velvetpage: (Default)
velvetpage ([personal profile] velvetpage) wrote2004-11-24 09:30 pm

cold

It is chilly up here.

This probably has a lot to do with two or three factors.

The first, obviously, is that it's November, and windy, rainy, and chilly outside.

The second is that our thermostate is located in the dining room. Therefore the only temperature in the house that counts is the temperature in the dining room. The office is a long way from the dining room.

The third is that, over the course of the three years we've lived here, my wonderful husband has taken out storm windows or screens or both from three or four different windows, and not put them back in. So instead of two panes of glass between us and the elements, there's only one. This is true of the bedroom, the office, and the living room windows. In most cases, the reason the storm windows never went back on is that they were bent in order to get them out in the first place, and now my slightly-handy man isn't sure how to unbend them so they'll fit again.

The fourth reason is the front door. Last year we put weather stripping on the screen door, but if you were to stand in front of it right now, the draft would be quite obvious. This last is, in my opinion, the gap which has the largest effect on the temperature of the overall house, and certainly has the largest effect on the work our furnace does. There's a vent right next to that door.

Home improvements needed: New storm windows that are easy to open, close, remove and put back, as necessary. Approx. cost: $5000. New weather stripping for both the inside and outside front doors. Approx. cost: $200. Some cheap fabric draft blocker thingies from the Regal catalogue: $20, and endless hours of frustration as we all trip over them.

Cost of doing nothing: about $400 over the course of the winter in extra heating bills.

Anyone want to start a pool on who we'll be paying this winter, the home-improvement guys or the gas company?

[identity profile] r-caton.livejournal.com 2004-11-25 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Our front door doesn't fit like it might (100+ years over London Clay)...we tacked on strips of old carpet over the cracks....

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2004-11-25 06:31 pm (UTC)(link)
We have on occasion had flurries in our front hall, when the wind and the snow were both bad enough that it was piling up on our (nice, deep) porch. Ours is an 85-year-old house, which is on the shady side of middle-aged for Hamilton. We, also, live in reclaimed swampland. It's not surprising we've got gaps.

The more I hear about your house, the more I wonder why you put up with it. Isn't there a clause in your lease that will force your landlord to fix some of this stuff?

[identity profile] r-caton.livejournal.com 2004-11-26 12:01 am (UTC)(link)
Nope. but we do OK.
generally don't rock the boat.....
These places were built in the late 1860's - early 1870s and wouldn't have been expected to stand as long as they have ...let alone through 2 World Wars. You can still see the scars of the Blitz if you look closely and know what you are looking at....

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2004-11-26 02:31 am (UTC)(link)
My grandmother lived through that, hiding out in the Underground with my toddler aunt. She was too young at the time to be sent to the country with so many other children. I was lucky - my nana was a storyteller by nature. Rather like myself, though without the education I've had.

Someday I'll get to England and see for myself.