Tuesday 13 December 2011

Washing up by Candlelight

Sunday 11 December

Excuse me – has anyone seen my life?

Anyone know where it went?

Anybody remember when they last saw it?

Information please, to the Home for Distressed Gentlefolk

(Third on the right, past the Museum but just before you get to the Zoo)


Things move slowly in my world, so it was a while before I realised it had gone, and that I’d really lost it, somewhere between the house on the cliff and the weaver’s cottage in the village with an ancient flour mill. By then it was useless to retrace my steps, to try to figure out where I must have dropped it. And besides, there was an ocean to cross on the journey. Could have drifted anywhere by now. It could be hand-beating silver in Copenhagen, or weaving silk in Kyoto, or fishing the Newfoundland Banks, or dancing to native songs on the beach in Vanuatu. I mean, knowing me, it could have ended up just about anywhere. 

But oddly enough, I think I may just have found it again, in a lovely terraced house in Derbyshire, further from the sea than I’ve ever lived. (Yet I can still feel the lift of the swell in my blood and bones.) At least I’m sure enough that those are my own footprints, from the worktable on the top floor, down to the piano and back up again, back up top, to the computer*, up and down two flights of bloody stairs all day long, and a sleepless night or two thrown in, too wired to let go. 

For four days now. No wonder the footprints have become visible to the naked eye, even to my blind side (which I always pretend to have until it becomes impossible to maintain, when clear sight is needed, and it’s obvious to everybody I’m not as dumb as I look and I was only shamming for the sake of convenience). Especially when I can see as far through a brick wall as most people** if only they would acknowledge their intuition. But I digress. As usual. Digression got me into this state in the first place. 

However. It would appear that I am no longer a wraith in my own house. I seem to be huge, all of a sudden – able, creative, and thinking Damned if I’ll just do what everybody expects of me, like eating three times a day and getting to bed at a sensible hour. And each morning after, there is the proof, bold as brass all over the kitchen table. Song. Words. Empty cups. Empty plates. Empty wine bottles. Happiness.

The fact that I may have just spent the last four days reinventing the wheel is beside the point. One or two of the chord progressions sound suspiciously familiar. Possibly because I haven’t played it much above 142857 times since Thursday morning. Altering it again and again, changing my mind, attacking a different bit, changing my mind, and stumbling with a wrong note into something better. I hope I never know whether I have painstakingly recreated someone else’s artwork. It doesn’t matter. 
If I have reinvented the wheel, not everybody can say that. 

I feel like I used to do, before the storm blew down the signpost. 

And I keep trying to make phone calls, or eat, or go to bed, or once in bed at least drop off to sleep rather than read yet another book, but I keep having to sneak downstairs and play it again. Who would have thought that 32 bars and 16 lines of vocals could be so mesmerising? So challenging – “Go on, find a flaw. Find a new chord, I dare you,” it calls to me. After a certain hour I can at least tell it to shut up, because I do have neighbours after all, although they swear they can’t hear the piano through the old, thick stone walls.
  
Apart from all that, I’m none the wiser where it came from. Just fell out of my head, like most things. (Including my memory… and I was so sure I’d put the oven on.) What can I tell you? – the moon changed, somebody read my cards, there was a beautiful full moon, there was an eclipse, the snow came….  Whatever the reason, Stuff Happened. Thank God there wasn’t an equinox on top of all that or God knows what I’d be up to. 
   
