With the day of rain yesterday that moved into the early evening and some overnight, both walks were canceled. Stella's trips were only to relieve herself and since she doesn't like rain, she did that as fast as she could ... then trotted back to the house. Today ... hot!!!!I knew something was a little different about 10pm last night as I let Heidi out for her trip outside. It was 59° in the carport and the same on my weather app on my iPhone. This morning at 9am when Stella and I stepped outside, it was 56° ... according to the old thermometer in the carport.I heard freezing temps were on the way and would arrive by tomorrow but looking at the 10-day forecast on Wunderground, it doesn't show that. A couple of days in the 30's but the rest a little above our average of 40° this time of year and back into the lower 50's to start January off right.
I seem to be a man of few words this morning ... so I'll let the photos do the talking.I was happy I wore my North Face snow/rain boots this. For the first time ever (20yrs) I took a step on the path and sunk in over my ankles in mud. I guess one of those underground water spouts was too active with all the rain. As we move toward the back of the field, higher elevation, there is always more saturated ground water.As you can tell Heidi is overcome with joy having temperatures in the high 50's for the second day in a row.
Another great day here in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
Life in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana, the high desert of the southwest and back to 'the tropics' with the hounds and dogs.
December 28, 2018
December 27, 2018
Rain Rain And More Rain
Evidently Stella knew something that I didn't at 5:03am. Her loud whine woke me up. I tapped my Garmin face to see the time with a bright white background. It was way too early to get up but I had a hard time convincing Stella of that. All three of us were up and starting our day 24 minutes later. I heard rain in the darkness as I opened the door to let the hounds out. It has not stopped five hours later ... Consequently it's a day of "rambling" and some long lost photos.These first three photos show just how dark it was at 8am. Normally Stella and I would be heading out to the field for our morning walk. It looked like the middle of the night because it was so dark. The only way I could get a decent photo was to use the flash. Usually Stella doesn't like getting out in the rain but when you have to go, you have to go.While I stood under the shelter of the roof overhang, I kept saying 'come on' but she had other ideas. She had to check out the scent the field cat left last night. 8am and darker than dark outsideI had to go through my photo archives to pull some out for this post. Back in October 2014 I wrote about this covered bridge near my house. During the winter months with all the leaves off the trees I can see a light that is near or maybe on the covered bridge, as I stand on my driveway, or while sitting near the large kitchen window.I cannot remember the year but I think this photo was taken in 2016. I had glanced out the window of my computer room to see this deer by the property pole. That's where Stella walks by to end most of her morning walks. I didn't want to startle it, so I took what photos I could from inside that room, shooting a zoom lens through a screen window. Then I decided to sneak outside, quietly as possible. While I stood not far from the house, she stood staring at me, neither of us moving. She eventually turned and started bouncing/running back to the woods.
At that time Stella was still running as fast as she could after any deer she saw, along with Sadie .... so they were both left in the house, sleeping, while I took this photo.While looking at different folders in my Photos program I saw one labeled 3200. I wasn't sure what that was nor could I remember the last time I looked in that folder. What I found were 3,200 photos with some of them going back 16 years. Possibly they were involved in transferring from Apple's iPhoto to Photos a few years ago. I also found a lot of photos I forgot about and had not been moved to each current folder that each hound has.
This is Arthur around 2003. What I found interesting was how his black hair on his back was turning dark brown to match his shoulders, head and ears. He and Winston had the same mother but Winston was born in the next litter or two litters after Arthur was.When you see current pictures this past July, the field and yard will not look much different than it did 14 years ago in 2004. The few differences are, me using a different camera, the previous farmer use to store rolls of hay along the edge of the woods and coming in to pick up rolls of hay as he needed them during the winter. The current farmer that bales the field will take all the rolls of hay away to his farm about 15 miles away.
That is Bertha running in from the field. She might look like a heavier Sadie but no relation in any way. She grew to the age of 8 and never could get rid of her weight problem with different foods, different portion sizes and a lot of walks in the field. She was the bloodhound before I bought Sadie in August 2008.From the time that Sadie arrived in August 2008, she always needed something to do. I can imagine the amount of time I spent away from the house in a normal work day just drove her insane. About the only thing I could find that occupied her, and satisfied that urge to be doing something all the time 24/7 were these kind of bones. She would eventually get each of them down to a size that was unsafe for her to chew on, so I'd throw them away and buy two more "monster bones". None of the basset hounds were interested in a bone that size.I am glad I saw this picture in the folder rarely looked at. This is a rare photo in my collection which is now over 55,000 photos in my computer photo file. I think this was the spring 2017 with Heidi actually going on a walk with Sadie and Stella. No, that had to be in June or July 2017 because the field is cut and baled. As you know, Heidi doesn't take that many walks in the field, no matter how high or short the grass is. You can barely see the winding path we still take today.Winston was a puppy in this photo. The photo information did not have the actual date that I took the photo so I am guessing around 2006, when he was only two years old. He loved the camera from his first day he arrived at the age of eight weeks. I have no idea what the look on his face means. LOL
It was good to turn on the hot water lever on the bathroom sink last night and have hot water. Like anything else, you don't know how nice something is until you don't have it. It was strange though as I was finalizing the steps before turning the power back on for the water heater. I had a scare wondering if it was really a bad thermostat along with the bad heating elements that needed repaired. A bad thermostat would prevent my repair job from working.
Before I started, I never did the electronic checks that would have told me if I had a good or bad thermostat because in the past when I had no hot water, replacing the heating elements were always the solution. So it was a nice surprise to feel hot water not long after I turned on the power.
