• Contact
  • Elaborations
    • A Policeman’s View
    • Driving School Diary
    • Great Danes
    • IVA charged on Tassa Rifiuti
    • Nana
    • Old trains and Old weekends
    • The peasant, the virgin, the spring and the ikon
    • Will Someone Please, Please Take Me to Scotland??
  • Recipes
    • ‘Mbriulata
    • *Baked Barley and Mushroom Casserole*
    • *Captain’s Boston Baked Beans*
    • *Cherry Tart*
    • *Crimson Pie*
    • *Louise’s Birthday Cake*
    • *Melanzane alla Parmigiana* – Eggplant Parmesan
    • *Penne with Cabbage and Cream
    • *Pizzoccheri della Valtellina*
    • *Pumpkin Ice Cream*
    • *Risotto alla Bolognese*
    • *Rolled Stuffed Pork Roast* on the rotisserie
    • *Shrimp and Crayfish Tail Soup*
    • *Spezzatino di Vitello*
    • *Stuffed Grape Leaves*
    • *Swordfish with Salsa Cruda*
    • *Tagliarini with Porcini Mushrooms*
    • *Tagliatelli al Frutti di Mare*
    • *Tzatziki*
    • 10th Tee Apricot Bars
    • Adriana’s Fruit Torta
    • Artichoke Parmigiano Dip
    • Best Brownies in the World
    • Clafoutis
    • Cod the Way Sniven Likes It
    • Cold Cucumber Soup
    • Crispy Tortillas with Pork and Beans
    • Easy spring or summer pasta
    • Fagioli all’ucelleto
    • Fish in the Ligurian Style
    • Hilary’s Spicy Rain Forest Chop
    • Insalata Caprese
    • Kumquat and Cherry Upside Down Cake
    • Lasagna Al Forno con Sugo Rosato e Formaggi
    • Lemon Meringue Pie
    • Leo’s Bagna Cauda
    • Leo’s Mother’s Stuffed Eggs
    • Louis’s Apricot Chutney
    • Mom’s Sicilian Bruschetta
    • No-Knead Bread (almost)
    • Nonna Salamone’s Famous Christmas Cookies
    • Pan-fried Noodles, with Duck, Ginger, Garlic and Scallions
    • Pesto
    • Pesto
    • Pickle Relish
    • Poached Pears
    • Polenta Cuncia
    • Pumpkin Sformato with Fonduta and Frisee
    • Rustic Hearth Bread
    • Sicilian Salad
    • Soused Hog’s Face
    • Spotted Dick
    • Swedish Tea Wreaths
    • The Captain’s Salsa Cruda
    • Tomato Aspic
    • Vongerichten’s Spice-Rubbed Chicken with Kumquat-Lemongrass Dressing
    • Winter Squash or Pumpkin Gratin
    • Zucchini Raita

An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Home maintenance and repair

Putting a Face on the Salvation Army

11 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Home maintenance and repair, People, Portraits of people, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Salvation Army, The Salvation Army

Salvation Army truck

There goes our old sofa! It’s a long story, and not the one I want to tell you today. The one for today is about the people who took away the old sofa – and the matching loveseat, the beat-up computer table, bits and pieces of the old computer, a long-handled kitchen fork and a couple of bags of miscellaneous household goods: The Salvation Army.

If you’re like me, you have a vague sense that the Salvation Army helps people, that its volunteers raise money around Christmas by ringing a bell next to a red kettle into which one may put cash.

Photo courtesy of Staytondailyphoto.com (Oregon)

Photo courtesy of Staytondailyphoto.com (Oregon)

Perhaps you’ve visited one of the almost 1,500 thrift stores, looking for bargains or dropping off contributions.  One of those stores is no doubt the destination of the disapearing sofa, etc.

I knew from some volunteer work years ago that the Salvation Army is a ‘front line’ agency – that is, they are there to help people in immediate need: those with no place to go, those who are hungry, those who are in dire straits. The United Way I was with so long ago gave money to the Salvation Army in spite of its being a religious organization because it was front line, and because the work it does can literally save lives.

I also knew from hearsay that the organization is evangelically Christian (Army??) and that it is rigorously conservative, taking a dim few, for example, of homosexuality. Happily, a visit to the Army’s web site suggests that, in spite of their extremely orthodox, conservative and evangelical approach, they are making a concerted effort to be more inclusive, at least in their rhetoric (if you want to know more about the Salvation Army’s history, organization and tenets, click here.  It’s pretty interesting).