If it all seems too rosy to be real, there was of course a small – a very small – downside, the immutable commandment which sayeth ‘Thou Shalt Suffer For Thy Art’, when what it actually means is ‘For This Is Where Obsessive Behaviour Will Land You’. Hence the following texts to Mari on day three: 
(I should add that I was texting from the computer keyboard where I can be as verbose as I like)

1905     Can I put you off coming over this evg? Have a really sick headache. Can’t bear light or noise. Prob through eye strain. Def not up to talking - whispering more like ! xx

1907     oh dear. hope u feel better soon. take care. xx

1909     Sure I will... going to creep noiselessly about by candlelight for a while, do washing up – have just taken pain killers but they may resurface shortly. Noticed my eyes aching two hours ago and should have stopped then. But some bugger kept tying me to the piano stool and shouting PLAY! PLAY! WRITE! WRITE! Should have decked him there and then. xx

1912     And it's a pitiful shame, because I was really looking forward to playing it for you. xx

1913     That Muse is a right tartar. xx


In fact, even candle flames and nightlights were too piercing. Had to hide them behind things. (And don’t mention my lower back. The left side of the sacro–iliac joint is pinging me with nasty arrows and feeling very ominous indeed. And from experience, I know it means business if I don’t pay it some attention.)

But do excuse me now. I have to play the song again, just in case... I’ve left the piano alone for at least an hour while I write this and the lamb’s cooking, the spuds and courgettes are slowly mashing themselves, having given up waiting for me to do it for them, and next thing you know they’ll be peeling the garlic and getting the butter out of the fridge, and anyway my piano doesn’t do Being Ignored very well. At least the piano tuner’s coming this week, not a moment too soon, so that should clap a stopper on its whingeing. 

Monday 12 December

I think it’s done. I think it’s cooked, finally. What a blessed relief. 
Like never knowing when to stop messing with a painting, another stroke would detract rather than increase. Some very simple parts of the melody have their own poignancy…. By definition, they are innocent. 



Oh, and Christmas? My beloved sewing, emails, stuff like that? Let’s just not go there. We’re not looking for miracles right now. Joy unconfined is quite enough to be going on with.



* for the music writing program - type it in, every note a mouse click, play it back to check, and print it out so I can read my own writing, as it were
** the lovers of Patrick O’Brian (Aubrey/Maturin) will readily forgive me using this phrase – and ‘clap a stopper’, come to that. 

Sunday 6 November 2011

How Not to Move ... or Whose Idea WAS This, Anyway?

Not in the style of my last move, definitely, involving a pantechnicon and a highly trained crack team of three who made the whole thing effortless – when I arrived next day boxes had been put in the right rooms and they sensibly left me enough space to walk around and open the cupboards. They put the big tables up for me. They put the beds up. You could be civilised, taking one box at a time from the two designated storage rooms and gradually putting contents away.

There are trees and a boat in there somewhere


it was the white house in the middle of three, on the village green, all very picturesque
However...

Fast forward 20 months.....There I am, still in the halcyon days of the House–by–the–River….   It is this Spring – late March. 
Packing steadily but stalling, truth be told, because I was eking out my time there, making the most of every minute, staring out of the windows at the hens and the baby chicks and the rabbits and the pheasants – wandering about aimlessly with a parcel tape dispenser apparently grafted on to my right hand but pointedly ignoring any actual constructive use of said object. 

When I told my friends (until now known as Friend One and Two, but henceforth to be referred to as Red and Mari as they've requested) that I was moving house, they said in perfect unison “But how on earth are you going to cope with shifting all this STUFF?”

“Oh that’s easy,” I said. “I’m going to do most of it in the car, empty the stuff into the cupboards (which I will have already cleaned, in rooms which I will already have painted where necessary), drop off the empty boxes at the recycling place on the way back and fill up the car again. Probably about three journeys a day.” (I had a loft full to bursting with empty boxes from moving before.) 

Plus, I added, nearly all the books and some other stuff never came out of their boxes in the first place, so I’m ahead already. I’m booking a van for the big furniture at the end. 

They believed me. It all sounded so simple, so organised, so confident. 

Astonishingly, I really believed me too. 


Ha ha ha ha ha ha. 

WRONG, WRONG, WRONG, WRONG, BANGING HEAD ON DESK WRONG.

