In last week’s post I made light of the household maintenance and repairs that I accomplished. Well, since then the universe has gotten revenge for my disrespectfully smart-ass attitude.
It started Tuesday night, sometime after midnight. Kim climbed out of bed and went into the kitchen, where she heard a loud whining noise coming from the basement. We checked the furnace room – nothing. After a bit of searching we found it, in a little closet next to my desk. When I opened the door, the noise was loud and a light on a gizmo plugged into the wall a blasted a bright red. The gizmo said, “Tank Alert,” and I recalled from my orientation years ago that this was where waste was pumped up to the septic tank. Fortunately, with the door closed we could manage a restless sleep in our bedroom upstairs. Kim was lucky that she could remove her hearing aids.
The next morning, we called a guy whose number we had on our “Maintenance” list, and he was out to see us that morning. He said that we needed to replace the pump – that they all need replacing after about ten years. He happened to have one in his truck. It took him a couple of hours, doing stuff that my college education did not prepare me to do. I no longer take it for granted when I successfully flush a toilet.
That night at about 2 a.m. we were again awakened, and by a very similar sound. We traced it to the furnace room, where a device about the size of a sandwich had noticed water on the floor and was letting us know. This was an easy fix: lift the device off the floor. The moisture was condensation from the cold-water pipes, which I had wrapped after a similar incident. I vowed to rewrap them and to move the little device. What’s next, I laughed – smoke alarms?
That night, as we were watching television, the smoke alarms went off all over the house, notifying much of the county that the house is on fire and we should evacuate. We opened a bunch of windows and looked for flames and smoke. Nothing. It was probably a battery issue, but we have eight smoke alarms, with two different kinds of batteries, and my liberal arts degree did not offer a solution, especially with me in near-panic mode, so we knocked on our neighbor’s door, and Rick and Sandy came over to help. Rick quickly learned, or he already knew, that in order to silence them, they all had to be disconnected. He set about doing that in a process involved some trial and error, but he figured it out. The silence was beautiful. My role in solving the problem was moving the ladder around. Sandy called her electrician and left a message, and I did the same using a number I had saved. My guy called me back at 7:30 in the morning, and by 8:15 he was here. He let me know that smoke alarms generally have to be replaced every eight to ten years (didn’t know that). He had six in his truck and promised to come back and install the remaining two the next morning, which he did. I vowed to be more conscientious about replacing the batteries every year – probably one failed battery set off all the alarms. I may be able to do it without help. I will stockpile the two types of batteries – AA and 9-volt – that I will need.
So, today we had our annual furnace check-up, hopefully sidestepping another late-night alarm. And I asked myself, what other alarms could go off? We get soft chimes when the refrigerator door is left ajar – not laud enough to awaken us. Our seatbelts warn us when they are not fashioned, but the car has to be running, and besides, the garage is far enough from the house.
Our toilet was plugged for a few days, and I used a low-tech plunger, plus some hot water and vinegar, and I got it unplugged in less than a week. The only alarm was in my frustrated voice. Can’t imagine what a plugged toilet alarm would sound like. Probably whatever I had deposited in the toilet was sympathetic after hearing all the alarms and decided, finally, to move on.