea to clean filters regularly. Just like changing the battery in the smoke detector, but more often.
Had to holler at the hubby for discussing money in front of the appliances. Back in March our furnace and our hot water heater both went within 24 hours of each other. Luckily tax return went in our bank account shortly after.
One thing that was wild when I spent a semester in London was the fact that while my host family owned a dryer, they never used it. My jeans were so loose by the time I came home after five months of hang drying them. I missed the perks like light clothing shrinkage and warm bedsheets (drying on the radiator can only do so much).
I was a homeowner for 16 years. Fortunately, I rarely had any interaction with my HOA except for them raising my dues. However, the home repairs were too high and the taxes kept going up. Since I live in Raleigh, NC I was able to sell my house last year at a 100% profit. I am now renting an apartment. Granted apartment rentals are extremely high but when you consider that I do not pay a mortgage, property tax or HOA dues, it comes out even. One really nice benefit is when the sink got clogged, maintance came out and fixed it without any extra cost to me. Anyway, enjoy your home. You've and your lovely wife have definitely earned it.
The HOA in my suburb were set in 1964 and can only be changed by the state legislature. They have never been changed.
Oh you're paying property taxes, it's just part of the exorbitant rent you're paying and no tax deduction either.
(Not) Thinking like this is what keeps people from getting ahead in life. You quite simply cannot save money long term by renting. How do you think your landlord is paying all those costs you're "saving" like repairs, taxes, and mortgage? He's paying them out of your rent, with some profit left over to go in his pocket. Landlords don't lose money renting their properties. They make money. How would that be possible if you could save money by renting?
There's a large urban population of coyotes in the Chicago area. They aren't much of a bother and don't like being around people, and can help with keeping populations of rabbits and other critters in check. The only thing you need to worry about with the coyotes is your puppy. Just make sure that you are outside with your pup when you let them outside to do their business, especially at night. Because coyotes can snatch up a small pet for super.
I haven’t been to England for 20 years, but I just think they remember enjoying the different architecture even from home to home. But a couple of things struck me as dumb. One being the presence of a hot water heater on the second floor of the house. I had relatives who were getting some work done outside and somebody bent the drain pipe to the hot water heater and their entire house filled up with water. Many thousands of dollars in damage.
You should keep that temporary drain gutter permanently. It has the advantage that you can move it out of the way whenever you need to, such as during yard work or any other activity in the yard, and just put it back when you're done. A permanent pipe will sometimes be in the way.
they make a extension that rolls out by itself when it rains and directs the water away . after the rain it rolls itself back up
You can also buy an extension with a pivot that can be tilted up and out of the way when doing yard work.
When I lived in the UK, there were some homeowner surprises, as well... mostly related to plumbing.
The first thing I noticed was that when I turn on a little hot water and a little cold water, in order to get a warm stream, I did not get a warm stream. I got an icy cold stream and a scalding hot stream coming out of the same faucet, yet still separate. It turns out this is by law. When I asked a friend how I was supposed to get warm water to wash my face, I was told, "That is what the basin is for." I said, "OK, I can live with that in my own home, where I can make sure the basin is clean. What about public toilets where people spit and probably piss in the sinks?" His reply was, "Thanks a lot. Now I can never wash my face in a public toilet again."
One day, the hot water stopped working. Nothing would come out of most of the faucets, except one. I called a plumber. He looked at me kind of crosseyed and asked, "What? You've never experienced vapor lock before?" No. I hadn't. He showed me the trick to force cold water backwards into the hot water pipes. This is a trick that you couldn't do with a mixer faucet... but then I have never needed to with mixer faucets. The plumber was nice and did not charge me for teaching me this trick that every child in the UK already knows.
One day, the water coming out of my faucets was brown. Very brown. I was about to call someone when my neighbor came by to warn me to not drink the water. Apparently, a construction crew had hit a water main and mud was getting into the system. She told me that they were fixing the system and that after it was fixed I would need to run the water until the water cleared. After the system was repaired, I opened all of my taps and let the water run... and run... and run... It did not seem to be getting better. I asked my neighbor if her water was clear and she said that it was. Then she told me about "the tank". In the UK: no water towers. Instead, everyone has their own reservoir in the attic to provide water pressure. So I went up to inspect the tank. There was about 3 inches of mud in the tank. My neighbor said that was not uncommon and that if I let the water continue to run, eventually the water would clear and the mud would just be a sediment in the tank... nothing to worry about. For me, this was unacceptable. I drained the tank. Then I removed the mud. Then I flushed the tank several times. My neighbor was stunned. First because she had never heard of anyone cleaning their tank and second from the huge pile of mud that I had removed from the tank - about 3 buckets full. She was also concerned about the smell of the mud - it was pretty foul.
I learned later that several of my neighbors had their tanks cleaned over the next couple of weeks.
On a related note. After I cleaned the tank and refilled it, the rafters of the house creaked for days from the restoration of the weight of the water. I kept half expecting the tank to come crashing through the ceiling at any moment.
pretty fowl 🦆
@@TheMcspreader As near as I can tell the regulations concerning NRVs were introduced in 2014. The house I lived in was built in the mid 1980's and I lived there in the mid to late 1990's.