I had a friend that read the post about the water heater story last night, send me an email afterward, asking a question that would have made draining the tank much much easier. He asked why I didn't shut off the water source for the whole house, which is in the middle of my front yard, plus it's easy to shut off the water.
THEN ... I could have turned on the kitchen and bathroom cold water faucets, draining the water much faster and much better than the time it took with the hose. You know what is laughable about this idea and how stupid I was?
I did a similar act to get the last of the hot water out of the pipes ... I shut off the water source to the water heater with the shutoff valve on top of the water heater. THEN ... I turned on all three hot water faucets in the house to flush what was left of the hot water in the pipes from the hot water tank to the faucets.
I will remember that idea from my friend next December when I empty my water heater again.
I found out this morning how bad of shape I am in by the way some small muscles felt just from the little bending, and squatting I did while working on the water heater. Of course it depends on the way I look at it. Compared to others my age, I am in great shape. Compared to when I was riding a bicycle outside 5-7 days per week in my 40's, I am in terrible shape.
Which brings me to my thoughts and confusion on ways of eating and/or choosing how I am going to eat. It's hard to choose. Every doctor, dietitian, diet fad, medical research, journals, articles, etc .... have different ideas on the most healthiest way to eat. My friend and I are helping each other to stay with the eating limits we started a few weeks ago.
He started after talking to his cardiologist, I started AGAIN just because I was not feeling as energetic as I remember a year or two ago. Since I track everything on a spreadsheet it seems, I know exactly what eating plan I was trying to follow and when. Not really dieting but changes in the way I ate after reading about different foods.
You would think a panel of medical doctors, evaluating the top diets in US News & World Report magazine would be the people to follow. I spent many years eating the Mediterranean Diet, way before it ever had a name. As you know, as you get older your body changes thus what you eat has to change.
In my case some foods, and fruit that are considered healthy give me heartburn. So I quit buying them. If you were to read the most recent reviews in that magazine by those doctors, it would be considered unhealthy to omit those foods and fruit IF I were following the Paleo or Keto Diets. Since I am making that decision on my own and find the heartburn goes away IF I do not eat those foods and fruit ... how can that be unhealthy? Would those same doctors consider that I am eating unhealthy?
Since May 2015 my best results after changing my eating habits occur when I decrease carbohydrates, increase fat and protein. That weird book from 23 years ago, telling me how to eat based on my blood type, gave me similar if not better results. Is that unhealthy?
In all cases I choose the "middle of the road." Some call it moderation but moderation throws me off the wagon of good eating onto the side of the road where ALL foods of any kind are now my diet. I cannot do that nor can I afford that as I move closer to 70 years old. I can't believe that is just three years and five months away. Damn, life moves fast. LOL
What is confusing to me personally is finding facts from medical doctors or videos showing that fat and protein are now the healthier way to eat. Where's the confusion in that? I have a family history of heart problems. Only on my dad's side of the family. His father, and my two uncles died at a very young age of heart attacks. My dad had triple by-pass at the age of 60. I've passed that age with no health issues of any kind.
I also know the his life and mine were two different things, health wise. He, his two brothers grew up where every day my grandmother cooked meals like it was a holiday. A lot of farm raised fat, protein and added homemade pastries, pies, sugar etc. That is just the way she cooked, even when I was growing up.
So high fat, high protein equals heart attacks ... or it use to.
Now in the past few years medical doctors are saying their new research in the years 2015 and on, show all of that is good for you. All that healthy food they told us to eat in the 1970s and 80's has proven to be the bad choice. Which to believe?
So as I eat my NY strip and use real Kerrygold butter on my baked potato that also includes real fat sour cream ... I wonder at times if I am just building my system up for my first heart attack? Or do I go with the current medical finding and keep eating like that? Who's to say that ten years from now they will say again, that is a terrible way to eat.
The only thing I can do, is research and know how I feel.
If I keep getting heartburn after a 1/4 c of oatmeal, guess what? I'm not buying it even if is known to be 'heart healthy'. If I feel full for the rest of the morning after eating bacon and eggs, with no heartburn and no urges to take a nap (like carbs make me feel), guess what? I'm going to keep eating that way.
I will do what I have done in the past and found positive results.
Read all I can about food, eating habits and consequences. Compare that research to my personal results, then add or subtract the food I am eating. Combine things from each source, sorting out the good and bad with the same goal of not only feeling better but also permanently stop eating processed food in any form (except bagged coffee). I'll cut back on grains (heartburn) and increase fruits (healthy carbs). Should I choose to eat fish over beef, chicken before beef?? I will still enjoy that occasional NY Strip and/or a 5Guy's burger and a Nick's Strom.
A few years ago when I merged my two spreadsheets that listed all the foods I could eat from the book "Eat Right 4 Your Type" by Dr Peter J.D'Adamo w/Catherine Whitney with the spreadsheet from the Paleo Diet .... many of those foods matched as duplicates. It was the list of foods I had color coded that caused me heartburn or made me feel lathargic, that stood out by themselves. Many of them were listed by doctors and dietitians as being very healthy and a requirement.
To me, if it was causing me heartburn it couldn't be healthy for me. Finding out my heartburn stopped once I eliminated those foods, told me I did not have a medical condition that cause it, it was different foods that caused it.
So what do we do when it comes to choosing a way to eat?
The other night when I was looking for a movie to watch that didn't deal with Christmas. It is not because I don't like Christmas movies, but that was all the tv channels were showing ... I pulled a movie from my shelf I had not seen in a while. "Steve Jobs"
I know many don't like Apple and especially Steve Jobs. I can understand those reasons just like I don't like everything I read about others in the tech industry. That led me to pulling a book off my self that I started reading years ago but never finished the 571 pages. After reading a long introduction and the first six pages of the book, it is already a book that I find hard to put down. It will be what I do the rest of the afternoon today right after I publish this post.
