I'm too stupid to know when to quit.aggie appraiser said:
4 years...you are a trooper
I'm too stupid to know when to quit.aggie appraiser said:
4 years...you are a trooper
I poured concentrated round up in the stumps a while back and it knocked it back a bit. But it will take several attempts to get this under controlQuote:
I fought a similar battle with bamboo on a fence line that was invading from a neighbor. I hand painted thousands of cut shoots with Tordon RTU. Took two treatments a couple months apart. Then tilled up/raked out all bamboo matter. Getting every last rhizome out was a PITA
Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Out of curiosity, does you crawl space have ventilation?
Dig it. Thanks.AgCWby90CS said:
what about this for your drive?
https://eaglebaypavers.com/products/turfstone/
Yeah, I've been trying to regrade a bit at the foundation. Right now the crawl space is basically air-conditioned and heated which you can feel when you pass by the scuttles. It's nuts.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
I'm not an expert, just pose as one on the internet. But I've dealt with a handful subfloor/crawl space moisture cases. It looks like the house didn't have proper ventilation when you bought it, which may have contributed to the rot. Then again, if you are keeping the floors original, most of the moisture will probably vent up through the floor into the living space and be handled by the HVAC.
https://www.thespruce.com/crawlspace-ventilation-requirements-1821946
You may already have a plan for this. The picture of the standing water between the houses just got me thinking.
I just guttered my 2500sf house for $2700 in DFW. Included guards for the leaves. Ended up about $5/ft in cost.p_bubel said:Yeah, I've been trying to regrade a bit at the foundation. Right now the crawl space is basically air-conditioned and heated which you can feel when you pass by the scuttles. It's nuts.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
I'm not an expert, just pose as one on the internet. But I've dealt with a handful subfloor/crawl space moisture cases. It looks like the house didn't have proper ventilation when you bought it, which may have contributed to the rot. Then again, if you are keeping the floors original, most of the moisture will probably vent up through the floor into the living space and be handled by the HVAC.
https://www.thespruce.com/crawlspace-ventilation-requirements-1821946
You may already have a plan for this. The picture of the standing water between the houses just got me thinking.
Gutters are on the list as well.
I assume you are tackling this yourself?p_bubel said:
New paint job and wood repair, yep.
There's levels of "done" I'm willing to live with. I still don't have a proper kitchen. The floors need to be refinished and there's still some trim work to be done. And interior paint.dubi said:
I'm so happy you are getting it done. That looked really difficult!
Remind me: Is the inside done?