The Sewer Saga – 1

When our son was five, we wanted to sell our first house and move closer to where I worked. But we couldn’t do that, because the septic system had failed. I’ll spare you the unpleasant details of how I knew that.

Massachusetts Title 5 regulation requires a functioning septic system, or municipal sewer hookup, to sell a property. The first step was calling the town and requesting a soil percolation test. A licensed inspector with a clipboard and stopwatch came out with a guy holding a shovel and bucket, who requested a hose. He did the digging then poured the water, while the inspector tracked the drainage time.

The soil in my backyard failed the test. The inspector said a new leaching field would require removal of the 24-ft. above-ground pool, along with a big tree. The backyard would have a huge mound with a vent pipe. The estimated cost would be at least $25,000 (equivalent to $50,000 today).

My thought was that, in addition to the cost of a new septic system and leaching field, the backyard would make the property extremely difficult to sell, even at a financial loss. During the recession of the early Nineties, the house had narrowly missed falling into negative equity. For a moment it seemed the best thing to do was get a new septic system, stay in the house, and continue to endure my commute.

But wait, said the inspector. A sewer line would be coming to the street the following year and the town wanted everybody to connect to the new system. Would I be willing to delay putting my house on the market and keep the septic tank pumped out as often as necessary, until the sewer line came to my street?

ABSOLUTELY YES!

He torn up the paperwork for the inspection and said, “I was never here.”

Hardcover for the Hardcore

It’s BIG! It’s HEAVY! It’s TL:DR for all but HARDCORE fans of Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F5NZ14WQ

There’s a Kindle e-book edition, but how much fun would that be? I’ve read reports of copies being delivered in damaged condition, but mine arrived in perfect shape.

Hollywood loves movies about itself. Not being a fan myself of any edition of A Star is Born, OUATIH is, for me, the best Hollywood love letter since Singin’ in the Rain.

If the book has more than you’d ever want to know about the movie, this interview with author Jay Glennie has more than you’d ever want to know about the book.

https://www.thewrap.com/once-upon-a-time-in-hollywood-making-of-book-interview/

The very last page of the massive tome has a picture of Brandy’s favorite DOG food. The RAT flavor. What else could it be, but a sly nod to this blog? 😉

Return to Downtown and Back to Mono

Andrew at Parlogram talks about one of the most significant Pop records of all time. Petula Clark’s “Downtown”.

It was a record that everyone of all ages loved hearing. This video of “Downtown” was made by somebody who knows his Sixties-era mono-mix 45 rpm singles. He played it with a mono Ortofon cartridge.

Andrew demonstrates the difference a quality, lateral-tracking mono cartridge can make for purists of original, mono-mix Sixties records.

Rats ‘n’ Bats

Here’s something very scary to see. A rat catching and biting into a bat! Mr. Rat carries it off, presumably to have Mr. Bat for dinner.

YIKES! What are the implications of that nightmare?

https://www.npr.org/sections/goats-and-soda/2025/11/08/g-s1-96931/rat-bat-virus-video

Last night, sitting at my drawing table, I heard something I’ve come to expect this time of year, when the weather gets cold. What I heard was the sound of a mouse crawling around in the wall between my office and what I’ll call the media room.

I set a non-lethal mouse trap that has worked for me in the past. This morning it hadn’t been disturbed. I decided to finally take more decisive action and go under the porch to see if I could find a likely point of entry, where the inside wall is located along the foundation. This gap looked like it. There’s even a crack there.

I’d heard that steel wool works as a mouse block. I have a supply on hand that’s used to polish the rim of my Thorens turntable platter. I stretched out half a dozen wads of it then packed it good and tight into the run of that gap.

Either the mouse is still in the wall and has been napping all day, or he left to take advantage of today’s 62 degree weather. If the former, is he stuck inside and will he find his way to the trap? If the latter, will he be prevented from getting back inside?