With it raining lightly non-stop, what better way to spend the day than with a book.
It's Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson. Mr. Isaacson has written books about Albert Einstein, Henry Kissinger, and Benjamin Franklin.
He pointed out he was not writing about Steve Jobs because he felt Steve Jobs was a Franklin, an Einstein or a Kissinger but he did find Steve Jobs an extremely interesting person. He was a little surprised after he was told that he had free reign to interview everyone good or bad and to write about all sides of Steve Jobs, good or bad. Jobs, requested Walter to be his author and he assured him that in no way would he edit the book or dictate what the book was about. It was to be open and truthful as possible.
I am at a point where I feel there was some other things I wanted to talk about but don't really remember. Since I was too busy yesterday with the water heater project and documenting as much as I could, I failed to log any ideas I may have had into the "Notes" program I told you about.
One thing before I go .... EDITING my blog !!!!
You would never know it after reading a new blog post, but I really do spend time proofreading what I have written. I even use the spell/grammar check that WordPress provides. Not only that, after reading my draft copy 5-6 times, I will look at the post in the 'preview' mode, just like it will look on the website ... I continue to make corrections there.
Then it shocks me, AFTER I publish the post for all to read ... I FIND MORE MISTAKES !!!!
I correct them although it might be the next morning before I catch the mistakes.
I apologize for a blog post(s) that look totally unprofessional with stupid basic spelling and grammar errors .... especially after the number of times I proofread what I have written. I'll try to improve editing my blog posts.
It's dark, gloomy and a very wet day here in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
At that time Stella was still running as fast as she could after any deer she saw, along with Sadie .... so they were both left in the house, sleeping, while I took this photo.While looking at different folders in my Photos program I saw one labeled 3200. I wasn't sure what that was nor could I remember the last time I looked in that folder. What I found were 3,200 photos with some of them going back 16 years. Possibly they were involved in transferring from Apple's iPhoto to Photos a few years ago. I also found a lot of photos I forgot about and had not been moved to each current folder that each hound has.
This is Arthur around 2003. What I found interesting was how his black hair on his back was turning dark brown to match his shoulders, head and ears. He and Winston had the same mother but Winston was born in the next litter or two litters after Arthur was.When you see current pictures this past July, the field and yard will not look much different than it did 14 years ago in 2004. The few differences are, me using a different camera, the previous farmer use to store rolls of hay along the edge of the woods and coming in to pick up rolls of hay as he needed them during the winter. The current farmer that bales the field will take all the rolls of hay away to his farm about 15 miles away.
That is Bertha running in from the field. She might look like a heavier Sadie but no relation in any way. She grew to the age of 8 and never could get rid of her weight problem with different foods, different portion sizes and a lot of walks in the field. She was the bloodhound before I bought Sadie in August 2008.From the time that Sadie arrived in August 2008, she always needed something to do. I can imagine the amount of time I spent away from the house in a normal work day just drove her insane. About the only thing I could find that occupied her, and satisfied that urge to be doing something all the time 24/7 were these kind of bones. She would eventually get each of them down to a size that was unsafe for her to chew on, so I'd throw them away and buy two more "monster bones". None of the basset hounds were interested in a bone that size.I am glad I saw this picture in the folder rarely looked at. This is a rare photo in my collection which is now over 55,000 photos in my computer photo file. I think this was the spring 2017 with Heidi actually going on a walk with Sadie and Stella. No, that had to be in June or July 2017 because the field is cut and baled. As you know, Heidi doesn't take that many walks in the field, no matter how high or short the grass is. You can barely see the winding path we still take today.Winston was a puppy in this photo. The photo information did not have the actual date that I took the photo so I am guessing around 2006, when he was only two years old. He loved the camera from his first day he arrived at the age of eight weeks. I have no idea what the look on his face means. LOL
It was good to turn on the hot water lever on the bathroom sink last night and have hot water. Like anything else, you don't know how nice something is until you don't have it. It was strange though as I was finalizing the steps before turning the power back on for the water heater. I had a scare wondering if it was really a bad thermostat along with the bad heating elements that needed repaired. A bad thermostat would prevent my repair job from working.
Before I started, I never did the electronic checks that would have told me if I had a good or bad thermostat because in the past when I had no hot water, replacing the heating elements were always the solution. So it was a nice surprise to feel hot water not long after I turned on the power.
I had a friend that read the post about the water heater story last night, send me an email afterward, asking a question that would have made draining the tank much much easier. He asked why I didn't shut off the water source for the whole house, which is in the middle of my front yard, plus it's easy to shut off the water.
THEN ... I could have turned on the kitchen and bathroom cold water faucets, draining the water much faster and much better than the time it took with the hose. You know what is laughable about this idea and how stupid I was?
I did a similar act to get the last of the hot water out of the pipes ... I shut off the water source to the water heater with the shutoff valve on top of the water heater. THEN ... I turned on all three hot water faucets in the house to flush what was left of the hot water in the pipes from the hot water tank to the faucets.
I will remember that idea from my friend next December when I empty my water heater again.
I found out this morning how bad of shape I am in by the way some small muscles felt just from the little bending, and squatting I did while working on the water heater. Of course it depends on the way I look at it. Compared to others my age, I am in great shape. Compared to when I was riding a bicycle outside 5-7 days per week in my 40's, I am in terrible shape.
