Barrel O' Fun 1
Rather than let all of that precious, valuable, biodegradable mulch go to waste, we moved it to the back yard, near the garden, and covered it up with a generic blue tarp, to mostly keep water and the larger critters out of our mulch. Mostly it worked, but one day recently one of us observed that she would prefer to look at something other than a blue tarp in our mostly-wild back yard. A discussion ensued wherein various ideas for alternate solutions were brought forth, and we ultimately decided to store our elm mulch in an oaken barrel.
It turns out you can get used wine barrels on Amazon. This particular oaken beauty came to us from California, via Texas, Florida, then Texas again (at least that's what the tracking information said).
So what are we waiting for? Let's get some mulch into this beauty and get rid of that blue tarp.
Slow down there, pardner. First we need to make some sort of opening in the top so's we can shovel in our beautiful mulch.
We opted to remove the lid, rather than cut a hole in same. After some Youtube education in barrel-lid removal we set to work.
Step one is to remove some nails that secure the hoops in place. Step two is to start removing hoops.
With the first three hoops removed the staves are loose enough to allow lid removal. Be sure to do this in a well-ventilated area, as the fumes can initially be quite strong.
After lid removal comes reinstalling the hoops and nails. The inside of our used wine barrel is purple, which would seem to indicate that it once held some kind of red wine.
We decided to re-use the lid as a lid to keep the larger critters and rain mostly out of our lovely mulch.
Cleanout
It all started when I mowed the lawn one day, months ago.
There is a 4" white, plastic cleanout plug smack dab in the middle of our front lawn, and I ran over it with Anton (our electric lawnmower), and the carnage was great - white plastic bits everywhere. So I replaced the destroyed plug with a new one and was careful to steer Anton around said plug so as not to repeat said plastic carnage. Well, recently I did it again. D'oh! I was not careful enough while mowing, and another innocent cleanout plug was destroyed. This time I bought two replacements, as there remains a slight possibility that this incident may be repeated, despite my best intentions and plans. And no, it's not really practical to try to lower the cleanout plug into the ground further.
Barrel O' Fun 2
After finishing all of the prep work (including adding homemade handles to the lid, and a thorough rinsing out with clean water) it was time to transport our barrel to its new location in our back yard.
Once again our large, heavy-duty, two-wheeled wheelbarrow came in handy. It handles the rough terrain very well with its big, soft tyres.
Here is the barrel in its initial placement. Note the edge of the unsightly blue tarp at the bottom of the photo.
Valve Job
It all began when we moved into our Texas House. We noticed that sometimes there was a slight dripping from a shower head in the master bath's shower complex.
This is the shower head in-question, and below is the controlling shower valve. Turning this valve to various positions seemed to mostly stop the dripping, but sometimes the handle seemed to slip out of place and it would have to be lined up again, but not always in the same place where it had begun. We put up with it for some months, but eventually decided to replace the faulty valve.
Here is the offending valve close-up. Note that it has two different levers - the larger one controls water flow, and the smaller one controls temperature. Note also the scale.
After unscrewing the large lever and removing the cover of the small lever.
After removing the small lever. Here you can see the temperature limiter adjuster.
After removing the faceplate.
It turns out that our Texas House has Delta cartridge-type shower valves, which means that we could just replace the valve cartridge without having to replace and replumb the entire shower valve assembly.
This greatly simplified things by allowing us to purchase another Delta valve cartridge and simply insert it into the housing. This is by far the easiest shower valve replacement I have done to-date.
After installing the handle and faceplate. Note the lack of scale. Also note that this is a more standard type of shower valve, where one lever controls everything.
The new valve came with this new shower head, so we decided to install it at the same time. So far, this one does not drip.
It seems that the root cause of the dripping was that the old valve cartridge was slipping inside of its housing due to damage/wear, and thus it was had trouble completely sealing when the water was turned off.
Cute Cat Interlude
No, it's not a live cat, but it is a real mailbox in our neighborhood.
Local History
You are looking at a genuine saltpeter oven. Due to the large number of local bats, and the resulting bat guano, this saltpeter oven was set up in what is now Landa Park. It was used during the Civil War to produce saltpeter for the Confederacy.
It was finally time to finish the new used wine barrel installation.
We dug a shallow hole in which to set our barrel, then began filling said barrel with our precious, lovely, organic, non-GMO, locally-sourced, elm mulch. After filling we tied down the lid to deter the larger critters from trying to remove same and get at the contents. A better solution might be to use hinges and metal latches, and those may be added at some point.
To reiterate how rocky our soil is, this pile of rocks was pulled out of the hole (about 3" deep by 22" across) we dug for the barrel. How was it possible for that many rocks to be in that small hole?
It all worked out quite well. The pile of mulch filled up the barrel, and there was only about three grapefruit's worth of leftover mulch, which we buried in another hole from which we had just pulled a rather large rock.
The markings on top of the barrel give us some of its history. It was produced by the Seguin Moreau cooperage, in Napa, CA; it is made of American red oak; and it held a 2012 vintage produced by Hughes Family Vineyard, of Sonoma Valley, CA.
The all-important view from the house. No more blue tarp, but what to do with that new patch of bare ground where the tarp used to be...
Did someone say, "cactus garden?"
bIsh