Never, ever, EVER again will I do a move like this one. I will not hire someone who is apparently nice person and cheap with large–ish van just one size up from transit (and who thank God has brilliant and helpful sidekick who thinks nothing of running up my steep flights of stairs carrying heavy boxes), whereas himself actually leaves a dozen boxes marked “Top Floor / Heavy” on the ground floor (that's when he gets out of the back of the van at all)  or who dumps boxes any–old–where so you can’t actually get past them to the cupboards, or cooker, or back door. 
After loading up at the house–by–the–river, with everything still going pretty well, he suddenly says “Van’s full. We’re going over to T St to unload.”

“Oh.”   I look around me at the stuff which was supposed to go on that shift. Which was the second shift, ten days after the first one. This is because in another clause of my Master Plan to move all this STUFF without having a nervous breakdown – nearly another glorious Fail – I overlapped the tenancies by nearly a month, enabling me to carry out the car plan outlined above.  What I saved in removal costs I could spend on rent. 

So they offer to move the last of the stuff on the Friday evening, their only gap in schedules, after they’ve done another job during the day. Which is noble of them, really. Because I have to be out by the Saturday morning when the new tenants arrive. 

And I haven’t moved Chocolate cat yet, either.  

When Friday evening comes around, mid-April by now, with all the doors open in exceptionally warm and sultry weather, Chocolate spends the whole time being skittish and nervous, as is his wont on a good day, let alone when strange people are walking in and out - so he’s too scared to come into the house at all, even for food.  My neighbour has lent me a large cage which she uses for her labrador, and I’ve put Chocolate’s cushion into it. He has shown no sign of going near it. I have naïvely imagined the cage was so big he wouldn’t cotton on it was actually a cage in the first place. 

So the van is packed and they’re ready to go. Mari has been packing the last kitchen stuff and making tea constantly for about seven hours and we are all exhausted. And they still have to unload at the other end. It’s nearly midnight and unfortunately the removal man has had a particularly heavy day which he wasn’t expecting with the other move, and this is because he never calls round to estimate the size of a job before the appointed removal day. Which is only partly why we’re in this mess tonight. The rest of the fault is mine, entirely mine, my car plan having failed so successfully.

Anyway, I come up with a plan. 

“All of you go and sit in your car or van and leave me and Chocolate in the house. I will feed him and he’ll be fine because he’ll think everyone’s gone home and he can relax." He will conveniently ignore the fact that all the beds have gone, so we won’t be going upstairs any minute now, and that he hasn’t heard any car engines driving away. He will also forget that he's been here before, with all his landscape vanishing around him, and what happened after that (eight hours mewing in the back of the car coming down from his Ross-Shire village, miserable as sin despite the pill which had little effect).

I put his food inside the cage on top of his long foam cushion and deliberately walk a yard or two away, whistling a happy tune. He looks at me. “You must think I’m thick,” he says.  

With a sigh, and an extra bowl of food in his usual place in the kitchen, and the cushion hauled out of the cage to a more friendly place, I leave. Mari goes home, the rest of us go over to T St and start unloading. Around one in the morning I take pity and start saying things like Never mind carrying those up to the top floor. Just leave them on the landing. Or try to find a spare inch in the kitchen. (Joke, but nobody was listening.)

It’s two in the morning when we’re done. I crawl into bed at three, texting the incoming tenant that Chocolate is still in the house and I’ll be back in the morning to get him (and the kettle, and leftover bits which are in the hall for everybody to fall over). New tenant and her fiancé are lovely couple and I don’t expect a problem. And they like cats too.

She texts back around 9 in the morning: Don’t worry – their move has been delayed for a week.
 
I go to the vet in Glossop. “Can I have a sedative pill for the cat?” 

“Is he registered with us?”

“No. Not yet.”

“Well he’ll have to come in for a check–up first. If his heart or lungs are dodgy then he can’t have a pill anyway.” 