"...she had never heard of anyone cleaning their tank...the smell of the mud - it was pretty foul....several of my neighbors had their tanks cleaned..."
It sounds like word traveled fast and a bunch of people went from a state of 'ignorance is bliss' to a state of 'we are drinking poo and it has got to go!'.
Question: How does one open one of these tanks to clean it?
@@WildBikerBill Mine was just an open tank in the attic. No lid, or anything. Crazy. I turmed off the feed valve, drained the tank through the plumbing, reached in with a makeshift shovel, and filled buckets. When most of the mud was gone, I turned the feed back on (still draining) and used a brush to scrub it down.
@@scytaleghola5969'No lid, or anything' - Wow. I was imagining something like a standard American water heater and wondering how on earth do you get inside to clean it? But nothing at all - so any dust, dirt, or other filth blowing in the air, or bugs, or animals could leave almost anything behind. I think I would put some sort of rubber trim over the top edge, then a metal sheet across the top to at least semi-seal it from the environment.
Not being in an HOA was our number one requirement when we started shopping for houses. And, yes, coyotes are thick in IL. On the one hand it's good for keeping the rodent and trash panda (raccoon) population down, on the other anything small to medium critter sized is at risk of becoming a coyote snack, so you have to be careful about pets and smaller livestock. (One recently tried to get one of my sister's kids--as in goats.)
Lawrence, have you done a video on any changes your English pronunciation has undergone since you moved to the States? Also, do you think you'll ever do another Brit vs. American pronunciation battle with the wife? Those were fun!
Ooooh, Lawrence, you've actually given me an interesting tidbit of information. Yes, you frequently toss out info tidbits like pet snacks, but they're usually MidWest-specific bits. Now, from your helpful map of states that are clothesline protective, I know that my state jumped on that bandwagon, which somehow silently slipped by me, which I don't think is the usual way of bandwagons. This is only important because I have a nostalgic memory of the clotheslines in my backyard, that are probably not there, anymore. But, still, I can mention it to my mama, who will smile and go into one of her stories of the old days. Priceless.
Lawrence... I think I'm detecting a touch of the good 'ol Midwestern Drawl creeping into your British accent!
This reminds me precisely why we sold our home. I am enjoying no-maintenance at the moment. As for the boiler room , I highly recommend finding an HVAC company that will come out twice a year to service/clean/check the furnace in the early fall and air conditioner in the spring. It is worth every penny. Plus if they miss something, you then have a record and can hold them accountable for any repairs. Good luck.
I second this. It's worth every penny.
We have a house with older clay pipes- and recently discovered that tree roots are growing inside them, flooding our basement (which is half our living space) and causing a huge problem
Ditto.
Which clay pipes? The ones from the twenties which are supposed to drain waste water, either domestic or roof, away from the building.
Yikes I'm sorry. I remember the same thing happened to my parents house when I was a teen. I remember the plumbing was out of order for quite a few weeks.
for the roots.. go to a local rental place get a power sewer auger with a root cutter, find the main clean out, remove the cap and feed the cutter in... that will clean them out... not easy or clean , but, cheaper than hiring someone to do it,, after that get root killer ( copper sulphate) you just add it once a month to a toilet and flush . keeps the roots from growing back
My parents' house has this problem. They hired someone to clean out the roots, and it hasn't been a problem in years. Unfortunately, to actually put in a new pipe would cost a fortune, as the city won't pay for the portion under the street, so my parents would have to pay to dig up the road and then to repave it.
The Georgia deer are always grateful when home owners plant for them tasty, new flowers.
The Virginia deer are too. My yard is deer super highway. I've spent the last 3 years experimenting with what they will and will not eat. Now I have way less deer, because they don't like my menu!
@@karenk2409 what is your menu?
Those 2 green things sitting under the AMAZING discarded piece of drain pipe do the same thing as the discarded piece of drain pipe
It seems to me that the USA has not cottoned on to the concept of a soakaway! Why discharge a rainwater pipe so close to the building that the water finds its way into the basement? Connect the pipe to an underground drain and terminate it 5m from the building in a soakaway where the water will just permeate the ground harmlessly.
@@derekporter7651 Those don't work so good in clay soils.
Squirrels love to eat daffodil bulbs!
I grew up in Seattle in the 1960’s-70’s and we, and most of our neighbors had clotheslines. My take is that as both spouses began to work outside the house from the later 1970’s on, the clothesline gave way to drying everything in the dryer. It was easier and quicker to just pull things from the washer and toss them in the dryer in the evening after work.
Did they eat many of them?! They're poisonous.
In the winter you could hang items for weeks and them never dry!
I love him saying "75 degrees outside" as if thats some horribly hot temperature and not, like, normal a/c room temperature.
He keeps his AC set at about 65.
Good Lord, Laurence! 75 degrees is not hot! It's been 96 degrees already here in sunny Tennessee this year..Once long ago in the dark ages when I was a kid, we visited my father's brother just west of El Paso, Texas! It was so hot there (100+) that when we hung out all the baby diapers on the line, by the time we had hung up the last one the first one on the line was already dry! Yes, it was hot as Hades, AND the humidity was hovering around 1%. Now that's hot and dry!
