Monday, October 29, 2007
Let it rain...
Howdy has been playing with rain barrels for a few years, but recently he took the next step and hooked them up to their toilet, so the toilet now flushes with rain water. I love this idea, since flushing a toilet with drinking water (5 gallons = 19 liters for each flush) always seemed like a waste to me.
So I was motivated to find some barrels and collect the rain water from my roof. This also helps my foundation, since the rain water used to drain right next to the foundation, which can cause problems.
I asked around and Jono had a good connection with somebody involved in catering for Picante's (very good Mexican restaurant in Berkeley) and somehow I got some steel drums that used to be full of honey and were used by Cafe Fanny for their granola. Each drum holds 55 gallons (208 liter), which used to be 640 lbs (290 kg) of organic honey. I *love* honey, so I really like the fact that I have old honey barrels as my rain barrels. I have 3 of them (one for each downspout). They will all be linked together and then to a pump, which will pump water to my toilet tank when it is drained.
Tonight Howdy helped me pick out all the plumbing parts at Pastime Ace Hardware, and 1 hour later and $105 lighter, I got parts. I forgot to get some pipe to adapt to my current downspouts, but I put the other stuff together. Here are a few pictures.
So I was motivated to find some barrels and collect the rain water from my roof. This also helps my foundation, since the rain water used to drain right next to the foundation, which can cause problems.
I asked around and Jono had a good connection with somebody involved in catering for Picante's (very good Mexican restaurant in Berkeley) and somehow I got some steel drums that used to be full of honey and were used by Cafe Fanny for their granola. Each drum holds 55 gallons (208 liter), which used to be 640 lbs (290 kg) of organic honey. I *love* honey, so I really like the fact that I have old honey barrels as my rain barrels. I have 3 of them (one for each downspout). They will all be linked together and then to a pump, which will pump water to my toilet tank when it is drained.
Tonight Howdy helped me pick out all the plumbing parts at Pastime Ace Hardware, and 1 hour later and $105 lighter, I got parts. I forgot to get some pipe to adapt to my current downspouts, but I put the other stuff together. Here are a few pictures.
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Foundation finished
As of Friday the foundation is finished. I have a new foundation under 2/3 of the house and lots of earthquake retrofitting (bolting, angle iron attachments, solid blocking between the short cripple wall, retrofitted pier/post/beam connection).
I'm a little bit less worried about earthquakes now. You can see some pictures from the foundation.
I'm a little bit less worried about earthquakes now. You can see some pictures from the foundation.
Monday, October 1, 2007
Leaking Shower
Yesterday Howdy helped me fix a leak in the shower. I knew it was leaking into the crawl space, but I didn't think it was too bad. I'm planning to do some bathroom work in a few weeks anyway. But the foundation guys told me that the ground was soaked, and some of the piers were sagging, so it was time to fix it. At first we thought it was a leak in the water supply line to the shower, but after not showering for a day, it was dry, so that didn't seem to be the problem. We discovered that the drain was leaking in two places, so we bought a new drain assembly, new PVC pipe and a new coupler to attach to the P-trap (that funny U-shaped thing that keeps your house from smelling like a sewer). As we were finishing the installation I dropped a little wrench down the drain. It could have happily stayed there, but Howdy decided to take it out with a magnet. On the picture you see the first attempt, using the magnet from him bike speedometer with a piece of floss, but the magnet was sticking to the cast iron P-trap, and wouldn't grab the wrench. Then we attached it to a wooden rod, and that way he got it out. We thought we were done, but when we started testing it by running the shower, there was still lots of water coming down to the crawl space (where Howdy was hanging out). It turned out that the seam at the edge of the shower pan lets through a lot of water. I sealed that seam later that afternoon with silicone. I showered at the gym later that night, so that the silicone can dry. Hopefully tomorrow it will be ready for a leak-free shower experience.House on blocks

Last week on September 27th they started working on my foundation. They have removed 2/3's of my old foundation, with lots of jack-hamering. Now my house is up on blocks. From the outside it looks like it is floating. The new foundation is going to be a lot wider and taller then the old small foundation from 1919. And it is going to have rebar (steel reinforcement) in it. They are done removing the old foundation, and are building the forms and installing rebar today.
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