In all, we dug a 24 foot long trench for the sink and toilet drains, then another two at angles measuring 12 feet long and 10 feet long. At the end is where the new drain ties in with the existing sewer line. We will also have the electrical share part of the trench that leads to the house. Oh did I mention that the entire trench had to slope until it met the existing one? Yes that's right, the further we dug the deeper we had to go. THEN... The stub out for the toilet drain had been covered in cement when the foundation was poured so I had to chisel the cement away which took about an hour. Tired yet? There's more.
We (I) also dug 15 foot long trench for the new gas line.
Yep. There it is. It took nearly an hour to chisel this out. Care had to be taken not to damage the pipe.
The 24 foot long trench.
Where ever there is an elbow in the pipes, we need to have a clean out. In this case we have 4 in the new drain whereas there are 2 in the existing drain. This is #1.
The 2nd clean out is sticking up there just by the door. That gray box on the wall is the on demand hot water heater.
The drain then angles down to the right and...
... meets up with clean out #3. The copper pipes are the intake to the pump and then the return back to the house. The gray pipe is the electrical from the electrical/water room to the house. Confused yet?
The 12 foot trench where it meets up to the 10 foot trench near the lanai.
We had 4 piles of dirt like this one. How can so much dirt come from such a narrow little trench?
And here is clean out #4 and where the new drain meets up with the existing drain. All this for a toilet and a sink!
A small portion of the trench for the gas line. This was a 3 hour dig on the HOTTEST day of the year and no shade in sight.
Stay tuned for an update on the stairs and railing.
4 comments:
Oy vey!
OY VEY IS RIGHT! But this means we can now finish painting the bottom and start planting! YAY!
Wow! I'm exhausted just reading it!
i need a nap!!! no pain, no gain...
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