- Jun 24, 2001
- 24,195
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- 126
Pic from before it got as bad as it is:
It actually much bigger than it looks because it was expanded in the back.
My roommate and I are renting a house in a nice neighborhood but it was clearly abused by the previous tenant and the expansions done decades ago by a previous owner were obviously unprofessional/DIY. I've never been very handy but the landlady [lives very far away and would rather] reimburse us for improvements/repairs than handle it directly. Unlike "problem tenants," I want to fix as much as I can myself, so I'm coming to you guys for help.
If the hot water pressure is low in one bathroom faucet but pressure is fine everywhere else, what should I check first? The knob? The line? Am I looking for clogs or kinks? Being the hot water line I imagine that any grit would be in the hot water tank and not slowing down one particular faucet. How do I test the water pressure from the line?
There is a poorly-built[, uneven, cracked-up] retaining wall outside that doesn't seem to have any drainage. It runs along the driveway and master bedroom and is CRAWLING with those giant roaches that people around here ignorantly call "water bugs." The wall is very close to the house so I also see them running all over the side of the house. The master bedroom smells musty and the owner described standing water [right outside] when it rains, so the problem is much more serious than outdoor pests, but that's my roommate's room so I'll let him worry about most of that.
My concern is that I see the bugs running across the wall, house, and front door every time I pull in the driveway. I bombed the heck out of the inside for roaches and fleas so I could start moving stuff in but I'm still finding them around the windows, doors, and vents. Clearly, I need to take care of the outdoor infestation. [I used a bottle of Bug Barrier with the motorized sprayer but I think I need to get some pesticide that you put in one of those pump/spray devices with a hose. What should I buy?]
Compounding the retaining wall situation is a missing piece of gutter that dumps water right on the side of the house. It's all green and that part of the porch is clearly rotten. There's another missing on the back side, but I already know that gutters are beyond my comfort level. I think I'll just have to pay for this and pass the bill on to the landlady.
By "bombed the heck out of" I mean that I used 12 cans on a 4 bedroom house and risked an explosion, but I forgot to put one in the crawl space like the landlady suggested so I came back 6 hours later and bombed again (one in crawl space and three more inside). I've been finding small and medium-sized roaches for the last three days so even now I haven't really begun to move my stuff in. Each can treats 2,000 cubic feet. [I have some professional bug bomb that I'm probably not supposed to have/use but I don't know what else to try before calling an exterminator.]
The back yard has a huge partially-deconstructed deck from a pool that no longer exists. I'm supposed to get rid of it [for a big credit on my rent] but there are eight super-sturdy metal pieces that once supported two walls of the pool. They may as well be skyscraper I-beams anchored deep in the ground because there is no reasonable way to get them out without construction equipment. I'm pretty sure I need to rent a chainsaw and some kind of digger machine (Bobcat? Ditch Witch? Seems like I need a straight-up bulldozer from Caterpillar). Anyone here ever done anything like that? I wouldn't know where to start.
Actually, before I do anything else with the back yard, I need to clear the vegetation. It's almost all poison ivy so mowing or cutting with a machete is not reasonable. Is there some kind of herbicide I need to use? What precautions do I need to take so that I can have a lawn when I'm done?
I think the backyard or the crawl space is infested with fleas... I think. Bombing seemed to take care of them inside but I found three on me after coming back to put a bomb in the crawl space (had to go through the back yard to get there). I guess I already asked about outdoor pest control, but I genuinely don't know where to start. I used a whole bottle of that Raid Bug Barrier stuff with the motorized sprayer to treat along the wall, doors, windows, and exterior but I still see the roaches clustered inside around treated windows and doors, alive and well. There must be something I can use on the yard and the crawl space for roaches and fleas.
One ceiling fan has a cracked blade holder that scrapes as it turns. Can I just buy a replacement at Lowe's or does it need to be the same make/model/brand/material for balance? I don't see where the brand would be marked.
The kitchen sink had the cold water turned off. We turned it back on and didn't immediately notice anything wrong but we did check back later and found moisture under the sink. I can't tell exactly where it's coming from but clearly someone knew it was a problem if they turned the water off. While it was on I tested the sprayer and found that using it doesn't turn off the main spout (water continues to flow). I don't have a clue how that works to know what might be wrong, but I can live with it as long as it isn't related to the leak.
Done:
Clear bathroom drain with Mister Plumber (Drain-O wouldn't do it)
Replace cracked toilet seat
Replace set screws to secure toilet paper holder
Replace pull-chain on ceiling fan
Bomb for roaches/fleas (still a problem?)
Sweep away rotten debris from alley/retaining wall
Eliminate mosquito breeding areas
Treat outdoor areas for pests (still a problem?)
To do/do again/do better:
Bomb for roaches/fleas
Clear back yard of poison ivy/overgrowth
Remove deck
Remove protruding/buried metal supports
Replace doors on tool shed
Replace doors on laundry room
Fix hot/cold handles on master bath's hot tub (both turn forever; difficult to turn off)
Fix gutters
Replace rotten wood on porch
Sand and paint porch
Fix ceiling fan blade holder
Fix hot water flow
Fix leak in kitchen sink
Refinish hardwood floors (future)
Clean the carpet
Replace the carpet (future)
Any advice is appreciated. I can't afford to do everything at once but I need to get the pests and weeds situations under control ASAP.
