Saturday, April 27, 2024

One bite at a time!

July 26, 2017 by  
Filed under Blog

Most of our client visits start with a list. A list of projects the client finds most annoying and wants to get fixed.

Things like: the dripping bathroom faucet, the toilet that flushes on its’ own, the bedroom closet doors that fall off their tracks, garages packed full with no more room for cars, unbalanced washing machines that dance across the floor, and the bulb that burned out in the fixture 20 feet up.

Small annoyances, yes, we all have them. And, because they are small, or we have no time to deal with them, we tolerate them. As we do, the list grows.

You know … like the tiny hole in the screen that bothers you a lot at first. Then, day by day, you hardly notice it at all. Suddenly your house is inundated with spiders, flies, gnats and mosquitoes.

And you wonder … Where, oh where are they coming from?

Recently, I worked on a clients long list of annoyances. I organized her shed, changed the toilet seat, installed a grab bar, replaced the shower head, took recycling to the dump, changed water and A/C filters, and worked right through the whole list of her projects.

You too, most likely, have your own list of little annoyances, ones that suddenly seem big and overwhelming once you put them altogether. It can feel like an avalanche coming right at you.

How do you “eat an avalanche?” One small (bite) project at a time.

Or, maybe hand that list over to us! Why not take advantage of this month’s retainer special … “Small, tiny fixes and projects!”? Wouldn’t you rather be swimming?

?>

Are you ready for tiny house living?

July 14, 2017 by  
Filed under Blog

The tiny house movement has finally come knocking at our door! As a handyman and electrician, I usually work on regular sized homes, condos, and offices. However, this time a call was from someone who had just recently moved into their first tiny home.

Fascinatingly enough, her tiny home is located in one of the very first tiny house developments in Oakland. Oakland is leading the way in this movement, more progressive than most other cities, who do not allow tiny houses within their city limits. I believe this is unfortunate since many people these days wish to downsize for a variety of reasons.

From the mindset of an electrician and handyman; that got me thinking . . .

How many square feet is enough? The one that intrigued me the most was the “Pan American” Airstream trailer which is 272 square feet. Seems ideal for one person or maybe two and a dog!

What kind of electrical would you need to support a tiny house lifestyle? Would you need it for a stove or hot plate, refrigerator, microwave and / or washer/dryer? What about computer usage and charging your smartphone? What would be required — solar with battery backup and live off the electrical grid entirely? Or, would you find a way to power your tiny home with pre-existing hookups available?

Maybe a very long extension cord! (Just kidding!)

How about plumbing and water? Would you need a minimal amount of plumbing for running water and a toilet?  Or is a composting toilet more to your liking?

And, what about all your stuff? How much storage space would you need? Or, do you wish to purge, downsize, and live minimally?

There are a lot of important lifestyle questions for Americans to ask of themselves when they decide to go the tiny house route. For the woman who called me, she is still answering many of these questions, even while living in her tiny house.

As to whether I would wish to live in a tiny house myself, the aspect that does spark my dreams is to have it located right in nature; just walk out the front door and there it greets you. The other draw, for me, would be to have less upkeep and maintenance — the freedom that would give.

I do know one thing….I would need more than 272 square feet with the lifestyle I like to live.

?>