Which brings me to my thoughts and confusion on ways of eating and/or choosing how I am going to eat. It's hard to choose. Every doctor, dietitian, diet fad, medical research, journals, articles, etc .... have different ideas on the most healthiest way to eat. My friend and I are helping each other to stay with the eating limits we started a few weeks ago.
He started after talking to his cardiologist, I started AGAIN just because I was not feeling as energetic as I remember a year or two ago. Since I track everything on a spreadsheet it seems, I know exactly what eating plan I was trying to follow and when. Not really dieting but changes in the way I ate after reading about different foods.
You would think a panel of medical doctors, evaluating the top diets in US News & World Report magazine would be the people to follow. I spent many years eating the Mediterranean Diet, way before it ever had a name. As you know, as you get older your body changes thus what you eat has to change.
In my case some foods, and fruit that are considered healthy give me heartburn. So I quit buying them. If you were to read the most recent reviews in that magazine by those doctors, it would be considered unhealthy to omit those foods and fruit IF I were following the Paleo or Keto Diets. Since I am making that decision on my own and find the heartburn goes away IF I do not eat those foods and fruit ... how can that be unhealthy? Would those same doctors consider that I am eating unhealthy?
Since May 2015 my best results after changing my eating habits occur when I decrease carbohydrates, increase fat and protein. That weird book from 23 years ago, telling me how to eat based on my blood type, gave me similar if not better results. Is that unhealthy?
In all cases I choose the "middle of the road." Some call it moderation but moderation throws me off the wagon of good eating onto the side of the road where ALL foods of any kind are now my diet. I cannot do that nor can I afford that as I move closer to 70 years old. I can't believe that is just three years and five months away. Damn, life moves fast. LOL
What is confusing to me personally is finding facts from medical doctors or videos showing that fat and protein are now the healthier way to eat. Where's the confusion in that? I have a family history of heart problems. Only on my dad's side of the family. His father, and my two uncles died at a very young age of heart attacks. My dad had triple by-pass at the age of 60. I've passed that age with no health issues of any kind.
I also know the his life and mine were two different things, health wise. He, his two brothers grew up where every day my grandmother cooked meals like it was a holiday. A lot of farm raised fat, protein and added homemade pastries, pies, sugar etc. That is just the way she cooked, even when I was growing up.
So high fat, high protein equals heart attacks ... or it use to.
Now in the past few years medical doctors are saying their new research in the years 2015 and on, show all of that is good for you. All that healthy food they told us to eat in the 1970s and 80's has proven to be the bad choice. Which to believe?
So as I eat my NY strip and use real Kerrygold butter on my baked potato that also includes real fat sour cream ... I wonder at times if I am just building my system up for my first heart attack? Or do I go with the current medical finding and keep eating like that? Who's to say that ten years from now they will say again, that is a terrible way to eat.
The only thing I can do, is research and know how I feel.
If I keep getting heartburn after a 1/4 c of oatmeal, guess what? I'm not buying it even if is known to be 'heart healthy'. If I feel full for the rest of the morning after eating bacon and eggs, with no heartburn and no urges to take a nap (like carbs make me feel), guess what? I'm going to keep eating that way.
I will do what I have done in the past and found positive results.
Read all I can about food, eating habits and consequences. Compare that research to my personal results, then add or subtract the food I am eating. Combine things from each source, sorting out the good and bad with the same goal of not only feeling better but also permanently stop eating processed food in any form (except bagged coffee). I'll cut back on grains (heartburn) and increase fruits (healthy carbs). Should I choose to eat fish over beef, chicken before beef?? I will still enjoy that occasional NY Strip and/or a 5Guy's burger and a Nick's Strom.
A few years ago when I merged my two spreadsheets that listed all the foods I could eat from the book "Eat Right 4 Your Type" by Dr Peter J.D'Adamo w/Catherine Whitney with the spreadsheet from the Paleo Diet .... many of those foods matched as duplicates. It was the list of foods I had color coded that caused me heartburn or made me feel lathargic, that stood out by themselves. Many of them were listed by doctors and dietitians as being very healthy and a requirement.
To me, if it was causing me heartburn it couldn't be healthy for me. Finding out my heartburn stopped once I eliminated those foods, told me I did not have a medical condition that cause it, it was different foods that caused it.
So what do we do when it comes to choosing a way to eat?
The other night when I was looking for a movie to watch that didn't deal with Christmas. It is not because I don't like Christmas movies, but that was all the tv channels were showing ... I pulled a movie from my shelf I had not seen in a while. "Steve Jobs"
I know many don't like Apple and especially Steve Jobs. I can understand those reasons just like I don't like everything I read about others in the tech industry. That led me to pulling a book off my self that I started reading years ago but never finished the 571 pages. After reading a long introduction and the first six pages of the book, it is already a book that I find hard to put down. It will be what I do the rest of the afternoon today right after I publish this post.
With it raining lightly non-stop, what better way to spend the day than with a book.
It's Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson. Mr. Isaacson has written books about Albert Einstein, Henry Kissinger, and Benjamin Franklin.
He pointed out he was not writing about Steve Jobs because he felt Steve Jobs was a Franklin, an Einstein or a Kissinger but he did find Steve Jobs an extremely interesting person. He was a little surprised after he was told that he had free reign to interview everyone good or bad and to write about all sides of Steve Jobs, good or bad. Jobs, requested Walter to be his author and he assured him that in no way would he edit the book or dictate what the book was about. It was to be open and truthful as possible.
