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Our summer was too dry at first and today it got too wet
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Klaas a day ago
So I wanted to got to bed early after an evening visit to the zoo in high humidity that was rather taxing since our zoo is in the hills – so the path is long and a constant up and down.

Then there was a thunderstorm – earlier than the latest weather reports which only hour before said that there wouldn't be any rain.

And then the basement was full of water. There is a built-in water barrier, but it was too low. When I got down there was water up to the lowest stair. Behind the barrier with a closed steel door there was so much water pressure that the storage room on the other side, the storage cupboard and the guest room which doubles as auxiliary storage was flooded as well.

After I manually closed the connection to the sewer water was still coming in from a more than one meter high pipe that is used to collect condensation from the chimney. I unplugged the washing machines, the water pump for the garden and the heater. Then I hastily left the room and closed the door with a lot of trouble.

The last five hours were removing water – first with a bucket chain with help from the neighbours next door, then the neighbour from across the street fetched a pump. Our second pump which I tried to get going earlier has a leak and does not work at all.
His pump can pump approximately 1000 litres per hour and it was running for at least three hours.
Then a friend arrived with a second working pump and started to pump from the storage room. I had already managed to decrease the boiler room's water level by bucket into then reconnected toilet that the previous owner though was a good idea to include and is often the main cause of trouble. To be fair – if it wasn't there all the water would have gone through the washing machines and maybe even through our kitchen sink/dish washer one floor up.

To make matters worse the neighbour from above 1) opened the door to the boiler room and made the water amounts unmanageable and 2) started moving some of my food from the storage cupboard around making everything unusable. Before that only the things in the lowest container was destroyed. I've lost 10 kg of rye and naked oat each and some very expensive rice.

The guest room unfortunately had carpet and below that some sort of plastic tilings from the previous owner. And my guitar amp with builtin speaker plus an additional speaker, my second bass speaker (Markbass ), the subwoofer of my stereo, an old high quality microscope that I've inherited from my grandmother and other things.

I'm not sure if any of those things are salvageable. After all the buckets of waters and countless fillings of my wet-dry vacuum cleaner I'm not really able to move and then all the things from the room had to be moved to the garage as well. Then the carpet and the plastic tilings.
Klaas a day ago
Oh right. The only thing he really saved were two canisters of distilled water.
Pengling a day ago
Oh no... I hope that there's some way to resolve the issues caused by the flooding (does your insurance cover this sort of thing?), and that you're able to salvage the important items that may have been damaged...

I don't live in an area that floods, but I did have to deal with a burst pipe a couple of times. Whilst that's nowhere near as severe as your situation, I wholeheartedly sympathise - even that was chaotic to sort out.
Klaas a day ago
Quoting: PenglingI don't live in an area that floods, but I did have to deal with a burst pipe a couple of times.
Did have that as well several times.

I'm not sure what the insurance covers since we are practically not able to have a real water damage insurance since we theoretically live in a flooding area of a big river that is far away.

But this was not a flooding issue, the sewer is not deep enough under the road and there was too much rain.


Looking through all that could be potentially damaged has to be ASAP since the damage spreads the longer it takes. I still can barely move.
Grogan a day ago
Damn, sorry to hear about your troubles, Klaas. My back hurts just thinking about it.
whizse about 21 hours ago
That just sucks a big bucket of bummerballs...
StoneColdSpider about 21 hours ago
Damn that sucks dude hope you get it all sorted soon enough mate....... And I hope insurance doesnt give you to much troubles.....

We are having a really wet winter here in Aus right now as well........ Thankfully I dont have a basement..... Theres a law against me having basements after what happened in the last one.......
Klaas about 17 hours ago
I can't go down the stairs anymore. First I separated the wet cardboard from between the things in the garage and sprinkled them and the carpet and fake tiles cuttings around the house to dry in the sun. Then I bought two large floor fans to move the air around.

Then a friend arrived who took photos of all damaged things with my camera (as independent witness) and of the inside of all audio equipment and then helped remove everything that could potentially have gotten wet. Unfortunately a lot of things got wet.

During the work I almost fell down because I lost control of one knee.

Nine more hours of cleanup today.
denyasis about 11 hours ago
Oh no! I'm so sorry to hear of your ordeal!! I've had to deal with floods too (I live next to a small stream), and they are some of the most stressful things I've ever encountered. I really hope you're able to salvage some of your belongings.
Klaas 24 minutes ago
Since it was not fresh-water from a pipe inside the house the insurance will not cover anything.
StoneColdSpider 21 minutes ago
Quoting: KlaasSince it was not fresh-water from a pipe inside the house the insurance will not cover anything.
Oh that is some class A bullshit right there..........
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