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So you may recall that yesterday I was crawling around under the house and discovered that one of the ducts for the heating system had had a section come lose and fall.  Today I went to the hardware store to see my clever friend Steve, who bought a beater house many years ago and has basically fixed most of it up from scratch himself, thinking "Steve will know what to do," even if it turns out that what to do is call a professional.

And yes indeed, Steve said that the solution was to bend half the tabs on the fallen piece out straight, fit them inside the round hole cut in the big box where all the ducts joined, reach inside the short piece and bend the inside tabs back against the inside of the box.  (Thank goodness for leather gloves.)  This puts half the tabs on the outside of the box and half on the inside of the box, trapping the tabbed end of the duct in the round hole in the box.  Then press the not-fallen length of duct away by half an inch or so, so you can align the end of the formerly fallen piece and the end of the not-fallen length, and slip one inside the other. He sold me some metal tape intended for sealing up ducts ($2.73) and I went back to the house with a lighter heart.


I also picked up the plywood for drawing the stations on, but when I got home I decided to work on the house first.  Putting the duct back together worked just as described except that the two pieces of duct only barely met.  Hopefully the tape will hold them together.  I feel quite proud of having (I think) solved the problem without having to spend a lot of money.

And seeing as that went so well I thought I'd drag some of the six mil plastic down under the house and see if I could spread it by myself (six mil means 6/1,000 of an inch, which is actually fairly thick, heavy plastic.  Just thought you might like to know what a mil was.) And the answer is yes, I can spread it by myself, though it is a bit of a pain.  So I spread plastic under half the house--the half farthest away from the crawlspace entry.  I had to cut it in places to get it to fit around the central weight-bearing pillars and the occasional prop, which was also a bit of a pain.  I left about six inches excess to run up the walls, and overlapped it by about six inches in the middle of the house.  However I have not done the hardest quarter yet, which will be the quarter where the heating ducts all come together in a giant tangle.  That tangle has at least one leg that runs all the way to the ground and I'll have to make a slit in the plastic to accomodate that, and I really can't see under there very well.

But that is a problem for tomorrow.  Since I fixed the duct for $2.73 and a lot of wriggling, and did half the plastic by myself I'm calling today another win.. 

Oh, and while I was spreading plastic I found a jawbone.  About three inches long, narrow, with many small, sharp teeth.  Opossum, maybe?  I wonder if it is from the same animal that left the poops I found yesterday--slightly smaller than cat poops, noticeably bigger than rat poops.  And, now that I think of it, where the rest of its bones are. 

I think I know where animal(s) are getting in, now--there is daylight visible under the ductwork's connection to the furnace.  The furnace itself is outside the house, and a big rectangular duct thing runs into the crawlspace, where it sprouts many round ducts.  This area is complicated by the bathroom plumbing, which makes it harder to get in and out, but a basic caving worm-wriggle accomplishes a lot.  I think I need to seal off the opening with some kind of heavy wire or something, because I have decided I don't want to share my house with animals--no, not even the crawlspace.  I need the stuff in there to stay in good shape with minimal care for decades and that means no lodgers.  Perhaps another trip to consult my friends at the hardware store is indicated.

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