My AC is set to 82. Of course I do live on a desert.
I am a first time homeowner; I moved from West Coast(Oregon) to the East Coast(Georgia) to a city I'd never even visited before. Although not quite "Lost in the Pond", it's definitely been something of a culture shock. Your videos about the joys and nightmares of owning a home have definitely resonated with me. And while I've never had to deal with an onslaught of squirrels, I've had my own share of nasty surprises. I've found myself on more than one occasion thinking " If Lawrence had to deal with this, he'd been grateful for the squirrels!" PS- I put up a clothes line shortly after moving in and I think that they are absolutely wonderful. Although I recently purchased a fancy new clothes washer and dryer and I've been somewhat concerningly enamored with them. The first time I ran a load through the washing machine, I literally sat on the floor watching the clothes go round and round for a good fifteen minutes or so. Not so marvelous as an episode of "Lost in the Pond" but a marvel nonetheless.
Watching the laundry go round and round is the only reason I want to get a front-loading washer when I can finally afford a new one. 😅
@@Pocchari there are many reasons but it is the only one that truly matters...
I’m in SW WA (and am from SE Alaska) & the majority of the “modern” houses (circa 1970s) and all the older houses here don’t have AC either. There are lots of heat pumps which don’t do well above 85 degrees or below 31 degrees 🤣. Also, HOA aren’t something I’m familiar with either. The USA is such a massive country that a USA vs Britain comparison doesn’t always work. Perhaps a NE USA or a Midwest USA vs Britain would work better. So many of the things Lawrence describes are also things that I am not familiar with either 🤷🏻♀️
This comment even reads British. 🫣
You’re going to have a fun time in summer where the humidity is a 100% and the temperatures are about the same.
I'm really happy for your success, Lawrence.
I grew up in Bolingbrook, IL (SW suburbs of Chicago), in a house that I think was built in the 1960s, and it had a retractable clothesline in the backyard. The clothesline was kept in a spring-loaded spool attached to the back wall of the house. You just pulled it out and attached it to a freestanding post at the back of the yard when you wanted to use the line. My parents only used it in fair weather as a convenience, not out of some urgent need to avoid using the dryer in our basement - though a bit of cost saving certainly also appealed.
Bolingbrook was named after the family name of two English kings, Henry V and VIII (Bolingbroke). As a child, I was told that many of the village's oldest streets were named after English authors.
Laurence - be sure to take a garden hose and was down those 'box things' outside the house too. If you can stick the hose down inside them and wash the inside of the walls out even better. This will also help keep your central air system running well. We try to wash ours down after every time we mow the lawn.
I kind of found it funny that you were hot at only 75. That's just spring temp. Ah yes all the critters that visit the homeowners property. Coyotes are mostly running around after dark so I wouldn't worry to much as long as you keep your pets inside then. We have them in Pa and they are good for keeping a rodent population down. Glad to hear the squirrel problem got solved. We had that freezing in our air conditioner before, it usually happens to us when it's really hot like in the 90's.
Yep I don’t even turn my AC on until around 84 degrees comes around.
@@lizzaangelis3308 Sitting here in Arizona with the A/C set at a cool 79°. 😎
75 to me is comfortable & I don't have to wear a jumper. 70 I need a blanket, 78 and I need to strip.
75 - I assume that's fahrenheit.
That's 24c.
I'd more likely have the heating on. 🤣🤣🤣
Speaking of critters, don't worry about possums. They only look scary because they have that marsupial "that is too many teeth my god" thing going on, but they'll just hiss at you and then go back to cleaning up ticks.
U.S. homeowner here- when my dryer broke down, I stretched some rope across my garage and pointed a 20" fan at it to dry my clothes. I still do that sometimes for items that aren't supposed to be dried in a dryer. I don't have an HOA, but the cost of putting a clothesline in my yard wouldn't be worth it since I rarely need one. And many common problems with dryers can be resolved cheaply on your own, like mine just needed a $50 part that was easily accessed and replaced.
When you were putting the gutter below the downspout pipe, underneath it I glimpsed 2 green objects. Didn't get a close enough look, but I'm pretty certain those are intended to do what you are using the gutter piece to do. Place one of them beneath the down spout and it diverts the water away from the house.
What I came to say
Did you notice the green things you stuck the discarded drain pipe on? Those are supposed to be used for that exact purpose. Also, did you call a furnace room a boiler room?
The problem is that over time the heights of things change and those green channels don't make enough of a ramp or the force of the rain is so hard that the curved attached extensions fall off if you don't put in screws. I gave in to the ugly corrugated spout extensions. Once the water drains several feet away from the foundation the basement stays dry.
The vast majority of British houses use radiators for heating, which, obviously, require hot water, which is supplied by a boiler.
US houses generally use hot air to heat the rooms and thus require a furnace.
@@acmeopinionfactory8018 I'm aware. I was just being a smartass. Plus, I don't know anyone in the midwest who refers to a furnace room as a boiler room.