the_siobhan (
the_siobhan) wrote2025-06-07 01:19 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
nothing matters but the weekend from a Tuesday point of view
Steroids are fucking magic, yo. They have returned my cat to his normal bitchy emotionally needy self. They have also taken most of the stabbing out of my foot so I can walk without limping, at least while I'm moving around the house. I cheated a bit and put some of the foot cream on my arm because I officially overdid it with the shovelling, and as a result I can now lift a water glass without wincing.
What a country.
Upper third of my yard is now graded and seeded. My daughter came over and helped. She's not getting a lot of hours at work so she has an open invitation to come over and help me move dirt from one place to another whenever she wants to make a few bucks and be given beer and dinner. It works out well for both of us.
Basement guys came back today - they said they figured they had about three hours of work to finish. More swearing in Polish ensued. In the end they were in my basement for eight hours, but they got it all done. They had to build entirely new frames to hang the doors from and there was at least one hardware store trip to replace borked parts in the storm door and BOY HOWDY did they have something to say about that, but everything is now perfect and the basement apartment has functional doors that work and close and lock and everything.
Next step: I got somebody to come over and have a look at finishing the wood work. This consists of:
1. The stairs from the kitchen door to the backyard. Currently about a three foot drop, which I have been climbing up and down but that's not a perfect long term solution. (Especially in winter.)
2. The stairs from the basement apartment into the yard, are flimsy, wobbly, and don't have any hand rails so they are definitely not code. They are also resting on a base of wooden slats that just randomly shift if you put your weight in the wrong spot. I have no fucking idea what Original Contractor was even thinking. They need to be replaced with something that will pass a city inspection and that also will not kill you when you try to use them.
3. I want to put some kind of a sound-proof bench over the sump pump, because that fucker is loud. Also I figure an exposed ginormous battery is possibly a safety hazard of some kind. So the guy who looked at it said they can build something that acts as a solid bench but you can flip the top up if it needs maintenance, which sounds perfect.
4. My original blueprints include a deck on the kitchen roof. That would be really nice if I can swing it, but we'll see how much this all costs. Mainly it would be an additional place for me to grow herbs and stuff so it's in the "nice to have" pile.
Working around the back door for the last couple of days, every once in a while I would get a whiff of something really stinking. At first I put it down to the mud, but it kept getting worse. Finally when I was showing wood guy how flimsy the stairs were I got a full lungful and went, no I'm sorry this is not fucking normal. We shone a flashlight through the slats.
There is a dead fucking raccoon underneath my back stairs.
I checked the city website and all I can do is double-bag it and put in the trash for pickup. The city trash cans do not have any kind of animal proofing and also my trash can lives by my front door and my neighbour's front door. It smells like Hell's bunghole. So I am going to have to wait until Tuesday to... to pour this thing into a trash bag and put it out for collections. It is already squirming with future generations.
Every time I see my doctor she asks me how the Not Drinking is going and every single time I'm all, FUNNY YOU SHOULD ASK.
What a country.
Upper third of my yard is now graded and seeded. My daughter came over and helped. She's not getting a lot of hours at work so she has an open invitation to come over and help me move dirt from one place to another whenever she wants to make a few bucks and be given beer and dinner. It works out well for both of us.
Basement guys came back today - they said they figured they had about three hours of work to finish. More swearing in Polish ensued. In the end they were in my basement for eight hours, but they got it all done. They had to build entirely new frames to hang the doors from and there was at least one hardware store trip to replace borked parts in the storm door and BOY HOWDY did they have something to say about that, but everything is now perfect and the basement apartment has functional doors that work and close and lock and everything.
Next step: I got somebody to come over and have a look at finishing the wood work. This consists of:
1. The stairs from the kitchen door to the backyard. Currently about a three foot drop, which I have been climbing up and down but that's not a perfect long term solution. (Especially in winter.)
2. The stairs from the basement apartment into the yard, are flimsy, wobbly, and don't have any hand rails so they are definitely not code. They are also resting on a base of wooden slats that just randomly shift if you put your weight in the wrong spot. I have no fucking idea what Original Contractor was even thinking. They need to be replaced with something that will pass a city inspection and that also will not kill you when you try to use them.
3. I want to put some kind of a sound-proof bench over the sump pump, because that fucker is loud. Also I figure an exposed ginormous battery is possibly a safety hazard of some kind. So the guy who looked at it said they can build something that acts as a solid bench but you can flip the top up if it needs maintenance, which sounds perfect.
4. My original blueprints include a deck on the kitchen roof. That would be really nice if I can swing it, but we'll see how much this all costs. Mainly it would be an additional place for me to grow herbs and stuff so it's in the "nice to have" pile.
Working around the back door for the last couple of days, every once in a while I would get a whiff of something really stinking. At first I put it down to the mud, but it kept getting worse. Finally when I was showing wood guy how flimsy the stairs were I got a full lungful and went, no I'm sorry this is not fucking normal. We shone a flashlight through the slats.
There is a dead fucking raccoon underneath my back stairs.
I checked the city website and all I can do is double-bag it and put in the trash for pickup. The city trash cans do not have any kind of animal proofing and also my trash can lives by my front door and my neighbour's front door. It smells like Hell's bunghole. So I am going to have to wait until Tuesday to... to pour this thing into a trash bag and put it out for collections. It is already squirming with future generations.
Every time I see my doctor she asks me how the Not Drinking is going and every single time I'm all, FUNNY YOU SHOULD ASK.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Cat litter is a wonder.
But WHAT KILLED IT?
BOY HOWDY did they have something to say about that,
I'll bet that was a treat.
1. The stairs from the kitchen door to the backyard. Currently about a three foot drop, which I have been climbing up and down but that's not a perfect long term solution. (Especially in winter.)
If my D&D era maths is accurate, three feet is 90cm. With YOUR KNEES AND BONES? Hell, with my bones. Harsh. You might consider getting non-slip strips too. I just bought some for mine.
The stairs from the basement apartment into the yard, are flimsy, wobbly, and don't have any hand rails so they are definitely not code.
Depends how high, but this seems like a job that can wait? A good chippie should be able to do that in a day or less. Do your Poles know people?The stairs from the basement apartment into the yard, are flimsy, wobbly, and don't have any hand rails so they are definitely not code.
lso I figure an exposed ginormous battery is possibly a safety hazard of some kind.
My safety sense is tingling.
But, whilst IDK exactly what a sump pump looks or sounds like, I feel like this an easy solve. As long as there is ventilation/airflow. And if what they build sucks, can be fixed.
It might also be something you get used to like the train.
no subject
Also I don't fix them, and somebody injures themselves, it is 100% my fault because I know the friggin' things aren't safe.
no subject
Steroids are the ultimate double-edged sword medically. Can clear things up almost magically quickly, but rarely good in the long term.
no subject
My sister took them as an immune-suppressant and they definitely had fallout effects on her health. But she lived 30 years longer than she would have without them.