“Oh.”  Catch 22 if ever there was one. 
I explain the unfortunate facts. An adopted starving stray with a blatantly scary childhood and broken home, nervous wreck, doesn’t go near strangers, pugnacious, not even me allowed to pick him up, and Generally Not Like Your Normal Pussycats. “Could he have a home visit?” 

“No, because over the weekend it’s only one vet and a nurse and there might be an emergency at the same time.” She doesn’t dare add – and because you insist on living out in the wilderness it would mean a bigger delay for them...  

Understandable, of course, like calling ambulances for a busted toe, but we seem to be at an impasse. Then the receptionist says she’ll go and have a word with the vet in the Saturday morning surgery. 

She comes back. “He’ll do a home visit, and do an injection.” Glory Be and Hallelujah.  It will cost a hundred pounds but I’m past caring. Worth every penny.  It’s exactly what I’d been hoping for – a knock–out jab.

At two o’clock that afternoon, while Mari and Red are crushing six months’ worth of plastic water bottles and cardboard into sacks in the garden shed (I’d lost the key to the shed for ages and then the recycling centre closed for a year because of a weak bridge – and I can’t say too much about this bit because it’s when my mobile phone vanished and I know I left it perched on something by the bottles) the vet arrives at the house with the nurse. 

I outline the only way this is going to work. We need a very small room to catch him in. Every time I go to the bathroom for a pee and don’t shut the door, Chocolate follows me in to get a stroke from what is basically a captive audience. I suggest they wait in hiding until I call softly. All other doors are shut. True to form, while I’m sitting on the loo (fully dressed, obv, in case you were wondering) in he comes, followed by stealthy vet and nurse, who close the door behind them.

Naturally, cat panics but has blanket thrown over him and vet grabs him firmly.  Not firmly enough. With considerable strength (huge strong Burmese that he is) the cat is out from under and dives to the back of the loo in the corner. His backside is jammed against the skirting and his neck is wedged under the soil–pipe.
The vet is now on his knees, arms cradling the toilet bowl, bum in the air, trying to conduct a totally serious examination. Chocolate is rigid with fear and doesn't move a muscle.

A few minutes later the vet emerges, backwards. He has estimated Chocolate’s weight at 5 – 5½  kilos for the injection. (Sounds bang on, knowing what it’s like when he lies on my shins every night.) Lungs, kidneys and liver are sound. Although his heart rate is exactly what you’d expect from a terrified cat, all is well, and in goes the injection. A short interval for it to take effect, and cat is gently hauled out from behind the loo and shoved carefully, headfirst, into the catbox. He will sleep for a few hours, and will have none of the trauma normally expected from the ordeal. I am beside myself with gratitude. I would have paid double if anybody had asked me at that moment. 

And in the next episode….

I give away a car in exchange for a tiny wooden elephant, and discover life with no telly, no cooking, no computer and precious little common sense either.


Monday 31 October 2011

Check-out

I am trying to pay with a card which has sent up some error the cashier’s never seen before. I have just used said card at another counter so I know it’s working. I know there’s plenty of leeway on the account. Being new on the job, the cashier calls for assistance.

I end up surrounded by a zombie, a goth in Dracula clothes and three different hair colours (the supervisor) and a witchy–looking girl in a floor length purple and black dress and long blue hair. 

Hallowe’en at Tesco’s. 

Ain’t life grand.



(I’d forgotten you don’t get cash back on a credit card. So had the cashier. So had everybody except the goth. Perhaps goths are cleverer than zombies and witches. Who knew?....)

Tuesday 25 October 2011

Meeces, My Meeces

If you have a phobia about mice, Look Away Now.
If you are convinced that the only place for a mouse is in a field, with a hawk hovering overhead or an owl swooping in, this post is not for you.

