Christmas Report: Installment 2
OK, so where were we? Let's see...peace, joy, presents, blah, blah, blah...oh yeah, plumbing.
We have to backtrack to early Christmas afternoon, when some potato peels were fed to the garbage disposer in my father-in-law's kitchen sink. I'm not saying who did it, or what volume was sent down the drain; that's not important and won't be, until we bring it up again at a future family gathering.
Anyway, we all know that while garbage disposers are marketed as being able to, you know, dispose of garbage, their actual function is to keep the federal government's Full Employment Act for Plumbers in effect, and the insertion of anything more substantial than melted ice and not more than eight sesame seeds at one time is a really bad idea.
So, the end result was a clogged kitchen drain. No big deal; happens all the time, especially during holidays, when professional help is unavailable, and the liquor stores are closed, too. We went ahead and ate Christmas dinner (consisting of the traditional brisket, pinto beans, mashed potatoes [peels off, unfortunately], and crescent rolls, the latter suffering greatly at the hands of the Nephew, who eats them by the dozen) and then waited until the Dallas Cowboys were looking especially ugly during another nationally televised embarrassment to explore the possibility that the clog was just under the sink. Which, of course, it wasn't. It never is, but you still have to disconnect all the pipes and get doused with yucky water in order to confirm what you knew all along.
We sent a poor man's plumbing snake (a metal tape measure) down the pipe that ran through the kitchen wall, hoping the clog was nearby. Which, of course, it wasn't. So we quickly reached the end of the very short checklist of Things I Know How To Do When It Comes To Plumbing, except for the last item, which doesn't do you any good on Christmas Day in Fort Stockton, because it's "Call a plumber," and good luck with that. Heck, even Wal-Mart was closed so we couldn't buy and apply the requisite ten gallons of Useless Drano. We were somewhat optimistic that we'd make progress because we were able to send a pretty good load of water down the drain before it backed up again, so chances were that the clog was becoming more porous. Perhaps it would miraculously dissolve. It was, after all, Christmas. Did I mention that already?
So we did the next best thing which was to rejoin the Cowboy fiasco still in progress, biding our time until something more entertaining came on TV. We were just settling into a state of Christmas miasma...no, wait...that's not the right word. Myopia? Misanthropy? Something starting with an "m." Anyway, we were pleasantly zoning out when it happened. Without warning, great gouts of evil black water began spouting up from the double sink in the kitchen, as if we'd tapped the very springs of hell.
Much running around and yelling and waving of arms ensued, by parties varied and sundry, including the dogs, who, while limited by a lack of arms, more than compensated with what passed for yelling. It was a malevolent mystery (more "m" words, except those are right, I think): where could the water be coming from? The dishwasher wasn't running; even we were smart enough to know better than that.
Then I heard that familiar ka-chunk...ka-chunk. I ran into the garage, opened the laundry room door, and -- sure enough -- the clothes washer was busily pumping black water back into the kitchen sink, where it was attempting to re-create an Everglades Christmas. I slammed my palm against the knob to turn the washing machine off, and ran back inside to survey the damage. The kitchen carpet was completely saturated, all the way into the dining room. We rushed out to the workshop and grabbed the big honkin' Sears wet/dry shop vac and I started squeegeeing the water from the floor. Fortunately, the carpet is thin and not laid over a pad, so the vacuum was pretty effective in getting the excess water up; after all, those Craftsman shop vacs will suck the skin off an anvil. After the emergency vacuuming, we set out a box fan and let the dry west Texas air do its thing.
Nobody fessed up to starting the washing machine, and I can't argue with that, since there weren't any clothes in it. All we can figure is that all that water we thought we were putting down the drain and which was moving through the "porous clog" was, in fact, backing up into the washing machine, which at some point, for reasons and by abilities still unperceived, decided that it was time to drain, sending the water back whence it came. If anyone has a better explanation, we'll be happy to entertain it.
It made for quite an exciting Christmas evening, which we capped off by watching the first few episodes from the first season of Northern Exposure. So, things could have been worse.
Well, they actually did get that way, but that's another story for another time.
I love a good conspiracy theory!
Posted by: Eric at December 27, 2006 10:31 PMAh yes, what's a holiday without someone putting potato peels into the disposal? And poltergeists turning on appliances. Sounds like a very traditional Christmas.
Did you mean Christmas "malaise?" The Cowboys and pinto beans will do that to you. ;-)
Posted by: gwynne at December 27, 2006 10:51 PMMalaise! That's it! I would have looked it up but I didn't have the energy. ;-)
Ever think about hiring out as a contract thesaurus?
I don't know about the beans, but the Cowboys sure gave me heartburn. I swore I would never care about them again.
Posted by: Eric at December 27, 2006 10:54 PMBut "miasma" was so much better. ;-)
And why is it that I can bite through a banana peal but they are completely impenetrable to the whirling steal blades of a garbage disposal? As a matter of fact, name a mammal that can not bite through either a potato peal or a banana peal. How is it that whirling steal blades can not compete with slow, misformed mammalian dental enamel. What are today's engineers smoking?
Posted by: Chuck at December 27, 2006 11:31 PMYall peel potatoes?
Posted by: Scott Chaffin at December 27, 2006 11:50 PMEgg shells did it for us. After cleaning the disposal out twice, having to use a broom handle to get the disposal mechanism going again, I forbade my wife to ever place eggshells in there again. It hasn't clogged since. :)
Posted by: Stephen Shores at December 28, 2006 07:59 AMYall peel potatoes?
What can I say? There are teenagers in the house. They'd run screaming from the sight of a potato peel in their mashed spuds.
Chuck, out of fairness to all involved, in my experience it's rare that the disposer actually clogs. It's usually the fault of old and throttled-down (if you get my drift) piping. That was the case here, in fact. I think you could put a '59 Buick through most disposers if you fed them in reasonably-sized chunks. The question remains: why would you want to put a Buick (or a banana peel) through a disposer when there are easier ways to get rid of them?
Posted by: Eric at December 28, 2006 09:17 AMEric, that is one of the funniest stories I've read in my life. I woke the hubby up last night laughing.
Your writing is awesome.
Now as for your plumbing skills...?;)
Posted by: Janie at December 28, 2006 09:43 AMJanie, thanks. And I'll be the first to admit that plumbing is an area (OK...one of many areas) that I will gladly leave to those who make big bucks to handle. The handiest plumbing tool I have in my house is the refrigerator magnet with Roto-Rooter's 24-hour phone number.
Posted by: Eric at December 28, 2006 09:54 AMCindy makes me tell her when I start any plumbing chores. She wants to call our favorite plumbers to ensure they are available to come "bail" me out...sometimes figuratively, sometimes literally!!!
Posted by: lyle at December 28, 2006 02:45 PMOh dear - That sounds like fun (not!). I am waiting to hear how things got worse though!
Posted by: Rachel at December 29, 2006 03:20 AM
Potato peels! Every garbage disposal disaster I ever had came from dratted potato peels! I've learned my lesson though. I know celery strings have a bad reputation but I beg you all ... do not send potato peels down the garbage disposal. Instead, take a double-wide swathe of newspaper (the Houston Barnacle comes to mind) and peel your potatoes on it. (Mind that you don't leave your vegetable peeler and favorite paring knife behind when you fold up the mess, which is as grievous as stopping up the drain pipe, but I digress.)
As for the mysterious action of the washing machine: it has been my experience that household appliances plot mayhem in tandem. Like the ice maker and water heater doing out at the same time, or the dryer and the freezer. It makes perfect sense to me that the washing machine would be in cahoots with the garbage disposal!
Posted by: Deborah at December 27, 2006 10:19 PM