I am at a point where I feel there was some other things I wanted to talk about but don't really remember. Since I was too busy yesterday with the water heater project and documenting as much as I could, I failed to log any ideas I may have had into the "Notes" program I told you about.
One thing before I go .... EDITING my blog !!!!
You would never know it after reading a new blog post, but I really do spend time proofreading what I have written. I even use the spell/grammar check that WordPress provides. Not only that, after reading my draft copy 5-6 times, I will look at the post in the 'preview' mode, just like it will look on the website ... I continue to make corrections there.
Then it shocks me, AFTER I publish the post for all to read ... I FIND MORE MISTAKES !!!!
I correct them although it might be the next morning before I catch the mistakes.
I apologize for a blog post(s) that look totally unprofessional with stupid basic spelling and grammar errors .... especially after the number of times I proofread what I have written. I'll try to improve editing my blog posts.
It's dark, gloomy and a very wet day here in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
December 26, 2018
Today's Water Heater Fun
I did what any novice in the HVAC field would do, I started by reading my owners manual that came with the water heater for the 5th time this morning. I wanted to make sure of every step. I didn't want to end up like fried chicken, if you know what I mean. I followed that up by getting on the manufacturer's website to find additional troubleshooting tips, a part number, and maybe the cost of a heating element. I found a lot more information than I was looking for.I was in for a rude awakening, as I saw a section to check for a warranty by serial number. To my shocking surprise my water heater and parts were under warranty until next October, 2019. I immediately wondered how many times in the past 20 years my 'friend' had screwed me by charging me 3x the cost for a replacement of the element or the unit itself, knowing it was under warranty? Or is that the responsibility of the owner to find that out. Either way ... I wondered what was going on and always have with that company.
By the time I had called the manufacturer in Tennessee, and three local HVAC businesses I had found all the information I needed. Like always, my plan was changing with each phone call. The nice lady at the manufacturers let me know I could find it cheaper to buy the element at the local hardware store, then send them my receipt for a warranty reimbursement. Otherwise I'd have to wait at least two days for hers to arrive and pay $24 for 2nd Day Delivery.
That's a long time without hot water, unless I am camping. As long as I am at home and not camping ... I want every convenience possible, even hot water every night.
I found out after calling two local establishments, one being my 'friend's place' ... their service charge as soon as their truck wheels touched the first stone of my gravel driveway was $125 and counting. The 3rd local business I called was still closed for the holidays. They are known in the area as the best HVAC biz but also the most expensive.
Don't get me wrong, I have a few dollars on hand that are accessible with a slide of a debit card or at an ATM machine. I just hate wasting money. Nothing pisses me off more than hearing $125 before they even get to the top of the hill. It further pisses me off when "he" says that does not include the time it takes to drain your 40gal tank or any problems we might run into. What ????? How damn hard can it be to turn the valve for the water supply off right on top of the heater, hook a hose to the drain valve, run it outside and let the water come out???
"What problems might he be talking about, that would add to that $125 service call??? "
By the time I hung up the phone I said "screw 'em" ... I'll do it myself. After all you are talking to someone that is not a RV mechanic but a few years ago I changed the two oil lines that ran underneath, from the oil filter in the middle of a 26' Class C, up to the side of the radiator in colder, wetter weather than today. Like my dad use to tell me when I was really young ... "you have a brain, use it!!!"It can't be that hard to drain a water heater and replace two heating elements ... as long as that power is shut off.I jumped in my clean car and headed for the local hardware store for a couple of heating elements. By the time I walked out of the hardware store, I had a free bag of popcorn (always available), and the total bill was $22.57 for two heating elements. I just have a hard time justifying those $125 service calls from two local companies just to replace two piss ant $10 elements !!!!I have only been knocked literally on my ass one time due to high electrical voltage, so I was going to make sure I had the power off before I touched anything on that water heater ... even a small screw. As you see the fuse box looks a little dusty but it's outside in the corner of the carport and has been sitting there since 1975.
Around the year 2000 I had a brand new Palm Pilot ... remember those? A handheld computer of sorts. I figured out on my own which fuse went to what. You can barely see the engraved numbers on the outside border of each circuit breaker. I wrote all of them down and entered them that Palm Pilot.
I backed up that data at the time with a little memory card, I was set for a 'lifetime', or so I thought. A lot has changed since that model of Palm Pilot in 2000 .... that information was not seen anywhere 18 years later .... let alone today.
Those five 30's on the right side belong to my five baseboard heaters in four rooms. Ask me how I know that ... LOL. On one of those faded white labels I see the word range, the top one I cannot make out and the bottom white label it looks like two words "water heater" ?????? Is that just some wishful thinking on my part? It depends on what angle you look at it. So to play it safe, I flipped every 30 on the left side to "off".Heidi started backing away from her supervisory position when it came to anything electric. She is a smart basset hound. Basset hounds are one of a few breeds that can backup or back out of a hole. She was showing her best form backing up.Stella decided it was the perfect time to TRY to sneak away into the "land of burs" .... while I was talking to myself at the fuse box. If nothing else, she could escape in the field, possibly the neighbor's backyard for the first time in months.My first problem was lack of water. I was expecting a water flow like flooding the streets coming out of the hose. I mean 40 gallons of water to drain, the drain valve "open" and the nearest hot water facet turned on all the way to help it drain faster. (As Per The Owners Manual)
At the rate I was seeing water coming out of that hose, I would have to stop this water heater project to mow the yard next April. I'm confused at this part of the process. (I can hear the experts in the crowd laughing)I checked the hose. No kinks, fairly straight, laying 'downhill' from the water heater's drain valve .... ????As I unscrewed the top heating element, just a tiny bit .... I hear a release of pressure and it sure sounded like water moving. I sprint outside, while blocking Stella's escape with a chair in front of the open door .... I see more water but not nearly like there should be. Where's the water?????Stella tried her best to help me and the flow of water, by planting 80 pounds of bloodhound weight directly on top of the hose as she leaned to scratch.
