Showing posts with label water pump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water pump. Show all posts

Monday, 7 April 2014

A Crap Plumber

Let there be no misunderstanding: I have never attended plumber’s school, I have never enrolled for a do-it-yourself-anything course, and I have no aspirations of becoming a famous plumber.

But, I sure wish I didn’t have two left hands when it comes to fixing stuff linked to the drinking water system. Make no mistake, there’s no desire not to be successful, simply a problem of the pipes and couplings not wanting to co-operate with me. If I were to sit for an exam in this arena of expertise, I wouldn’t expect to be awarded any sort of marks, let alone a grade.

For some time, we have been aware that the water pump (mounted inside the garage) has been leaking at the seals, with the result that a leak-pond forms inconveniently on the floor near the pump. Not good when there is a stack of Pickfords removal cartons packed on the floor.

Knowing what skilled tradesmen charge, I decided (knowing full well that this could be the start of a very unpleasant experience) to disconnect the pump and to take it to the repair agents, who are located in Levin, 35 k’s to the North of Waikane.

As a pedantic pedanticist, I pre-planned Operation Water Pump in the minutest detail. Sort of in the minutest detail.

Tools: Lesson Number One which you learn at Plumbing School is that, in order to do any job well, you must use the proper tools. Hmmm. We have one smallish shifting spanner and no plumbing pliers. Tyler is deputised as emissary to go across to the neighbour to borrow something to undo the pipes.

The neighbour is quite humorous at this stage of a Sunday afternoon.

spanner
(Above): Jeanette holds up the neighbour’s spanner and ours. No prizes for guessing which one belongs to whom. It’s big enough to dismantle the bloody Eiffel Tower!

Everyone in the house is brought up to speed regarding Operation Water Pump. Twice, at least. Clayton checks that the spanner fits all the nuts. Emergency spare water is tapped off, so that life will not come to a standstill on Monday morning.

Monday morning and I wake up before the alarm. I have coffee (tea, actually) and fiddle a bit with the computer, to keep me tech-savvy, I pretend. There’s plenty of time for last minute showers, preparation for school, etc. I will leave just before 7:30 to get to Campbell’s at 8:00

7:15 and time to disconnect the pump. Right. All goes well, and I’m ready to drain the pump, when I notice… well, I notice that the electrics are such that my disconnected pipes are not sufficiently disconnected. Other stuff (which seems glued or welded in place for life)

Damn (Actually, something else). Double damn (double something else)

I am starting to perspire slightly. There is somewhat laboured breathing. That, too, is not good. What now? This intricate plan of mice and men… I failed to develop a Plan “B” for this very eventuality.

What now? That was not meant to sound panicky, as I do not panic easily, as many people can confirm. Sort of. I think.

With much cunning, deep breathing and scaredy-cat panic, I eventually dismantle half of house and a greater part of the water reticulation system. Luckily, I stop before breaking out the kitchen sink and toilet pan. Thank heavens for that, as I am sure that Jeanette had already looked up the telephone number for… well, for the unmentionables.

Finally, I am travelling northwards on State Highway 1, headed for Levin. I am disappointed to note that some of the road hogs motorists are exceeding the 100 kph speed limit. Mostly larger more expensive models. Let the speedsters perform, I remind myself, sticking to the limit, even though I can see that I will arrive late in Levin. Just too bad.

I meet with the pump expert Stu at about a quarter past eight. He has little hope for the patient – his view is that you can never predict the reliability of a re-conditioned unit. He only trusts genuine German Grundfos engineering. Probably made in China.

By ten, I am back at Chartwell and trying to re-assemble my Meccano pieces, in  a way that even Frank Hornby would approve. I even open up the priming valve and get that filled with some water. I make a mental note to look for a stainless steel mesh filter.

Guess what? The joint outlet pipe (naturally) has a leak! Did I really expect anything less? To be perfectly honest, yes: I imagined that, by some freak chance, this could the first time before I die that I complete a plumbing task satisfactorily.

I manage to locate Stu who, by chance, was out on a service call-out in the Reikorangi valley. I explain to problem and he agrees to call here on the way back to Levin. It turns out that I had used too much PTFE tape and this prevented the pipe end being joined properly. He re-wound the joint, and re-tightened.

Whallah! No leak, as performed by the professional. Thanks, Stu.

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Monday, 3 March 2014

Acting the Giddy Goat

Sunday 2 March. Although the sun is out, a promising amount of grey cloud is starting to accumulate overhead, with a slim possibility of some much-needed rain later in the day. Everyone is holding thumbs.

Our neighbour (‘Mike’, we’ll call him) from across the way arrives with his tractor-trailer and sets up a water pump and pipes so that we can transfer 3,000 litres from the garden tank to the household supply, which is dwindling at an alarming rate.

That’s not the end of the story.

Its actually not even the start. Its a different story, a “trailer” prequel if you like. A while later, Mike cum-tractor-cum-trailer-cum 5 little girls on the back plus a goat-house arrives back in the driveway!

Goat-house. Yes, goat-house, not dolls house or guard house, as you might expect.

Mike is the proud owner of a pair of Billy goats and previously offered there services as scrub/weed/gorse removal agents. It looks like this is the day when that promise gets fulfilled.

GOATS
(Above): Tyler and Clayton walk around Goat Hill, surveying for a good spot to locate the goat-house, a piece of level terrain with a bit of cover from the elements.

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(Above): The goat-house proves to weigh far more than can be handled without some sort of crane over any distance. Getting it over the fence into the Goat Hill paddock is well-nigh exhausting, and the building comes to rest in a convenient spot under some undergrowth (which, we understand, in all likelihood, will be devoured in due course.)

A short while later, Mike and Clayton arrive back, with two obedient-ish goats on leashes. Enter Michael Jackson and Justin Bieber. That’s the names given to these creatures by Mike’s three pre-8 little daughters. The black and white boy is “Mike” and the brown one is called “Justin.”

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The new tenants enter the Goat Hill precinct and sheepishly (pardon the pun) inspect their surroundings, mostly along the (level) top of the steep incline adjacent to the length of the fence. It is soon evident that Mike and Justin are by no means “wild” – they, in fact, appear to crave company. Mike has a healthy set of horns, while Mike sports a pair of rabbit-ish floppy ears. He has strange dopey eyes.

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(Above) The physiques of the two buddies is rather dissimilar. While Mike is plump and pregnant-looking around the gut, and has a stocky purposeful gait, in contrast Justin is quite skinny, with a protruding spine, and seems to weigh about the same as Bennie (about 35 kg). Every now and then, Mike head-buts poor old Justin, just to remind him who is the Alpha-goat in the paddock. The butting doesn’t seem to bother Justin in the least.

Time to introduce them to Labradors Sophie and Bennie. This should be fun.

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(Above): Sniffing through the bars: Bennie and Sophie did some “we’re boss here” barking spells (and still continue to do so now and then), and then started settling down to the serious business of sniffing these new and very strange-looking dogs! The goats are in no way phased by the hounds, and we’re hoping that everyone will soon be living happily ever after…

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