Once upon a time, there lived a slightly bonkers young lady in her house on the edge of a cliff. Well it was about 100 yards away, enough to hear the seas crashing into the rocks below. In fact lying on the bed she would actually feel the reverberation up through the earth, rather than hear it. And on stormy nights the wind would hurl itself into a natural drainage channel carved into the cliff top, sending the stream of water skywards, and this set up a banshee wail, on a scale of notes so accurate she could tell the wind strength as precisely as the Beaufort Scale. This same wind was also stripping the paint off the windows, and sometimes ripped the vegetables out of the ground, so that next morning they were lying there, roots all nicely parallel, in rows, urgently needing to be replanted.

Now, in this house, which was really a ground floor three bedroom converted croft–cottage, there lived a mouse. 

It was quite reasonable to find a mouse here, as the house was over a hundred years old and the walls were made of stone, about two feet thick (if you’ve been brought up on centimetres, I suggest you go and look it up, but glancing at the length of an adult’s arm will do for now) and just imagine all the nooks and crannies and alleyways and quite possibly town squares that there could be in mouse town!  But for the moment there was only one mouse. 

You’re thinking No, No, No..... There is never, ever, only one mouse, like there is never only one rabbit. But for the moment, one mouse was all that the house declared. 

It must have lonely, this mouse, because it wasn’t long before it brought home a little friend. And together they played in and out of the nooks and crannies, noisy as a herd of buffalo.

They were happiest in the kitchen, perhaps because there was always the smell of food, even if they never actually found any accidental leftovers. (Remember that word  – accidental.)

The problem with mice is the inconvenient downside. They pee everywhere, nearly all the time. So the worktops were cleared of all bits and pieces, bar the little telly at one end, and the cleaning cupboard under the sink got emptied into the utility room. Finally, it was clear that the cutlery drawer would have to evacuate too, so it went into jugs on the kitchen table. (Stocks and shares in cleaning materials apparently rose at this time.) 

I know what you’re thinking. 
The slightly bonkers young lady was actually completely off her trolley. 

Well you might be right, but this is the same lady who as a child would go round the kitchen cupboards in the middle of the night with a long carving knife setting off the mousetraps so that her parents and grandfather could never explain why the cheese was gone, but never a mouse was caught. 

Anyway.     

So....

There’s the lady in her cottage, really quite delighted to have a pair of little ones to look after. (This is always a risk when you don’t have children.) (But I swear in this case it would probably have made no damned difference.)  And because she was a kind lady, she let them have a few peanuts when she was refilling the bird–feeders. She also realised that they had a special love of candlewax. There was always a candle or two burning in the evenings, and sometimes little nightlights perched in tiny crevices in the stone walls. One wax in particular seemed to be the caviar of waxes. This was pink wax, precious beyond rubies to the little mice. Better than red, better than green, better than yellow and a mile ahead of plain boring white. One night the lady watched a mouse run up a pink candle hoping to chew a bit off the top, realised it was lit, ran down again, forgot, ran up again, ran down, forgot again and tried a third time. 

Chocolate. Do we all love chocolate? Mice do, and so did the lady’s best friend (let’s call her Elizabeth) who came round for the evening bearing a couple of Galaxy ripple things. 

They sat talking at the kitchen table, and the lady of the house decided to save part of her chocolate for later. She laid it on a side table by the wall, lying on its wrapper. Ten minutes later the wrapper began to slide slowly backwards under the houseplant. The chocolate was rescued just in time, but Elizabeth thought she’d try to see the mouse for herself, and laid a fat crumb of chocolate on the table where the wrapper had been. She sat talking, never taking her eyes off the crumb for a second, and suddenly – “It’s GONE! And I never blinked….” What she didn’t know was that the mouse had been christened Speedy, as in Gonzalez. 

The lady’s neighbour in the nearby cottage suggested it might be a good idea to get one of those plug–in deterrents which emit a high frequency signal. Oh dear oh dear and bollocks. Fail. The little mice joined hands and danced round it, singing little mouse songs, probably high as kites on a special rave-mouse-party frequency. 