It actually much bigger than it looks because it was expanded in the back.
My roommate and I are renting a house in a nice neighborhood but it was clearly abused by the previous tenant and the expansions done decades ago by a previous owner were obviously unprofessional/DIY. I've never been very handy but the landlady [lives very far away and would rather] reimburse us for improvements/repairs than handle it directly. Unlike "problem tenants," I want to fix as much as I can myself, so I'm coming to you guys for help.
If the hot water pressure is low in one bathroom faucet but pressure is fine everywhere else, what should I check first? The knob? The line? Am I looking for clogs or kinks? Being the hot water line I imagine that any grit would be in the hot water tank and not slowing down one particular faucet. How do I test the water pressure from the line?
There is a poorly-built[, uneven, cracked-up] retaining wall outside that doesn't seem to have any drainage. It runs along the driveway and master bedroom and is CRAWLING with those giant roaches that people around here ignorantly call "water bugs." The wall is very close to the house so I also see them running all over the side of the house. The master bedroom smells musty and the owner described standing water [right outside] when it rains, so the problem is much more serious than outdoor pests, but that's my roommate's room so I'll let him worry about most of that.
Compounding the retaining wall situation is a missing piece of gutter that dumps water right on the side of the house. It's all green and that part of the porch is clearly rotten. There's another missing on the back side, but I already know that gutters are beyond my comfort level. I think I'll just have to pay for this and pass the bill on to the landlady.
By "bombed the heck out of" I mean that I used 12 cans on a 4 bedroom house and risked an explosion, but I forgot to put one in the crawl space like the landlady suggested so I came back 6 hours later and bombed again (one in crawl space and three more inside). I've been finding small and medium-sized roaches for the last three days so even now I haven't really begun to move my stuff in. Each can treats 2,000 cubic feet. [I have some professional bug bomb that I'm probably not supposed to have/use but I don't know what else to try before calling an exterminator.]
The back yard has a huge partially-deconstructed deck from a pool that no longer exists. I'm supposed to get rid of it [for a big credit on my rent] but there are eight super-sturdy metal pieces that once supported two walls of the pool. They may as well be skyscraper I-beams anchored deep in the ground because there is no reasonable way to get them out without construction equipment. I'm pretty sure I need to rent a chainsaw and some kind of digger machine (Bobcat? Ditch Witch? Seems like I need a straight-up bulldozer from Caterpillar). Anyone here ever done anything like that? I wouldn't know where to start.
Actually, before I do anything else with the back yard, I need to clear the vegetation. It's almost all poison ivy so mowing or cutting with a machete is not reasonable. Is there some kind of herbicide I need to use? What precautions do I need to take so that I can have a lawn when I'm done?
I think the backyard or the crawl space is infested with fleas... I think. Bombing seemed to take care of them inside but I found three on me after coming back to put a bomb in the crawl space (had to go through the back yard to get there). I guess I already asked about outdoor pest control, but I genuinely don't know where to start. I used a whole bottle of that Raid Bug Barrier stuff with the motorized sprayer to treat along the wall, doors, windows, and exterior but I still see the roaches clustered inside around treated windows and doors, alive and well. There must be something I can use on the yard and the crawl space for roaches and fleas.
One ceiling fan has a cracked blade holder that scrapes as it turns. Can I just buy a replacement at Lowe's or does it need to be the same make/model/brand/material for balance? I don't see where the brand would be marked.
The kitchen sink had the cold water turned off. We turned it back on and didn't immediately notice anything wrong but we did check back later and found moisture under the sink. I can't tell exactly where it's coming from but clearly someone knew it was a problem if they turned the water off. While it was on I tested the sprayer and found that using it doesn't turn off the main spout (water continues to flow). I don't have a clue how that works to know what might be wrong, but I can live with it as long as it isn't related to the leak.
Done:
Clear bathroom drain with Mister Plumber (Drain-O wouldn't do it)
Replace cracked toilet seat
Replace set screws to secure toilet paper holder
Replace pull-chain on ceiling fan
Bomb for roaches/fleas (still a problem?)
Sweep away rotten debris from alley/retaining wall
Eliminate mosquito breeding areas
Treat outdoor areas for pests (still a problem?)
To do/do again/do better:
Bomb for roaches/fleas
Clear back yard of poison ivy/overgrowth
Remove deck
Remove protruding/buried metal supports
Replace doors on tool shed
Replace doors on laundry room
Fix hot/cold handles on master bath's hot tub (both turn forever; difficult to turn off)
Fix gutters
Replace rotten wood on porch
Sand and paint porch
Fix ceiling fan blade holder
Fix hot water flow
Fix leak in kitchen sink
Refinish hardwood floors (future)
Clean the carpet
Replace the carpet (future)
Any advice is appreciated. I can't afford to do everything at once but I need to get the pests and weeds situations under control ASAP.
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