10 years sooner

May marked our 5th year in fixer-upperhood. We smiled to recall how, 5 years ago, we moved in one day and went on vacation for a week the next. It was chaotic. Coming home to a houseful of boxes and junk is not something I recommend.

But we’ve come a long way baby, I think. Too many home projects finished and in the works to recount. Too many dollars spent. Too much darn hard work. But to celebrate, we decided to make all this (raise hands and twirl around) all ours 10 years sooner.

We’d been watching interest rates for a while, and finally jumped on a 15-year refi at 4.25% from the same lender who holds our current mortgage. Our 5.5% 10/1 ARM wasn’t bad, but would need to be refinanced in 5 years anyway (unless we were willing to put up with annual adjustments). So, we’ve done the “smart thing” and cut 10 years and more than $60,000 off our mortgage (and paid $2800 in closing costs and $111.76 more a month for the privilege). Whoopee. The worst part: enduring, again, the blood-sucking crock that is the home-buying biz — all those fees we just paid 5 years ago had to be paid again (Flood certification — HA! An appraisal — HA! [don’t get me started on appraisals] Title insurance — HA! An extra 1/4 pt. because we don’t want to escrow — HA!)

Oh, and did I mention our smalltown lender would immediately sell the mortgage? To Wells Fargo — a Fannie Mae thing. The same Fannie Mae already bailed out at taxpayers’ expense. Is this my payback? Maybe.

But hey, at least we’re paying our mortgage. At least we didn’t buy more house than we could afford. At least, God willing, in 15 years, this will all be ours (except for those pesky taxes every year).

I’ve never been this close to owning my home. I’m praying for good luck and good health in the next 15 years…and beyond, of course.

Home is a shelter from storms — all sorts of storms.
~ William J. Bennett

Country folk we are not

Yet, we still manage to get by in situations where my growing-up-on-a-farm relatives would have clearly excelled.

It started innocently enough. A typical 4:15 a.m. Saturday morning sojourn to the kitchen to feed the ever-pesky Julius. Stumble down the dark stairs, through the hall and dining room, into the kitchen. As Julius was eating, I noticed pesky-cat-Jr., Rory, frisking around the dining room instead of coming in to eat.

Why is he playing now, the little brat?

Julius half-heartedly looked up from his bowl toward Rory, then resumed eating.

I thought…This isn’t normal. Oh, geez, maybe there’s a mouse!

So I flick on the dining room light to have a look, and WINGS! CIRCLING! CHAOS! OH MY GOD IT’S A BAT!

“MIKE, MIKE! HURRY UP! THERE’S A BAT!” I screamed to my poor sound-asleep husband, as both cats leapt around the room. He quickly stumbled down the stairs.

Intellectually, we like bats. Like having them around our house. Know they eat tons of bugs every night. Concerned they are endangered by the mysterious white-nose syndrome fungus.

But it’s another story when one seemingly 3-feet wide is flapping around your living room.

Quickly, we pondered what to do.

“Get the broom on the front porch,” seemed the logical first step. But then what? We have no doors on our first floor to trap it in a room. It had free reign.

Open the vestibule door and the front door? Turn the light on? Maybe it’ll go out.

No such luck, of course. It continued to circle and swoop, while we continued to duck and the cats continued to leap.

What we didn’t want was for it to go upstairs.

So that’s what happened next.

Fortunately, it settled in the spare room, and we closed it in. Then we did what any non-country-folk do when confronted with an unfamiliar situation: We Googled it. Mike went upstairs to his computer, which, of course, had downloaded updates and needed to restart, which took 10 minutes. In the meantime, I started up my computer, and eventually we were both searching madly.

“Catch bat house” yielded some helpful tips (and some concerns about rabies). We gathered more bat-catchin’ gear — Mike’s tennis racket, a big flower pot I had just purchased (in lieu of a bucket), jackets and caps for both of us — even though it was like 80 degrees that night — but no gloves (too lazy to go out to the garage). (Humorously, as we went searching for a cap for me in Mike’s vast collection, he handed me a Pirates cap. That led to a comment that that probably wasn’t the best choice, as the Pirates can’t do anything with bats…)

Finally, thus armed, we went in, with thoughts of The Office episode where Dwight captures a bat in a bag around Meredith’s head…and she had to get rabies shots.

Didn’t see the bat anywhere.

Quickly opened both windows and hoped for the best. A giant moth immediately flew in. But as for the bat, nothin’.

So we timidly went looking. Was it clinging to the inside of the radiator cover? Was it under the dressing table? The ironing board? On top of the ceiling fan? It could be anywhere!

No, No, No, No.

Mike finally found it, huddled on the floor in the far corner, wedged between the armoire and the wall.

No tools for that, so off I went to get a yardstick.

