New house? Sure, why not!

There’s something to be said for fresh starts. Connie and I decided a few weeks ago that it was time for a new start for our lives together, beginning with a new house. It’s a little sooner than we initially planned on, but we also had a few other reasons pushing us toward this.

Connie had some specific things she was looking for, and we managed to find that in a new development going up between Moncks Corner and Goose Creek. We went up there just to have a look around and by the time we left, we had:

  • met a nice couple who had been living there for a few months
  • got a tour of their house
  • toured a couple of the model homes with the sales agent guy
  • decided to buy a house.

Talk about your impulse buys!

Being new construction and since the house hasn’t been built yet, we have the opportunity to add a few additional features to the house to make (radio) life a little easier.

  • Requested a 2″ conduit running from outside terminating in the room we chose for the shack. This will let us run coax out to the antenna(s) without having to drill holes in the house or propping a window open
  • Distribution panel for phone/TV coax. Later after we get settled, I’ll work on running Cat5 through the same conduits and have network drops along with the cable outlets.
  • Dedicated 120V and 220V outlets in the shack
  • Extra lights and outlets in the garage where the workshop will be
  • Move a few doors around
  • Garage insulation

The new house will be a fair bit smaller than the current one (1500ish sq ft vs 1880 sq ft) but I think we’ll actually gain a little more storage and functional space thanks to taller kitchen cabinets and additional wall space. We’ll also get the back yard fenced so that the dogs can run around outside (they’ll love that). We’ll lose our current library space so the bookshelves and their contents will end up getting split up to various places.

The commute between work will be significantly longer than the 10 minutes I have now, but it’s something I can live with. It will be a good excuse to put a mobile radio in the car and get in on whatever drive-time repeater chatter there is around here.

For now, the new place feels a little bit like being out in the middle of nowhere, even though there are a lot of other new-ish developments in the area. Nothing is terribly far away though. Goose Creek and Moncks Corner are both about 15 minutes away along some of the back roads. When we head out on road trips, there will also be a little less city to wind through before hitting the open highway.

It’s a big thing to buy a house, and just a little bigger thing to worry about having to sell one first, but after all the dust settles the new house should actually be better for the finances since we’ll end up with a slightly smaller mortgage and more energy efficiency than the current one.

Now we just need pack everything up, do a little bit of fixing up and renovating of this house (I don’t think we need to do a whole lot) and hope we can sell it fairly quickly.

A break in the rain

According to the latest radar images, the river of rain has moved a little to the north, so now the house is just a the left edge of it instead of smack dab in the middle.

southeast_20151004.gif

It’s been a record setting rain with 29.2 cm (11.5 in) measured at the airport and 23.5 cm (9.25 in) measured downtown yesterday. Three days into October and apparently it’s already the wettest October on record.


Over by Boone Hall Plantation in Mt. Pleasant, they recorded over 60 cm of rain since Thursday.


Had another round of torrential rain overnight, but now that the rain has stopped here, a lot of the water is starting to drain from the yard. The water in the ditch is back to a still high but more reasonable level and over in the corner of the side yard along the ditch the water has gone down quite a bit since last night.

DSC02295.JPG

Now that it’s daylight, you can see the line of debris that gives an indication of how far away from the ditch the water got last night.

DSC02297.JPG

With the water level in the ditch going back down, the swale is back to draining (slowly) into the ditch rather than the other way around.

DSC02300.JPG

Glad for the break in the rain, but with the rest of the state continuing to get hammered there will still be lots of flooding going on.

Wetter and soggier

After a bit of a break in the rain for a few hours, the water in the back and side yards started to recede just a little bit, but it didn’t last long. A couple hours of torrential downpour and wind filled up the ditch and yard again to the point where the ditch is overflowing. Of course, being dark it’s hard to get any good pictures of it, but I managed to get a few decent ones during a break in the rain.

DSC02278.JPG

The water filling up the swale got a lot wider

DSC02276.JPG

Along the side yard near the front of the house, water’s getting pretty close to the house, and up against the neighbour’s house.

DSC02285.JPG

More rain on the way and another high tide coming up in a few hours. Seeing a few reports of buildings downtown getting inundated with water now.

So far the house is staying high and dry, aside from a little bit of wind driven rain getting in underneath the garage door seals. A look in the attic space above the ceilings didn’t show any leakage or anything, which is good.

Hopefully the rest of the rain we get tonight isn’t quite as torrential as what went through a couple hours ago, and some of this water has a chance to drain away some.

Wet and soggy weekend

Thanks to a confluence of weather events, a lot of moisture from Hurricane Joaquin is getting funneled right through the state.

NWSsoutheast_20151003.gif

We’ve been getting a good bit of rain the past few days, and the forecast was calling for an additional 20-40 cm of rain for the weekend. After raining pretty much all of yesterday evening and all night, I ventured out to find the ditch beside the house running pretty high and fast, with the swale coming off the ditch like a tributary.

DSC02261.JPG
DSC02262.JPG

Normally the swale drains into the ditch, but I think today, the swale was draining the ditch.

The corner of the side yard was looking like this

DSC02264.JPG
DSC02266.JPG

Looks like it will be like this for most of the day. Apparently downtown flooding was bad enough that the Charleston Police Department closed off the peninsula a few hours ago.


It’s not just the peninsula that’s flooding either. There are a lot of other areas in West Ashley, Mt. Pleasant, Isle of Palms, North Charleston where the water is getting pretty high too.

A day like today makes me glad we got the eavestroughing put up around the house.