Wikipedia tells us “the Salvation Army is one of the world’s largest providers of social aid, with expenditures including operating costs of $2.6 billion in 2004, helping more than 32 million people in the U.S. alone. In addition to community centers and disaster relief, the organization does work in refugee camps, especially among displaced people in Africa. The Salvation Army has received an A- rating from the American Institute of Philanthropy.”

Well, okay.  That’s all interesting. But back to those sofas. Two men came in the “Sally Van” to pick up our no-longer-wanted furniture; meeting them was one of the highlights of my week.

Meet Steve and Scott:

Steve and Scott

We got talking as they shifted our furniture, and Steve mentioned that he had been homeless for ten years.

“How could you be homeless for ten years?” I asked. “Did you lose your job and just couldn’t find another?” He is a bright, organized man, and it just didn’t make sense to me.

“Drugs and alcohol,” he replied.

“Ohhh,” I said, in some embarrassment at being so dense.

“That’s my story too,” said Scott, who volunteers 40 hours a week with the Salvation Army (Steve is now a paid employee).

Steve
Steve went on to tell me with justifiable pride that he had just celebrated his fifth anniversary of being ‘clean and sober.’

Scott
Scott has been off the streets and sober now for five months.

I wondered aloud what percentage of people who work at the Salvation Army are volunteers like Scott, and what percentage are paid. Scott opined that only about 10-15% of the staff are paid; all the rest are volunteers. And each one has his own story, no doubt. Just here in Phoenix there are ten vans that go out every single day alternating between East Valley and West Valley. Each day they come back to the warehouse chock-a-block full of things like our sofa (on a good day) and our computer desk (on a normal day). That is to say that they will take things for which you might not be able to imagine a use, things that might be a little beat-up and well-used. Some items the volunteers will repair, some will go right into the shops after being cleaned and sanitized, and some are auctioned off to others who will find a use for them.  It is a great way to breathe new life into old things.

But much more than that, it is a new way to breathe new life into a person who has faltered and needs help. I can’t imagine anything more difficult than being addicted to drugs or alcohol, and then being strong enough to recover.  What courage! While one might or might not agree with the religious tenets of the Salvation Army, one can only applaud the work they do saving people like Steve and Scott. Meeting them was a humbling pleasure.

Tip-toeing off the Grid

18 Sunday Aug 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Home maintenance and repair, Italian men, Photographs, San Maurizio di Monti, Taxes in Italy, Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Fotovoltaic panels, Green energy in Italy, Installing fotovoltaic panels, NWG

Meet our computer wizard here in Rapallo, Andrea Canessa:

Andrea Canessa

This year when Speedy’s home-built computer finally got tired and decided not to cooperate with us any more we paid a visit to Andrea. Speedy, who makes limited demands on his computer, had the brilliant idea that Andrea could build us a machine from bits and pieces for much less than a new one would cost. And he was right! We got exactly what Speedy wants for about half what a spanking new machine would have cost.

While we were with Andrea we admired his new electric car:

IMG_0275

Cute, isn’t it?

Then Andrea started bending our ears about alternative forms of energy. We’ve been admiring our friend Leo’s extensive work of that sort at his house in Piemonte – he’s put in photovoltaic panels for electricity and solar panels for hot water – so we were pretty well up on what Andrea was speaking about. What we didn’t know, and what he soon told us, is that he has become an agent for NWG, a company that installs alternative energy systems all through Italy.

Andrea’s a man we trust, and someone who has a firm grasp of technology. To make a long story short, we decided to install a photovoltaic system for our house.  We have enough space for 10 panels which should produce about 2.5 KW of electricity when the sun is shining brightly.  Since our regular electrical service is 3 KW, and we never seem to exceed that, it seemed enough. Besides, if we need more current than the sun is giving us at any particular moment, Enel kicks in to give us the extra that we need. The project was not cheap, but there were several factors (aside from the 80% financing offered by NWG) which made it seem timely and The Right Thing To Do.

First, the Italian government has a scheme in place that will refund 50% of the cost of the project with tax credits over a 10-year period.  No, we may not live (or live here) long enough to collect it all, but the rebate is attached to the project, not to us; it can be transferred if someone else lives in our house within the time period.  The government’s incentive program is not just for photovoltaic cells. It covers other energy-saving projects as well. Why is the government being so generous?  Well, (aside from it being The Right Thing To Do) it is an effort to stimulate the economy – for the manufacturers of green energy systems and for those who install and maintain them.  This tax incentive has been increased to 65% for some systems this year.  Lots of projects are covered in whole or part – restructuring a house to make it more energy-efficient; energy-efficient windows; hot water heaters and heating systems; even  some kinds of furniture for the newly done-up house are covered.