Yet .... I did get to see what the old heating element looked like. Of course since I have no idea what I am doing, I then have no idea what a normal 5 year old heating element should look like .... any ideas ... is this a normal look or needs replaced? In my opinion it needs replaced.When you are retired you have plenty of time to figure out things like this. Besides saving me a minimum of $125, I am also learning the grander aspects of electricity and plumbing ... just what I wanted to know. :)Like anything that deals with tools and maintenance, NOTHING COMES EASY WITH ME !!!! You see the tool on the right that I pulled out of my 'plumbing drawer'? Well it is about 1/4" too small to unscrew the heating element ... BACK TO the hardware store for the correct wrench, just a few rows higher than the displayed heating elements I had bought 30 minutes ago.
My next problem is an hour and thirty-three minutes into this fun project ... is not the lack of water flow that a draining tank should have ... when I poked my small camping LED flashlight into the hole left by the upper heating element I took out while cleaning the threads for the new element located near the top of the machine .... WHAT DO YOU THINK I SAW ?????
WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER !!!!!!!
Water ... just about an inch below the upper opening of the water heater, where the element was located ... It will take all night, maybe days, weeks or months to drain completely!!!!!
Two hours later I hear a sound of some kind, like water might be draining. It's inside the unit and I had just barely unscrewed the bottom heating element. That had to have released some sort of pressure. I was THRILLED I did not have 35 gallons of water hitting me in the face ... since I was on my hands and knees, checking to see if I saw any kind of water coming out with the old heating element still screwed in.
While the unit took it's time draining ... I decided to unload the photos from the iPhone and start this blog post. Before you get out of shape on this and start telling me I'm an idiot (maybe I am), I was planning on draining my water heater anyway this year BEFORE the heating elements went bad .... BEFORE I had no hot water.
That brings up the other thing I was always wondering about when it came to my 'old friend' advice of .... drum roll ..... that I did not have to drain the water heater every year, in fact that it was bad for it. Still I have friends telling me their water heater lasted for 15-20 years and I've been HAVING TO have this 'friend' replace my water heater every 5 years when I wake up to a flood on my kitchen floor!!!!
So what gives? Drain annually or don't drain it anytime?
Two hours and forty-four minutes into the process ... the mystery continues. Little water flow, the 'draining' sound inside the water heater is still there AND THE WATER HEATER IS LIGHT ENOUGH THAT I CAN ROCK IT BACK AND FORTH, A LITTLE BIT OFF THE FLOOR !!!!
That begs the question .... WHERE IS THE WATER DRAINING TO ??????
With that, I saw no other recourse but to take Stella out for her afternoon walk since it is beautiful sweatshirt weather outside today. Plus it can give me some time to think and some time for the water to drain out without me standing over the drain valve saying "Faster Faster Faster."
Back from the walk ... I have a new plan. Get online and look for images of water coming out of the hose. I found nothing like that. I DID find a lot of articles on how to drain a water heater, in fact a few of them I had bookmarked last month but failed to review them this morning. What could be a better source than the OWNERS MANUAL ???
Well well well .... what do we have here ????
Of course late into this 'ball of fun', I find with my online search AFTER Stella's afternoon walk ... different instructions than what my owner's manual says. Imagine that!!!!
Following Bob Vila's instructions .... I opened the pressure relief value ... that noise went away after a short hissing sound when it released pressure inside the tank. That hissing sound also told me the pressure relief valve worked. Of course the Owners Manual labeled this valve as the TEMPERATURE RELIEF VALVE .... what?????
Another thing I was thinking about the lack of water flow .... a plugged or blocked drain valve by too much sediment. I just found a way to check that.
Three hours into this pain in the ass project I find out my problem. I didn't really get 'serious' about this job until after Stella's walk and I had time to think instead of wasting time letting the water heater "drain on it's own" ... take whatever time you need plan. The sediment at the bottom of the tank is blocking the flow of water.
How did I find that out for sure .... Bob's instructions and my curiosity.
I leaned a two gallon pail under the bottom heating element/thermostat block and unscrewed that element a little more .... water like I expected from the start came flowing out of that small area into my pail. I was able to screw the old element back in soon enough so the pail would not overflow. In the bottom of that two gallons of clear cold water were nice white rock type of granules.Who knows how much water is in that tank four hours after I have started. Bob Vila's website says to drain the tank all the way, but I don't have a pan large enough to fit that low under the drain valve, when I take out that drain valve and move that sediment away from the opening.
If you look at his picture, what is big enough to fit under that lowest drain valve where the hose is connected and collect 12-35 gallons of water??The plot thickens ... back to the action.
I decided to stick that two gallon pail under the lower element area .. I knew I could screw the old element back in fast enough to stop the pail from overflowing. By the way the water level looked inside the element hole, there could not have been that many gallons of water left in the tank.
I emptied two more pails of water and was able to pull out the lower heating element. I could see where it had got too hot and by all the sediment crud on the tubes, I knew I had made the right decision to replace both of them. I believe this is cause of my loss of hot water.I'm calling this project a success. I closed the relief valve, the drain valve, unhooked the hose and left every hot water faucet in the house on to push the air out of the pipes while filling up the water heater tank with new water. NO LEAKS were coming out around the upper and lower thermostat and elements ... I'm told that's important (joke) ...
