On Monday I installed a ceiling fan in Treese's home office, one of
two ceiling fans we scored for free over the weekend thanks to
Craigslist. One was white, the other brown, and both were in very good
condition. I installed the white one and disassembled the brown one to
box up for storage. I figure I'll use it to replace the ceiling fan in
the gazebo at some point since the weather has not been kind to that
one. It's the first time I've been in the attic since we had the new air
conditioner and heater installed, and it was quite a mess up there.
They left an empty cardboard box, cut zip ties, old metal bands, a bunch
of tape scraps, PVC pipe scraps, and more. They also broke the light
bulb and the face plate for the light socket/light switch combo. I
understand being exhausted after a hard days work in the attic but they
did come back a second time to finish the job, and a third and forth
time to run tests so seems like they could have cleaned some of it up.
And also let me know that they broke the face plate and light bulb so I
could have replaced them.
Yesterday I had a handi-man neighbor, Dave, come by to help me with
my roof valleys and gutters. He brought a friend with him who did the
gutters while he did one of the valleys and put some tar-like stuff
around the seals of the various pipes that come out of the roof. I
watched how Dave did the valleys by using a crowbar to push the tiles
along the valley back in place before using his air blower to clean them
out. It was similar to how I cleaned the valleys except I didn't know
about pushing the tiles back up. That only gets the very center of the
valley clean, though, so at some point we'll need to have a professional
remove the valley tiles to really clean the metal area below.
I also trimmed the branches of the tree that was spanning over the
roof, the one that squirrels like to use to jump on the roof. I was able
to get most of them thanks to my long branch saw. Then I worked on
fixing the storm door. It was slightly slanted and so would scrape
against the the edge when closed. Dave helped me re-align it, using the
same screw holes in the metal frame but angling them away to create new
screw holes in the wood. It worked great but then I noticed the storm
door frame was pulling away from the wall at the bottom because the
bottom of the metal frame was being pushed out by that lip of the
regular door frame on the ground. I either needed to take the whole
storm door off and shift it up a smidgen or cut off the little bit of
metal pushing against the lip. I chose the latter as it seemed easier
and thankfully it worked. The storm door is now flush against the wall
and closing properly.
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