We had read that bats have a hard time getting airborne once they’re on the ground, so as Mike nudged him out, we stood by with our flower pot and tennis racket to trap him. After some flapping and fluttering, Mike managed to pin him (gently) under the racket. I went off in search of cardboard to slide under him.

It’s amazing that tiny, mouse-like thing was the cause of so much trouble. After a few tense minutes, it worked! The bat was wedged between the cardboard and the tennis racket, and Mike took him to the window and set him free. Then we closed the windows pretty darn quick! (The moth didn’t fare so well.)

By now, an hour had passed and it was starting to get light out. We noticed tiny bat droppings on the floor, and sighed to think of the clean-up. Wide awake, of course, we laid in bed and rehashed our experience. I talked about my dad and my Aunt Annie & Uncle Leo, hearty country folk, and how that wouldn’t have phased them a bit. Mike recounted how he and a friend had caught a bat in his grandmother’s house, after it conveniently landed in the punch bowl on top of the very same china cupboard we now have in our dining room. We lamented I hadn’t grabbed the camera to take a picture of the little guy (once safely trapped, of course). We both laughed at the tales of our friends, who have had two bat-catching escapades in their house, and shuddered again at my sister’s experience, in which she woke up from a sound sleep last year to find a bat crawling up the bedclothes toward her!

As near as we can tell, the bat got in through the chimney. One of the many brilliant previous owners of this-old-house had punched a hole in the top of the tile fireplace, presumably to vent gas logs or some such nonsense. It had been covered by a screen (admittedly not very well), which evidently had come loose. So of course, Mike jury-rigged something to cover it up again, and coming up with a permanent fix is now on our shortlist. Although, we should be safe for another 5 years, right?

Finally, we drifted off to sleep, battle weary and bat wise, with me knowing full well you never forget your first time. But just in case…

The horror of that moment,” the King went on,
“I shall never, never forget!”
“You will, though,” the Queen said,
“if you don’t make a memorandum of it.”
~ Lewis Carroll,
Through the Looking Glass, 1872

Can you dance for joy in 36″ x 43″?

Of course you can!

I’m thrilled to share pictures of our tiny “water closet” creation — formed from space that formerly held a recessed niche for the “icebox” (outside of the kitchen, just inside the back door) and a coat closet in the front hall. We did everything you see ourselves (translation: Mike did everything you see himself) — only the plumbing rough-in was done professionally.

Here’s what it looked like originally:

The hall coat closet.

The other side of the closet, which formerly housed the refrigerator. (The fridge moved into the kitchen where it belonged during that remodel.)

Here we broke through the closet. What you see is our back door and tiny entryway.

If you’ve ever done it, you know what a joy stripping plaster is (NOT).

Always interesting to see what’s behind the walls. (The wiring is new.)

The plumber did a great job in a tight space. (As a reminder, you’re looking through the front of the powder room to our back door.)

Funny, but the little niche in the wall is one of the first things Mike built. (Julius the cat was helping, as usual.)

The room feels bigger than it is because the ceiling is fairly high — under the stairway and landing. Luckily, Mike is good with electrical work — this wire is for the ceiling noisemaker fan.

Look! Walls and a floor — big progress. (Again, this is is taken from the back hallway, looking toward the front.)

More progress! The back wall goes in — no more see-through from front to back.

God, and a lot of time, is in the details.

Hey, there’s that niche!

And so much trim!

Tiling the floor took a lot of effort, too.

In fact, you can see we all worked so hard on this project. (This picture was in the same folder with the floor tiling pix.)

But as with all lengthy, torturous DIY endeavors, the finished product was worth it we think — all 36″x43″ of it.

And now, the big reveal. What’s behind Door #1?

Bliss! (Doesn’t Julius look proud?)

A closer view.

A few details: The toilet rests on a small platform to raise it to “comfort height” – which wasn’t available in the 10” rough-in toilet we bought to save space (vs. typical 12” rough-in).

We used a Porcher “Elfe” sink and, hey, there’s that niche! (As usual, plumbing presented many challenges…needed a special grid drain, not the pop-up drain that came with the faucet, plus huge trouble fitting the trap in the space underneath. We ended up using an unusual contraption called a “bottle trap.” Thank God for the Internet — we are able to solve most issues by researching them online to find advice and fixes and workarounds.)

The tile is pretty — 4″ limestone tiles with a shiny mosaic stone border.

Wood walls, tall wainscot, and trim give a Craftsman feel.

It’s a tiny room, but huge for us. Mike deserves all the kudos for building it so beautifully. (I will take but a few “atta girls” for enduring the process for nearly 2 years.)

So, a party to celebrate might be in order.

Except, well, the sunroom isn’t finished.

We’d look like such slackers.

Look at a day when you are supremely satisfied at the end.
It’s not a day when you lounge around doing nothing;
it’s when you’ve had everything to do, and you’ve done it.
~ Margaret Thatcher

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