Second, the electric company cooperates by buying from us any energy we produce which we don’t use.  We buy energy from them for .32/KWH; they buy it from us for .16/KWH, which seems fair to me.  We get a certain amount of black-hearted glee from knowing that it is our neighbors who are buying our excess, heh heh heh.  We don’t have the capability to store what we don’t use, so when the sun sets, or when it decides not shine at all, we are once again at the mercy of Enel.

This leads to an interesting case of teaching old dogs new tricks.  We’ve tried for decades to use energy during the low-cost hours, which are usually after dark.  Now we have to school ourselves to do our energy-intensive chores, such as laundry, dish-washing by machine, and oven use, during the brightest parts of the day.  Turns out it’s not so hard to adjust.

The first step of the project was to get all signed up – which in Italy of course means many, many signatures.  To our amazement, though, everything was done with great efficiency and relative speed, and a month after an acceptable engineering study and our subsequent agreement to go forward, it was time for the installation.  It was done in two steps in one day.

A very jolly crew of five men from AMS, based in Lucca, arrived shortly after 8 a.m.  The first step was to prepare for the panels.  This involved some amount of wiring inside the house and placing frames on the roof to accept the panels.

Wiring done up in the attic

Wiring done up in the attic

wires

Here’s what our indoor electric panels looked like before the installation:

electric boxes before

Here’s what they looked like at the end of the day:

electrical plant

The jolly lads from Lucca sang as they worked; it was so cheerful:

up on the roof-011

Once upon a time I would have climbed up on the roof myself to photograph progress, but I couldn’t do that this year. The photos taken from the roof itself are courtesy of the gents who did the work. The frames are not massive at all:

braces for panels

The panels were supposed to arrive at mid-day, which was about the time the electrical work was done. The men went to lunch. They came back from lunch. They tidied up some. Along about 3 p.m. they were finally able to track down the panels which had left Prato, near Florence, and mysteriously bypassed Rapallo on their way to Genova, where they now sat (a thoroughly Italian route). Our expectation was that everyone would shrug and say, ‘Well, see you tomorrow.’ Not this outfit. Two of them hopped in their panel van, drove to Genova, retrieved the panels and at 5:30 the roof was crawling with activity.

The panels arrive!

The panels arrive!

Getting the panels to the roof was not easy.

Getting the panels to the roof was not easy.

up on the roof-007

It was still hot in the late afternoon

Solving a small problem

Solving a small problem

By 7:30 the work was done and the connections had been tested successfully.

P1010468

It was time for a bit of refreshment (and a few more signatures):

The ccrew

The crew didn’t linger however; they had a two-hour drive to get back to Lucca, and another system to install the next day.

Here are a few more pictures from installation day:

They had the most appealing backpacks.

They had the most appealing backpacks.

It takes a panolply of tools to effect this sort of installation, but they kept everything neat and tidy (tools, house, everything).

tools-001

tools on parcheggio

My favorite collection of gizmos - I want a box like this!

My favorite collection of gizmos – I want a box like this!

So, everything was in place… now we had to wait for the men from Enel to come and make the connection. This also was done in two parts. There was the outside team:

Enel men

They swapped out our one-way meter, which measured only what we used, for a two-way meter for what we use AND what we sell them. (ha!) Then another technician came and checked the indoor wiring and turned it all on:

final connection

Ta-Dah! We are now using old Sol to run our day-time appliances, and it makes us feel just great. Our first reading:

Our very first 'free' energy!

Our very first ‘free’ energy!

Everything is working as it should with but one little wrinkle. NWG keeps track of all the power coming in and going out. They like to do it using the Vodaphone cell-phone system, but our hill-side coverage is not good enough to send the data. Their technician will return in a week or two to attach everything to our ADSL line to transmit the reports. Then we should be able to see daily graphs of what we are producing and what we are using. I can’t wait!!

Are we off the grid? Not by a long shot, but we’ve taken our first baby steps. Next year, who knows? Maybe solar panels for hot water. Stay tuned…

A Long Sad Story with a Happy Ending

30 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in Building, Construction, Home maintenance and repair, Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Septic system, Sewer connection

Photo courtesy of catsofaustralia.com

Early in the autumn of 2010 our septic system failed for the second time.  The first time it happened, in 2008, we discovered that the tank had been improperly installed and had a hole at the bottom where a rock poked into it, which sent all manner of unpleasant stuff to our downhill neighbors.  They were remarkably calm about it, but of course wanted us to fix the problem.  Which we did by removing the damaged tank and replacing it with a spanking new one.