You probably know how mice like to keep little stashes of food, and these mice had oodles of places to choose from. Since the lady of the house usually had bare feet, it was easy to walk over the rugs and feel something nobbly underfoot. Three peanuts under the corner of the mat. Together with a lump of pink wax. Two peanuts down the toe of her boot. Peanuts under the phone. One morning there was a peanut under her pillow, which she thought was probably a thank you present, but gave it back to them anyway. 

One day she opened the cutlery drawer, forgetting she never used it now. There were crumbs, some leftover bits of peanut, and a whole nightlight still in its casing. They’d obviously been celebrating something with a special candlelit dinner.

The day came, as it surely must, when the two mice had a little family. And the teeniest tiniest feet you ever did see were running along the top edge of the cutlery drawer under the worktop. The meeces could not be seen, just their miniature feet. 
Oh what fun they had, chasing each other round and round a white lump of rock on the windowsill, playing I’m the King of the Castle and trying to knock each other off the top. Then they’d run up the side of the secondary glazing window, and like a sailor on the yardarm they’d reach out to the fuschia plant hanging high up there. One little teenage mouse was on the plant when he slipped and hung there by one arm for a few seconds. The lady rushed to catch him but he fell off before she got there, and just ran off, completely unhurt.

Once in a while the lady came home from work so late at night that she brought fish and chips in with her, and there were always too many chips. The mice got the rest. They hauled them one by one under the sink and the lady pretended not to notice, half–watching her little tv in the corner. Then she realised the row was getting louder and louder. It sounded like a whole cinema full of people eating crisps with their mouths open. What a racket! She couldn’t even hear the telly properly.

And while we’re on the subject of food, did you ever see a Spaghetti Mouse?

Sitting upright on his haunches, tiny hands clutching a length of spaghetti flavoured with tomato, garlic etc, for all the world as if smoking a hookah. And as the lady watched, the length of the spaghetti magically got shorter and shorter, until there was nothing left and the mouse trotted back under the sink, wiping his paws and whiskers.

One sunny afternoon the lady went to a wardrobe where she kept blankets and spare curtains. On the top blanket she had carefully laid two oystercatcher wings, salted and dried in the open position, separated from the body (road kill, unfortunately) with all due ceremony, the body being given to the ravens to eat. (Ravens lived around her house on the cliffs.) (Why she preserved the wings is another story.)  Sliding the wardrobe door open, she saw the two wings had been dragged to the back behind the blankets and were now pointing skywards. How curious, she thought.

Moments later, a little mouse ran along the edge of the blanket to the front of the wardrobe, wondered whether to hold its nose and jump, thought not, ran back, had another thought and ran forward, got scared and ran back, and forward and back and forward and back and suddenly, ever so bravely, took off into space past the lady’s shoulder and was never seen again.

The lady gently pulled away the blankets, and found a soft nest at the back, lined with tiny feathers nibbled off the wing edges. And a pair of earrings, a heap of peanuts, choice morsels of candle wax, a large bead missing for weeks, a paperclip and the spare link from her watchstrap.






Saturday 15 October 2011

Yet more waterworks

“HOLY CRAP” thought I, on awaking one morning. “It’s five to nine and the plumber’s here in five minutes.” 

Moments later, eyes still desperately shut despite the fact I was walking about, I had a second thought. Today is not a Plumbing Day. Today is a Plastering Day.  YES ! My complaint had been taken seriously regarding the state of the bathroom walls and they would finally get the treatment they deserve, at the very least capable of supporting a coat of paint.  Apparently there was a leak from the loo tank before I moved in, so the wall behind it was a right mess - a collage of collapsed plaster and brittle paint bubbles. 
It was wonderful watching the paint peel off in huge strips, intact and in no way attached to the wall behind.  (I would have joined in if the room was big enough for two, and I don’t like to get in the way. I'm better employed on kettle duty.) And the opposite wall, by the basin, had been cracked right across halfway up, bulging as though it wanted to fall out, hence it got included on the estimate. The plasterer had insisted, bless him.

