Concrete cracks.
Plumbing leaks.
You may have noticed that this posting is not titled "The Four Stages of Crack."
That leaves Leak.
As in drip. drip. drip. drip. Leaks never fix themselves. They only get worse. Just ask the Grand Canyon.
*sigh*
It all started with noticing that part of the front yard was damper than other parts of the front yard where things were dying for lack of water. We had cactus to the east and a jungle to the west. At first we thought it was a misaligned sprinkler head, which we corrected, but the damp spot got damper. And Damper. And DAMPER. AND WETTER!!
Recently, the damp spot turned into a pond.
More recently, the pond turned into a lake.
Very recently, I have been having a good time fishing carp and bass out of our lake until it was pointed out to me that I should not be fishing in my own front yard, unless I had lakefront property, which I don't. (Damn! I'll have to cancel that boat order.)
As Scoobie Doo would say, "Ruh roh!"
I called my plumber whom I HEART and told him "I think I have a problem."
Of course, I've never called my plumber just to wish him a good day or to tell him the Houston Texans are sure to win the Super Bowl. (I'll probably NEVER make THAT call.) Anyway ...
Shortly later ...
My plumber arrived, surveyed the property and pronounced those fateful words one dreads to hear, "I'm pregnant."
Uh, no, that wasn't it. I wish!
This was it: You have a small leak.
Note that in Nature there is no such thing as a "small leak." In the Universal scheme of things Niagara Falls is a "small leak." The Grand Canyon is the result of a "small leak."
I'm sort of torqued off that Niagara Falls and the Grand Canyon didn't have to call a plumber!
Seriously, what's up with that???
To make a long and sordid story short, the leak appeared to be where the City Water supply joins the house.
"Appeared." That is, not *exactly* identified. After hours of digging in the mud why was that? Well,
Unfortunately for me, the builder, now sunning himself in Acapulco I suspect, situated that connection underneath the concrete slabs that support our multi-ton air conditioning compressors.
Yes, the water supply connection is located under concrete.
Why?
To make repairs Interesting! Exciting! Expensive! Muddy! Possibly Impossible!
To give you a clue, one of the proposed fixes involved helicopters. Skyhooks. Seriously. Airbourne Plumbers.
I had no idea. I think they construct their parachutes out of $100 bills. Apparently they're light and strong but fall somewhat faster than chutes made out of Euros.
Now we're going through the Four Stages of Leak.
The first stage is Shock. What? A leak? Where? OMG!!!! Leeeeeaaaaaakkkkkkkk!
The second stage is Denial. It's not a real leak. It's runoff. The neighbor watered our yard as a prank. It's always been like that.
The third stage is Anger. How dare it leak! Stupid pipes! Stupid builder! Stupid water! Stupid gravity! Stupid Bill Gates!
The fourth stage is Acceptance. OK, here's my checkbook, Visa card, first born and car. Let me know when it's over. Be gentle.
We are somewhere between Stage 1 and Stage 2.
Personally, I'm looking forward to Stage 3!
Stay tuned to Part 2.
4 comments:
The same thing happens when my Jeep breaks down. The parts that is most important is the final acceptance that this is how it is and life goes on. Pay and forget about it.
Crappy place for a leak. You know if you lived some place cooler, you wouldn't have three frigging AC compressors in your yard..
Major bummer...
So... WHAT HAPPENED?
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