We were very unhappy when they came back last fall and told us that ‘it’ was happening again.  Arrrrrgh.  Our loyal muratore Giovanni came over and had his merry band of laborers dig up the tank again.  The tank was fine; the only solution was that the septic field had failed after 10 years.  Giovanni’s crew kept digging to try to find the source of the problem.  Imagine our surprise when we discovered that we didn’t HAVE a septic field!  Instead we had a perforated pipe, about 12 feet long, that came off the septic tank and ran underground — and then ended.  Evidently when we did the reconstruction on our house our impressario (contractor) decided that we could make do with less than what the plans called for (he has since died, so we can’t ask him about it).  And, oddly enough, it worked fine for all those years.  But the heavy rains of last fall saturated the ground and ”took space” that our sewage had been using.

But it was no longer working, and we had to do something, quickly.   We were scheduled to leave in mid-November, so we had a hurried bunch of meetings with our geometra and with Giovanni, and came up with a plan whereby Giovanni would continue to dig and install the septic field properly.  Plans were finalized a day or two before we left.

When we arrived in Arizona we found an *urgent* e-mail from our geometra saying that he had called off the work.  A little further digging had revealed that there was nothing ahead but ledge.  There simply was no place to put a septic field.  What, he asked, did we want to do?

When we did the original reconstruction there was no public sewer in the road above us.  In the meantime, thank goodness, the sewer had arrived in San Maurizio, and when it was installed the Captain had the presence of mind to request a hook-up, even though we didn’t need it and thought we never would.  Wasn’t that a lucky thing?

Please, we asked our geometra, design a plan that will work well for us to connect to the sewer.  We knew it would be complex and costly, because our septic tank is some 40 vertical feet below the street.  Clearly, the easy fix was to go downhill, through our neighbors’ property and let gravity do the work.  Our geometra felt the neighbors out and wrote back quickly that we could forget about that solution. Then we waited.  And waited.  It is a funny thing about Italy – if you ask someone to do something and you are there to nag a little if necessary, the something will get done.  If you don’t happen to be around, nothing will happen at all.

Thus it was that when we returned in May we found the beginnings of a design for a pump-up system, but no work done, and a septic system that was still being generous to the neighbors.  The Captain attacked the problem with his usual vigor.  Within three weeks he had learned all there is to know about septic pumps, whom to contact to get a good one, and what other equipment was required.  The geometra participated in the process by seeing that the requisite permissions were requested and going over the plans.  The Captain and Giovanni organized the work and the work party, which, in addition to Giovanni’s digging crew included an electrician and a hydraulic specialist.  We didn’t want to wait for approval before beginning, so begin we did.  After all, you’re allowed to dig up your property without a permit.  And that’s what we did.

It was no simple matter.  We wanted to use as much of our existing system as possible.  We had to do the work quickly too, so we decided on an integral tank/pumps system rather than building a concrete tank and installing the pumps therein.  So Giovanni simply diverted the pipe that formerly led to the septic tank to the gleaming new septic tank with its pumps (two are required, one to use and one to use when the one you’re using stops working).  The unit is a triumph of Italian design and engineering.  Here it is in place with a fair amount of the plumbing already attached:

But before the above could happen, there was a lot of digging to do.  We needed a trench that would be wide enough to hold both an electrical line and the line from the tanks that would carry the waste up to the sewer connection.  We had to climb 40 vertical feet breaching four ancient stone walls and one new one in the process, beginning with the back wall of our wood shed.

This is where Giovanni’s genius shines.  We assumed he would simply break through the stone walls and keep the pipe fairly close to the surface with a 90-degree bend at each wall, but no – he went under the walls.  This meant an almost straight run uphill for the line thereby reducing the backpressure on the pumps, which the Captain felt was extremely important.

That means that in places the trenches had to be very deep indeed.

The men had to be very careful at one point because they had to dig all around the electric lines that serve the house.

Weren’t they smart to pass the line under the electrical conduits?  That way if there’s ever a leak it won’t short circuit the electric service.

The men who dug did some of the tidiest work we’ve ever seen. They made careful piles of material to refill the trenches when the pipe was laid, and they created a new stone dump at the far end of a lower fascia where they put all the big rocks they couldn’t use again. I’m embarrassed that I don’t know their names. Giovanni’s crew tends to change frequently as new men arrive from Romania, and then strike out on their own after they’re well settled here.  To a man they are incredibly strong, hard working and persistent.

