Gah! Plumbers!

Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

Why does it always happen to me? Someone, somewhere, must know a plumber who actually turns up when he says he will, but I've never met one.

For some time now, we've had a damp patch on the (concrete) kitchen floor. Just occasional seepage from somewhere. Not very much, and no smell so I'm guessing it's mains water rather than sewage. Just recently the stains started to get larger and I reluctantly decided that we would have to get the problem fixed.

That was Monday. Found a plumbing firm in the phone book, rang them up and a youngish chap came round in the afternoon. Explained the problem to him and we agreed he'd turn up the following morning and get started.

So, early Tuesday morning (because of the Fibromyalgia I'm not a morning person) I tidied up the kitchen and sat waiting for him. A phone call comes; he's managed to somehow blow two tyres of his souped-up Volkswagen Transporter van (alloy wheels!) and can't get there. The other plumbers at the firm are busy, can they reschedule Wednesday? Fine. I'm at a loose end now so I quickly go and post chapter 28 of Somewhere Else Entirely while I have the chance (and still awake).

So, early Wednesday morning (did I mention I'm not a morning person?) I'm waiting again, and the phone call comes. He's still waiting for the van, won't be there until 11:00. (I'm guessing the alloy rims got damaged.) Fine. There's not a lot I can do, I don't want to start writing if I'm going to be interrupted. Second phone call. He can't make it today, he's booked tomorrow (Thursday) so he'll come Friday. At least I have the day free now so get started on the backlog...

Mid-afternoon Wednesday, my central heating spontaneously decides that all the radiators have to be red-hot. It's July, the heating's turned off, WTF? Cue headless chicken mode. Now, I can't get the people who I have a boiler service contract with to come around until the other plumbers have finished. I really don't want the house full of competing plumbers, I'd never hear the end of it!

At least today I have a bit of scheduled peace and quiet. Tomorrow, who knows what will happen. Will the plumbers turn up? Will I end up owing them more than the National Debt of Greece? They are dead lucky that because I don't work there's someone here every day to allow them to postpone as they have done. Have I been told a load of male bovine droppings? You know what these people are like as well as I do.

At least I've started writing chapter 29. Now, when I'll finish it is a tale for another day. Life? Don't talk to me about life!

Penny

Comments

Plumbers

The origin of the name is that water pipes were originally made of lead, albeit that very little plumbing work involves lead pipework these days. It sounds like your guy is "swinging it" (the lead that is) a bit - if he really wanted to get to your job, a couple of punctures wouldn't get in his way.

Since Paraland probably has water pipes made of lead, and workers to go with it, perhaps you might obtain at least a frisson of revenge by introducing a venal water-pipe-worker to whom Garia gives his come-uppance? Being tripped and falling in the midden perhaps?

Xi

PS The guys who work with lead for waterproofing roofs and walls call themselves "lead-workers" these days. Perhaps that's because (around here at least) they do turn up when they say they will, do what they are asked to do, and leave a good job and a clean & tidy site. You can see that they would not wish to be sullied with the P-name.

Unforgiving

Unforgiving stuff, water.

These two might be connected:

For some time now, we've had a damp patch on the (concrete) kitchen floor.

Mid-afternoon Wednesday, my central heating spontaneously decides that all the radiators have to be red-hot.

- in which case the "National Debt of Greece" might well be in the right ball park.

In any case, anything under a concrete floor is going to require a bodge or a builder (or both). I feel for you - I had the same thing happen to me (except with an expensive wood overlay floor over the concrete) about 30 years ago. 10 day's disruption and you can still see some marks of the damage.

Xi

Tradespeople

Over a year ago, part of mum's kitchen ceiling started blistering - followed a few days later by water eventually penetrating it. The bathroom is directly above the leak.

Mum first of all checked her house insurance - if the leak was caused by "wear and tear" they won't pay. Anything damaged in investigating or accessing the source of the leak they won't pay. So mum decides to investigate herself. The most likely source is the toilet cistern - hidden behind a false wall. The false wall didn't have a removable panel, so the only way to access the cistern was by removing the worktop. Easier said than done - after removing the sealant, it turns out the walls were tiled after the worktop was installed, so several tiles were damaged in getting the worktop up (with a few hefty clouts from a mallet, as it had been mortared onto the frame of the false wall). Investigations with a torch failed to identify the source of the leak, so the section of false wall in front of the toilet had to be dismantled. The cause turned out to be the cistern filling up to the water inlet, and one of the washers having failed.

With the toilet now decommissioned (the house does have an en-suite and downstairs cloakroom, so there were two other toilets to use), mum started calling plumbers with a view to replacing the bathroom. Out of over a dozen plumbers contacted (including ones recommended by friends and ones on various registers / directories of 'good' tradespeople), only five actually bothered turning up to look at the bathroom, and only three gave a quote. Each made the job sound much longer and more complicated than need be (one claimed it would take 3 days to remove the bath, while another wanted to charge £600 each for removing the bath, basin and toilet - never mind installing new ones!) and the one mum eventually went with failed to show - eventually phoning up with the excuse he'd now been contracted on a big job. Generally, the attitude seemed to be that if the job would take less than a week or cost under £1,000, they weren't interested. Those that showed interest and quoted reasonably turned out to only be using her as a standby in case something bigger failed to materialise.

In the meantime, she's bought the new suite (currently occupying a spare room) and, with occasional weekend visits from either myself or my sister's boyfriend, the existing bathroom has been completely cleared and she's attempting to find a tiler to retile the bathroom. Although this time she's finding out how they'd do it - either tiling over the existing tiles, or remove and replace. It's a bit of a dilemma because if the existing tiles are very securely attached, trying to remove them could damage the underlying plasterboard wall. On the other hand, if they're not very securely attached and they're tiled over...

Needless to say, some have recommended remove and replace, others tile directly over, and one even suggested using an angle grinder to score the existing tiles before tiling over - which he then made more ominous by claiming that even putting towels etc. under the door wouldn't stop the dust invading the rest of the house. So evidently he didn't want the job...

 

Bike Resources

There are 10 kinds of people in the world - those who understand binary and those who don't...

As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!

I don't know where you live

But here you'd have contractors crawling all over themselves for the work. After the third day I would have found someone else to do the work. Arecee

Familiar

Sadarsa's picture

This is almost exactly what i had to put up with last summer with my air conditioner. In the end i went the whole summer without it and it didn't get fixed until last October.. by then i didn't need it anymore. Some day's the house was so hot i'd get nauseous, average house temperature was close to 90 degrees. (it was over 110 outside)

--SEPARATOR--

~Your only Limitation is your Imagination~

~Your only Limitation is your Imagination~

I don't understand

I don't understand this...

I'm in a small town (6,000) but many other towns close by. There are tons of construction work all around. All the plumbers are hiring (as are electricians and construction trades).

And yet,when my furnace / central air system got all wonky last month, my plumber was here in a few hours; he had the part in his van.

Last week, I had a badly leaking shower assembly in my new bathroom that he did NOT install. I told him I really need it fixed; he was very, very busy (him and his three apprentices), and yet he showed up the next morning, right on time.

We must be spoiled....

I'm hoping

Angharad's picture

mine will turn up tomorrow, he failed on Tuesday, so I won't be holding my breath.

Angharad

Angharad