The hot water faucets spit and sputtered air out that was loud enough to have Heidi and Stella running for cover in the bedroom. It doesn't take much in their quiet world to make them scared .... they are use to me screaming at referees, umpires or officials during games on tv ... as if they can hear me.
I let the water run for an hour or so, then turned the power back on so I'll have some hot water tonight.
Sure I spent some time on this, but it took three hours to get really serious about completing the job. I definitely took longer than any HVAC professional would have taken but it wasn't time out of my schedule. All I have is time being retired where I can fill that time slot with anything I want to do. Today it just happened to be this.
That decision saved me $125 or more even after I subtract out the $27.03 it cost me for two heating elements and the tool to take the old ones out and screw the new ones in.
Sounds to me like I have added another home maintenance project to my resume.
All is good tonight in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
By the time I had called the manufacturer in Tennessee, and three local HVAC businesses I had found all the information I needed. Like always, my plan was changing with each phone call. The nice lady at the manufacturers let me know I could find it cheaper to buy the element at the local hardware store, then send them my receipt for a warranty reimbursement. Otherwise I'd have to wait at least two days for hers to arrive and pay $24 for 2nd Day Delivery.
That's a long time without hot water, unless I am camping. As long as I am at home and not camping ... I want every convenience possible, even hot water every night.
I found out after calling two local establishments, one being my 'friend's place' ... their service charge as soon as their truck wheels touched the first stone of my gravel driveway was $125 and counting. The 3rd local business I called was still closed for the holidays. They are known in the area as the best HVAC biz but also the most expensive.
Don't get me wrong, I have a few dollars on hand that are accessible with a slide of a debit card or at an ATM machine. I just hate wasting money. Nothing pisses me off more than hearing $125 before they even get to the top of the hill. It further pisses me off when "he" says that does not include the time it takes to drain your 40gal tank or any problems we might run into. What ????? How damn hard can it be to turn the valve for the water supply off right on top of the heater, hook a hose to the drain valve, run it outside and let the water come out???
"What problems might he be talking about, that would add to that $125 service call??? "
By the time I hung up the phone I said "screw 'em" ... I'll do it myself. After all you are talking to someone that is not a RV mechanic but a few years ago I changed the two oil lines that ran underneath, from the oil filter in the middle of a 26' Class C, up to the side of the radiator in colder, wetter weather than today. Like my dad use to tell me when I was really young ... "you have a brain, use it!!!"It can't be that hard to drain a water heater and replace two heating elements ... as long as that power is shut off.I jumped in my clean car and headed for the local hardware store for a couple of heating elements. By the time I walked out of the hardware store, I had a free bag of popcorn (always available), and the total bill was $22.57 for two heating elements. I just have a hard time justifying those $125 service calls from two local companies just to replace two piss ant $10 elements !!!!I have only been knocked literally on my ass one time due to high electrical voltage, so I was going to make sure I had the power off before I touched anything on that water heater ... even a small screw. As you see the fuse box looks a little dusty but it's outside in the corner of the carport and has been sitting there since 1975.
Around the year 2000 I had a brand new Palm Pilot ... remember those? A handheld computer of sorts. I figured out on my own which fuse went to what. You can barely see the engraved numbers on the outside border of each circuit breaker. I wrote all of them down and entered them that Palm Pilot.
I backed up that data at the time with a little memory card, I was set for a 'lifetime', or so I thought. A lot has changed since that model of Palm Pilot in 2000 .... that information was not seen anywhere 18 years later .... let alone today.
Those five 30's on the right side belong to my five baseboard heaters in four rooms. Ask me how I know that ... LOL. On one of those faded white labels I see the word range, the top one I cannot make out and the bottom white label it looks like two words "water heater" ?????? Is that just some wishful thinking on my part? It depends on what angle you look at it. So to play it safe, I flipped every 30 on the left side to "off".Heidi started backing away from her supervisory position when it came to anything electric. She is a smart basset hound. Basset hounds are one of a few breeds that can backup or back out of a hole. She was showing her best form backing up.Stella decided it was the perfect time to TRY to sneak away into the "land of burs" .... while I was talking to myself at the fuse box. If nothing else, she could escape in the field, possibly the neighbor's backyard for the first time in months.My first problem was lack of water. I was expecting a water flow like flooding the streets coming out of the hose. I mean 40 gallons of water to drain, the drain valve "open" and the nearest hot water facet turned on all the way to help it drain faster. (As Per The Owners Manual)
At the rate I was seeing water coming out of that hose, I would have to stop this water heater project to mow the yard next April. I'm confused at this part of the process. (I can hear the experts in the crowd laughing)I checked the hose. No kinks, fairly straight, laying 'downhill' from the water heater's drain valve .... ????As I unscrewed the top heating element, just a tiny bit .... I hear a release of pressure and it sure sounded like water moving. I sprint outside, while blocking Stella's escape with a chair in front of the open door .... I see more water but not nearly like there should be. Where's the water?????Stella tried her best to help me and the flow of water, by planting 80 pounds of bloodhound weight directly on top of the hose as she leaned to scratch.
Yet .... I did get to see what the old heating element looked like. Of course since I have no idea what I am doing, I then have no idea what a normal 5 year old heating element should look like .... any ideas ... is this a normal look or needs replaced? In my opinion it needs replaced.When you are retired you have plenty of time to figure out things like this. Besides saving me a minimum of $125, I am also learning the grander aspects of electricity and plumbing ... just what I wanted to know. :)Like anything that deals with tools and maintenance, NOTHING COMES EASY WITH ME !!!! You see the tool on the right that I pulled out of my 'plumbing drawer'? Well it is about 1/4" too small to unscrew the heating element ... BACK TO the hardware store for the correct wrench, just a few rows higher than the displayed heating elements I had bought 30 minutes ago.
