Blacktop is beautiful

As much complaining as I do about contractors and the trials and tribulations of life in a fixer-upper, I’m thrilled to be able to talk about a home repair/ improvement project that went utterly, amazingly right.

Last week, Mike called an asphalt contractor who came highly recommended. Our driveway has been deteriorating since we moved in 3 years ago, plus finishing the new retaining wall allowed us to extend the driveway 5 feet or so, and the gap just had a temporary gravel fill. We needed to do something.

We had no idea what to expect. Because of oil prices, asphalt has gone up 70% since last year. Same with shingles — a huge price increase (which we are seeing on my mother’s roof replacement project). We thought redoing the whole driveway was pie in the sky, and were prepared to just get some patching or sealing done.

The contractor came on Sunday — perfect because we were already outside working all day (that’s a story for another post. You’ve heard of the 18-hour bra; we have the 18-hour storm door). We liked him immediately — personable, knowledgeable. He told us the current driveway is really just a base coat — the top coat of asphalt had never been applied. (Hence the very stony, uneven surface and frequent loose gravel to contend with. One more thing previous owners didn’t do right that we are now paying for.) Luckily, the base was still in good enough shape to put a top coat on, but if we waited, it may have deteriorated to the point where it, too, needed to be torn up and replaced. UGH!

He quoted us prices for different options (whole job, partial job) on the spot, and, happily, they were less than we expected (though, presumably, much higher than they would have been last year). We agreed to pave the whole driveway on the spot. Again, this was Sunday.

Today, Wednesday, we have a whole new driveway! He showed up a day or two earlier than the original, incredible end-of-the-week date he gave us, at 8:00 a.m. as promised, and worked steadily until it was done.

Three days from estimate to finished, paid-for job. Three days. We have been waiting four months for the plumber to come back to repair the sewer. Four frickin’ months. (And we are now starting over looking for a new plumber, having wasted the whole summer waiting.)

Mike and I are tickled pink — or black. (We both said, “It’s a shame we have to drive on it.”) Who would have thought something as mundane as paving would give such a boost? But in the weary, never-ending drudgery of life in fixer-upperhood, this is like Christmas and birthday and anniversary all rolled into one. (And, given the cost, it might just have to be.)

But if you ever need a good asphalt contractor out this way, I can help! And if you can get us a good plumber…why Mike and I may just be ecstatic enough to cover all holidays for the next 5 years.

Gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder.
                                    ~ G. K. Chesterton

Where IS that Swiffer…?

We are excited to be seeing dear friends we haven’t seen in nearly 2 years, since they first moved to Alabama. They’re passing through next week between visits to parents in Michigan and Central PA, and taking time to see a Pirates game with us and spend the night.

Of course we’re excited. These are special friends. We love them to pieces. But five people (mom, dad, 3 kids) at our house? Overnight? They’ll see how we really live.

Sure we have a guest room — until 2 days ago when a frantic clean-up ensued, the bed was covered in clothes, the floor was covered in bags of clothes to be donated (bagged up months ago and never dropped off because, you see, maybe we’ll find more to donate) as well as being a dumping ground for stuff we will need eventually for house projects, but not yet. Things like crown molding for the upstairs hall, doorknobs for the new cubby doors we had built for the third floor, a ceiling fan to be installed, and several unfinished custom picture frames that still need paint, glass, mattes, and pictures inserted. Now at least, the clutter has been redistributed (and the ceiling fan installed!). Unfortunately, the room itself hasn’t bubbled up on the to-do list and still sports the previous owners’ girly pink and green color scheme complete with hideous mauve carpet. (We can clean, but we can’t work miracles.)

Sure we have a finished attic — a great space for spillover guests, complete with a queen-size futon! Unfortunately, there’s barely space to walk up there. It’s a holding ground for still-unpacked boxes (3 years after moving), piles of collectibles awaiting sale on eBay, cast-off office equipment (because you can’t just throw it away — bad for the environment doncha know), the previously mentioned cubby doors (4 of them; bulky), and assorted “no other place to put it” items. (The good part: It’s in the midst of a massive clean-up effort. The kids might even be able to see the floor when we’re done!)

I know, I know. People understand. They just want to see you and spend time. Who cares about clutter, dust, dirt, grime? So what that the floor of the lovely new kitchen is all aflutter with cat hair bunnies (and plain old dirt). Isn’t it cute that you can write your name on the dining room table? And those 25 magazines and catalogs all over the coffee table — how interesting.

It’s all true, but it’s all lies. People may not care, but they do notice. And I for one, would rather be noticed for how nice the house looks, not how sloppy. 

Oh, don’t pretend you’re any different. Tell me YOU don’t run around like crazy cleaning when someone’s coming over. Tell me YOU don’t want your house to look like grown-ups live there instead of a pack of frat boys. Tell me YOU haven’t been influenced by Martha, Emily, Heloise, Miss Manners, HGTV, BH&G to feel your home has to be “gracious” and “perfect for entertaining.”

You don’t? You haven’t? Darn.

You must be one of those people. Everything always in the right place (preferably a place neatly labeled with a label maker), floors swept every night and with a good hands-n-knees scrubbing every week, no dust on the window sills or soap scum in the shower… 

Oh well, my house gets there eventually. All it takes is a little push from an impending visit and days of back-breaking effort. The place’ll sparkle. I may fall asleep at 8:30 the night they come, but the place’ll sparkle. And (sadly?), that’ll make me really happy. I love a clean house. And it may never get that way if it weren’t for visits from dear friends. So come see us soon, OK?

You sometimes see a woman who would have made a Joan of Arc
in another century and climate, threshing herself to pieces
over all the mean worry of housekeeping. 
                                                    ~ Rudyard Kipling

Bright spot

We inherited a garden shed with the house — not a charming, shingled oh-how-cute shed, but a standard, vinyl HD/Lowe’s shed. And like every other project completed by previous owners, it has issues — a shoddy foundation and, consequently, a rotting-away floor. But it does provide much-needed storage, so we’re happy to have it anyway (until we have to replace the floor, that is).

A few weeks ago, we got the bright idea to spruce it up a bit (a classic “honey, what if we…?” project).

The trusty car jack helped us level it (for now). Four cans of spray paint gave it a happy face. And some leftover wood from the dismantled swing set and salvaged bricks from the driveway pier demo added a cute little stoop.

Now the yard has a little peek of color in the back corner, and we can scout out chatchkes to hang on the outside. (Loved some of the rustic garden art at the local arts festival last week, but $42 for something to hang on the shed isn’t in the budget. A few dollars for some old gardening tools and such is more like it.) Let the search begin.

Low cost, high impact, and quick turnaround — the perfect little summer spruce-up.

Small deeds done are better than
great deeds planned. 
                         ~ Peter Marshall

 

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