I was downstairs in the kitchen when I heard him say “Oooh. Ugg.”  I went up. “Why the Ugg ?” I ask.  “Look at this,” he says, “lath and plaster !” Or some lath and precious little plaster. No wonder that bottom corner had a crack across it.


Pic kindly provided by plasterer using his mobile - I had no running computer & a broken camera

I think the OK from the landlady for this plastering came swiftly because a guilty conscience was already in place. I happen to know she was visiting just before I moved in. I surmise that she thought this disgustingly filthy and cracking bathroom was just fine and dandy. Ditto the freestanding loo roll holder which was marked on the inventory as “E” (lowest grade for quality) and “rusty”.  It was actually ALL rust. I emailed the agent to say it was going to the tip and they said Yes, Absolutely. Don’t ask me what state the bath tiles were in. You don’t want to know. (Let me just say grout and dark pink and brown.) And I wasn’t happy until I’d replaced the shower head and manky hose, either. And the bath and basin plugs which were still slimy and orrible after ten minutes of bleaching and scrubbing. Some things are beyond redemption.

So now all I have to do is wait a week for the plaster to dry out properly, give it a coat of half–water–half–paint as per instructions, wait another day and then, at last, I can make it into a bathroom to luxuriate in, not somewhere slightly icky to be avoided. It’s tiny, but it will be bijou when I’m done. Think it will be a very fetching dark pink, sort of ruby–cherry. The landlady doesn’t like my choice and has asked me to paint it back again when I go. OK. Not a problem. I have a nice long strip of paint kept for precisely that purpose, so I can match it.


One Saturday morning I washed up my coffee cup and wondered why my feet were getting wet. 

The u–bend underneath the sink had come adrift from the plughole. I felt the base of the plughole - it apparently had no thread to screw the collar of the u–bend tube up to it – ‘twas smooth as siIk. Strange.

Washed my hands and got wet feet again. DIMWIT.  Put The Plug In First. I phoned the agent for a plumber and went back for another look. Then phoned again – it was engaged –  I left a message:  “Hang fire! Think I can fix it.” 

I had started peeling off the silicone sealant from around the plughole base. There was a perfectly good thread under all that, but the lads who used to live here obviously hadn’t bothered with it.  (Maybe because you had to push the pipe sideways quite a bit to get it lined up.) I took the whole u–bend off, washed it and put it back, screwing the collar back up on to the plughole.  Watertight.  I have saved the owner another bill.  Then started cleaning all the cleaning stuff and putting it all back under the sink. 

Pity it was the only cupboard in the place which was actually sorted and full.

Plumber’s attendance was necessary when the loo wouldn’t flush. Right from day one. (How did those lads manage?) The plastic gubbins was removed and fitted with new washers, and eventually I learned a trick with the lever which works 99 out of 100 times. Now I have to find a way of stopping the lovely white china handle falling off every two days. Dare I just glue it, for posterity ?

Such are my days at Th St.  I am once again the toast of the local tradesmen. They can count on me for a decent living.

For all that, I actually like this house. Something about it just suits me. I'm glad I'm here.

But I do miss the chickens.



Friday 14 October 2011

On water, irony and not a little luck


Well, there I was at the Spring Equinox, traditionally a time when Things Happen, still at the House by the River, minding my own business and thinking ‘I’ll just do the cat’s litter tray before I go shopping’, and crouching over it, little plastic spade in hand, and thought that’s funny, he seems to have peed on the dining room floor right next to the tray in the hall. He’d never done this before, and I was still thinking ‘Cheeky Monkey…’ and 'or is he not well?' as I opened the door fully.

Oh Jesus. 

Homed in on the radiator in the far corner. The pipe coming out of the floor had parted from its joint into the radiator. It was spurting out nicely. Had presumably been doing so for hours. Half an inch deep and rising, spreading into the hall. Where it would have got under the vinyl and wrecked the cork tile under that.