My next problem is an hour and thirty-three minutes into this fun project ... is not the lack of water flow that a draining tank should have ... when I poked my small camping LED flashlight into the hole left by the upper heating element I took out while cleaning the threads for the new element located near the top of the machine .... WHAT DO YOU THINK I SAW ?????
WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER !!!!!!!
Water ... just about an inch below the upper opening of the water heater, where the element was located ... It will take all night, maybe days, weeks or months to drain completely!!!!!
Two hours later I hear a sound of some kind, like water might be draining. It's inside the unit and I had just barely unscrewed the bottom heating element. That had to have released some sort of pressure. I was THRILLED I did not have 35 gallons of water hitting me in the face ... since I was on my hands and knees, checking to see if I saw any kind of water coming out with the old heating element still screwed in.
While the unit took it's time draining ... I decided to unload the photos from the iPhone and start this blog post. Before you get out of shape on this and start telling me I'm an idiot (maybe I am), I was planning on draining my water heater anyway this year BEFORE the heating elements went bad .... BEFORE I had no hot water.
That brings up the other thing I was always wondering about when it came to my 'old friend' advice of .... drum roll ..... that I did not have to drain the water heater every year, in fact that it was bad for it. Still I have friends telling me their water heater lasted for 15-20 years and I've been HAVING TO have this 'friend' replace my water heater every 5 years when I wake up to a flood on my kitchen floor!!!!
So what gives? Drain annually or don't drain it anytime?
Two hours and forty-four minutes into the process ... the mystery continues. Little water flow, the 'draining' sound inside the water heater is still there AND THE WATER HEATER IS LIGHT ENOUGH THAT I CAN ROCK IT BACK AND FORTH, A LITTLE BIT OFF THE FLOOR !!!!
That begs the question .... WHERE IS THE WATER DRAINING TO ??????
With that, I saw no other recourse but to take Stella out for her afternoon walk since it is beautiful sweatshirt weather outside today. Plus it can give me some time to think and some time for the water to drain out without me standing over the drain valve saying "Faster Faster Faster."
Back from the walk ... I have a new plan. Get online and look for images of water coming out of the hose. I found nothing like that. I DID find a lot of articles on how to drain a water heater, in fact a few of them I had bookmarked last month but failed to review them this morning. What could be a better source than the OWNERS MANUAL ???
Well well well .... what do we have here ????
Of course late into this 'ball of fun', I find with my online search AFTER Stella's afternoon walk ... different instructions than what my owner's manual says. Imagine that!!!!
Following Bob Vila's instructions .... I opened the pressure relief value ... that noise went away after a short hissing sound when it released pressure inside the tank. That hissing sound also told me the pressure relief valve worked. Of course the Owners Manual labeled this valve as the TEMPERATURE RELIEF VALVE .... what?????
Another thing I was thinking about the lack of water flow .... a plugged or blocked drain valve by too much sediment. I just found a way to check that.
Three hours into this pain in the ass project I find out my problem. I didn't really get 'serious' about this job until after Stella's walk and I had time to think instead of wasting time letting the water heater "drain on it's own" ... take whatever time you need plan. The sediment at the bottom of the tank is blocking the flow of water.
How did I find that out for sure .... Bob's instructions and my curiosity.
I leaned a two gallon pail under the bottom heating element/thermostat block and unscrewed that element a little more .... water like I expected from the start came flowing out of that small area into my pail. I was able to screw the old element back in soon enough so the pail would not overflow. In the bottom of that two gallons of clear cold water were nice white rock type of granules.Who knows how much water is in that tank four hours after I have started. Bob Vila's website says to drain the tank all the way, but I don't have a pan large enough to fit that low under the drain valve, when I take out that drain valve and move that sediment away from the opening.
If you look at his picture, what is big enough to fit under that lowest drain valve where the hose is connected and collect 12-35 gallons of water??The plot thickens ... back to the action.
I decided to stick that two gallon pail under the lower element area .. I knew I could screw the old element back in fast enough to stop the pail from overflowing. By the way the water level looked inside the element hole, there could not have been that many gallons of water left in the tank.
I emptied two more pails of water and was able to pull out the lower heating element. I could see where it had got too hot and by all the sediment crud on the tubes, I knew I had made the right decision to replace both of them. I believe this is cause of my loss of hot water.I'm calling this project a success. I closed the relief valve, the drain valve, unhooked the hose and left every hot water faucet in the house on to push the air out of the pipes while filling up the water heater tank with new water. NO LEAKS were coming out around the upper and lower thermostat and elements ... I'm told that's important (joke) ...
The hot water faucets spit and sputtered air out that was loud enough to have Heidi and Stella running for cover in the bedroom. It doesn't take much in their quiet world to make them scared .... they are use to me screaming at referees, umpires or officials during games on tv ... as if they can hear me.
I let the water run for an hour or so, then turned the power back on so I'll have some hot water tonight.
Sure I spent some time on this, but it took three hours to get really serious about completing the job. I definitely took longer than any HVAC professional would have taken but it wasn't time out of my schedule. All I have is time being retired where I can fill that time slot with anything I want to do. Today it just happened to be this.
That decision saved me $125 or more even after I subtract out the $27.03 it cost me for two heating elements and the tool to take the old ones out and screw the new ones in.
Sounds to me like I have added another home maintenance project to my resume.
All is good tonight in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
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