Originally in print in the
Kendallville Mall, where it’s also cold:
SLIGHTLY
OFF THE MARK
It can be nice to sit in my house
and let the summer breeze blow past us. Or, to get even more breeze, we could
open the windows.
My house leaks like a Washington
bureaucrat. Over the years we’ve stuffed cracks and other openings with
anything we could find: towels, sandbags, small cars, door to door salesmen,
whatever. A nice breeze isn’t what you want come November.
We don’t know exactly how old the place
is, but a guy named Fred Markey carved the date 1879 into a garage wall. Is that when he was born?
When he built the house? Or when he got cabin fever and went crazy with a
knife?
The walls once held blown in
insulation, but over time it settled, or possibly got carried off by mice. Now
we have the annual, depressing, tradition called “winterizing”.
I don’t like winterizing, because
it reminds me winter’s coming. Winter comes every year, usually in the
fall. It’s like it’s seasonal, or something.
Hm … maybe that 1879 carving
commemorated the winter they found Fred Markey frozen to the outhouse seat. It
would be embarrassing to be frozen to indoor plumbing, so we winterize, starting
with storm windows. Traditionally they’re installed just before an unusual warm
front comes through, forcing you to decide whether to take them back down to
let warm air in, or just curse the fates.
I also put plastic up on the inside
of the windows. You put double sided tape around each window, then place the
plastic on it, then curse and flounder as the tape falls off. Then you put the
plastic on again and use a hair drier, which tightens it up so wrinkles don’t
show. NOTE: This does not work on skin.
In the spring, this tape will be
impossible to remove. In the fall, you’ve got an even chance it will fall off.
You can also use spray foam
insulation and caulk, to seal cracks. The main purposes of these substances are
to form permanent crusts on clothing. They’re also fairly effective at removing
skin.
At some point, the furnace has to
be started for the season. This is always a time of great interest in my house:
I’m interested to know if it will start. I have hot water radiators, and the
water is heated by a boiler. Anyone who knows me understands that me waving a
match over a pilot light to start a boiler is akin to Wiley Coyote opening the
latest package from Acme Co.
You know something is going to
happen; you just don’t know if the result will be ashes and singed hair, or a
flattened body against the wall.
But I’m seriously considering not
doing any of that this year.
You see, earlier this fall I put on
the air conditioner cover. Not on myself.
This is a cover that goes over the air conditioner: See what they did, there? My
window air conditioner was there when I bought the house, seriously and
permanently caulked and set into the dining room window. That makes it at least
twenty-five years old, which means whether it starts in the spring is always a
mystery, but that’s a story for another season.
The polyvinyl cover has a couple of
elastic strings attached to it. The instructions say to wrap the strings around
the cover, hook them over the air conditioner, and voila—instant winterization.
Until the first time the wind
blows.
What does work? Duct tape. Rolls
and rolls of duct tape.
Under the forecast of a 20 degree
temperature drop, I got the storm windows up. Then I put the cover over the air
conditioner and waved for a truck to back in. I’d ordered a dump truck load of
duct tape. They dumped it right into my driveway, and other than the dozen or
so rolls that rolled down the hill out back (should have seen that coming), I
was set.
I taped the cover to the
conditioner. I taped the cover to the window. I taped the cover to the wall,
the conditioner to the window, the wall to the conditioner, and I finished by
taping the tape to the tape. There was now no sign of the green plastic cover.
I might as well have skipped it and just made a duct-cover.
It made me oddly happy.
By then the sun had set on my duct
tape paradise, so I did some winterizing inside, such as replacing the
door-to-door salesmen in the cracks. The next morning I pulled on my coat, walked out the door, and stepped on the air
conditioner cover.
Some of the tape was still on the
cover.
Some of the tape was still on the
wall.
But they were no longer connected
to each other.
I said something then that I rarely
say in public, and would be best off not repeating here. Then I stumbled back
inside and collapsed on the couch, where my wife took in my red face and the
steam coming from my ears, and tried to decide whether to dial 911.
And that’s why I’m considering
giving up on the whole winterizing thing. What, I can’t build a fire in the
bathtub and just hover over it all winter? It probably worked for Fred Markey.
By the way, I’ve got some used duct tape for sale … cheap.
I left it out at home for three days ... then had to cook it another minute and a half. |
LOL!
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you didn't manage to hurt yourself in the process. What is it about frozen food that still takes so bloody long to cook even after it's been defrosted?
ReplyDeleteI suspect it's actually frozen in a pocket universe somewhere, where it's near absolute zero.
DeleteLOL!
ReplyDeleteDuct tape can fix anything!
ReplyDeleteThat's my working theory!
DeleteLOL Have you ever considered hiring a handy man. It might be less expensive in the long run.
ReplyDeleteLess expensive to my emotional state, but still not in the reach of my checkbook!
Delete