I say dining room but the house owners used it as an office, and I used it as Mother's bedroom. There was a load of equipment–for–the–disabled, her hanging wardrobe rail, an old tv, old hi–fi (yes, that old) bags of newspapers which were soaking up the water nicely (I was intending to use those as packing material, not to mention being a fount of Sudokus), a carpet piece about 4 yards by 3, oh God knows what else under the desk and all of it saturated. 

Phoned the agent in Glossop, thinking they’d be the fastest to get a local plumber up to me despite my lease now being managed by another of their offices 20 miles away. Told the lady it was an emergency and explained why.










I have never cleared a room so fast in my life.

Turned off the water tap at the tank where it came in from the spring. And took photos, thinking ‘insurance’ and ‘owners’.

Continued carrying out electricals and fax machine into the hall and kitchen, and stuff into the garden where it could water the plants. I emptied and dismantled the heavy steel desk and got that out. I mopped and mopped and emptied buckets (it took a while for the whole system to drain down) and mopped again. 

Phoned the other agent's office 20 miles away., in desperation. Left urgent message on answering machine and she called back. “Oh,” she says, “I got a message an hour ago from the Glossop lot. They said to give you a call because you had a problem with one of the radiators.”

I will never divulge the words which went through my mind. Let’s just say obscenities and blasphemies tightly woven.

Waited for the plumber, laid down a carpet of the driest newspapers, and walked up and down, and up and down, squelching every step. Bare feet now because the stain was coming off the parquet tiles and my shoes were looking a bit ruined but still within rescue limits. 

Squelch squelch, more newspapers, every step squeezing water bubbling out from the foam layer under the tiles. Six hours of walking up and down interspersed with the odd cup of coffee.

The plumber arrived, and mended the radiator joint. He also helped me to carry out the sodden carpet which of course weighed a ton, and we draped it wide over a selection of walking frames, shower stool, commode etc, to drip it dry in merciful sunshine. You’ll have noticed the black water in the flood. That was all that radiator ‘inhibitor’ so carefully administered by the last workmen on the property.
So I played the hosepipe over the carpet, until there was no more black stuff seeping out of it, the water ran clear, and the weather was kind enough to stay dry.

Nobody came to inspect. For a very good estate agent, this really surprised me. The new tenants were planning their move in, (and I discovered weeks later they’d still not been told about the flood) and I was packing like no tomorrow, and despite my efforts to save the floor it continued to swell and buckle. I had heavy weights on the worst bits hoping to flatten them back into position as they shrank and dried. Failed. Take the weight off and they sprang up again into shallow pyramids. I really, really wanted to save that lovely floor. I’d been told by the neighbour how painstakingly the owner had laid it. 

After I’d moved, me and friend Mari went back to collect some leftover things from the shed and the loft. The room had been refloored in plastic wood–effect laminate. The wooden parquet had been from Ikea, and it hadn’t been expensive when the owner laid it, (and I could have told them there were spare tiles in the loft – I did tell them only a small portion of the floor was ruined out of shape). But there you are. All that effort for nothing. I gave a none too subtle hint about a small rebate on the rent, for the effort I’d put in etc, but the answer from the agent was a flat No. 

Oh well, don’t ask – don’t get. 

But it was so laughable – living by the river, a very active little river, between it and a very active waterfall, and where do I get my flood from? Pathetic. Serves me right for having a go at John Lewis advert, back then. And yet, and yet, I was so lucky. Could have left the house, unknowing, for the day. It was such a small flood and easily dealt with. I can not imagine what it’s like to have proper flooding, and everything it touches contaminated and condemned. Even the half-dozen bags of newspaper had been fortuitous - they soaked up so much.

The couple who were moving in were doing it on the tab from their insurers, while their ground floor was stripped out and refitted, new kitchen and all. Their house was at the bottom of a hill. There was a mad rainstorm. The council hadn't cleared the gutters for years. Oh the irony of it all.