The Basement: Good News and Bad News
Thursday and Friday night, I patched over the last two cracks in the basement. I didn't do the thorough job I had on the east wall, however, where I scraped up all the old sealant along the whole wall, and repatched. Instead, I only chiseled out a small section around the immediate leak, and filled that, then layered on cement until the leak stopped.
The good news is, it rained last night, and my basement still isn't leaking.
The bad news is, I finally came across an explanation of why the water problem has to be taken care of outside of the house. Underneath my many layers of patches, I'm pretty sure water is still seeping in through the foundation. Which is probably no big deal, as long as it stays water. Alas, I do not live in a warm part of the country, and eventually this water is going to turn to ice. And expand, thereby enlarging the crack and shifting, ever so slightly, my foundation and my walls. And then melt again, and fill up the now-larger crack, and ... well, you get the idea.
So ... I dunno. As a couple of other people have pointed out, this house has been here for fifty years and it's probably had this same issue the whole time. According to the inspector at the time I bought: "If it were going to fall off the foundation and slide down the hill, it would've by now."
So I'll probably get the gutters cleaned and water the house in the summer, and hope for the best.
Assuming my patches don't leak before then.
The good news is, it rained last night, and my basement still isn't leaking.
The bad news is, I finally came across an explanation of why the water problem has to be taken care of outside of the house. Underneath my many layers of patches, I'm pretty sure water is still seeping in through the foundation. Which is probably no big deal, as long as it stays water. Alas, I do not live in a warm part of the country, and eventually this water is going to turn to ice. And expand, thereby enlarging the crack and shifting, ever so slightly, my foundation and my walls. And then melt again, and fill up the now-larger crack, and ... well, you get the idea.
So ... I dunno. As a couple of other people have pointed out, this house has been here for fifty years and it's probably had this same issue the whole time. According to the inspector at the time I bought: "If it were going to fall off the foundation and slide down the hill, it would've by now."
So I'll probably get the gutters cleaned and water the house in the summer, and hope for the best.
Assuming my patches don't leak before then.
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-- Kagetsume.
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And this part of the country doesn't have really long freezes anyway. We rarely have three consecutive days where the temperature is below freezing. So I'm unlikely to get a really hard freeze here.
Anyway, thanks for the note -- I feel better about it already. :)
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Pack up and move to Texas.
We never get freezing in the groundwater and maybe it snows once every 10-12 years or so. :)
Scott (I also note that the houses down here don't have basements at all.) Kellogg
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CYa!
Mako
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Would it be Ok to add you to my Friends list? It's long past due actually :)
CYa!
Allen
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Be my guest -- I was just about to add you, in fact. :)
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I figured that it would be much simpler to formally acknowledge the fact that I'm a fan of your writing and to ask to add you to my Friends list directly :)
Thank you for the ok to do so, it's nice to be here and it's a pleasure to have you following my octane laced scribblings too!
CYa!
Mako