They had to break through the supporting wall of the stairs that descend from the street level so that the pipe could run under the stairs (thank goodness they left that space hollow when, five years ago, they built the walls for the parcheggio above).


The pipe emerged again at the top step only to disappear into a new box built just for the purpose as required by the sewer company for reasons no one of us could plumb.  From there it was just a short downhill journey to the main sewer line.

(An interesting aside – one of our sour neighbors who have a right of passage down the stairs (yes, the same ones who were so patient while we dumped sewage on their property) complained that the new connection box is ‘unsafe.’  Our geometra opined that it was unsafe if one were blind, and that if we really felt we needed to address this complaint (which he didn’t think we did) we could just put something decorative on top of the box to alert the eye.  We’ve done nothing, and have heard nothing more on the matter. They send an old lady down the stairs once a year, just to be sure we remember they have the right.  I’m waiting for a letter from a lawyer. )

It took about 10 days to complete the physical part of the work on the project – each person showed up when promised and did what was necessary.  We were extremely lucky that about a day before the work was finished we received permission from the Sewer Department to connect to the main.  It was such a relief when the work was done.  It was a big undertaking, and the Captain put in untold hours planning and overseeing work.  What a joy it was the first time we heard a great whoosh up at the connection box and realized that our pumps were sending our waste on its way to Rapallo.

A sewer connection is one of those things we just never think about until necessity thrusts the thought upon us.  This problem drove us crazy for about six months; to this day I think with relief, when I flush, of where the water and whatnot are going.  Let’s hope the pumps last longer than we do!

On the Deck

26 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in Building, Construction, Home maintenance and repair, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Composite decking, Decks, Renovation, Verandah decking

We should know from restoring our old house in Rapallo that no fix-it-up job is simple.  Unexpected complications always attend a home improvement project.  Our small deck in Arizona was no exception.

I’ve been lobbying for deck replacement for a couple of years.  The old deck was made of pressure-treated boards; they had cupped and splintered in the intense summer heat here, and it was a hazard to walk on them in bare feet.  We knew we wanted to replace the wood with composite boards when the time came; a sale of the Home Depot brand gave us the impetus to get started. Here’s a side-by-side comparison of the ugly old and sparkling new:

The first adventure was getting the boards home.  We needed 24 of them.  They are 12 feet long, a bit floppy, heavy, and, it turns out, very slippery.  Because of the weight we had to transport them atop my ancient car in two loads.  As I turned the next-to-the-last corner to get home the whole load slid off the front of the car and skittered across the road.  Fortunately there was no traffic, and even more fortunately two kindly knights stopped and helped me secure the boards for the short end of the journey.  Unfortunately some of the boards got pretty scratched up as they moved across the pebbly road.

Removing the old decking was relatively easy; removing the three large joists that supported the old deck was more difficult.


Our friend John, who is ‘in’ construction, agreed that the outer supports of the deck were in sufficiently good condition to keep.  The old joists were spaced 32″ apart; the new decking required joists 16″ apart, so we went back to Home Depot and got seven pieces of pressure-treated joist wood.  We had not anticipated having to replace all the joists.  Nor had we anticipated having to patch and fill where the old joists met the house, nor where there was a bit of rot in one of the main supports.


It all takes so much time!  And it was hot – 95 F the day we placed most of the joists.


But life in Italy has taught us the phrase ‘piano, piano.’  Just start the job, keep at it slowly and carefully and, as they also like to say in Rapallo, “Wallah!” – eventually your job is finished.

So it was with the deck, and we are thrilled with the result.  We are also utterly exhausted from the work, especially the Captain who had to do all the heavy parts of it.


A quick word about Home Depot: the people there could not be nicer.  We received tons of helpful advice, all of it spot on.  When we bought a couple of small power tools the salesman told us, “If they don’t work the way you want them to for your job, bring them back.”  Home Depot is enormous – it’s the size of a football arena, and contains everything you could ever need for home or garden.  We love our ‘Fai da Te’ stores in Italy, but they are wee in comparison.  It’s not that there’s not a lot of do-it-yourself in Italy – there’s a tremendous amount, much of it extremely creative and very beautiful.  But if you want cement you go to the cement store, if you want wood you go to the wood store, and if you want nails you go to the hardware store – it’s not all under one roof.  And in Italy there’s a lot of use made of old materials; not much goes to waste there.

Speaking of Italy, we’ll be heading home in the next week, so your Expatriate will be silent for a week or two…

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