13 products that will make your life easier
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Bookmark this travel packing list because you’ll want to refer to it as
your trip gets closer. It’ll serve as a tool to tell you exactly what to
pack, whet...
5 months ago
11 comments:
Gosh... I'm really sorry to read about what happened to you guys. It sounds like both of you are very trusting and think that everyone else is like you. I used to be that way. If anything good cam come out of it, it is that you will probably not repeat the same mistake. While it must be difficult to see the mistakes, I hope both of you can get to the point when you laugh at this "relatively small" hiccup. That is what it is. Your home sounds lovely and you will enjoy it for many years to come. The best of luck!
Thanks! I'm not at the laughing point yet, unless I'm making fun of those guys, but I'm sure it will come. Eventually.
Wowsers!!! I just had an experience this past week with the same type thing on a smaller scale. Pissed is putting it nicely. Anonymous is right, if anything good can come out of it it is to scrutinize everything, demand references, look at past work, demand a guarantee and be very assertive.
::sigh::
This is too familiar. My 'contractor' is MIA today. Again. Luckily, we do have a contract but that's not making them move much faster.
You know, I'd like to know how these people stay in business! Everyone I talk to has had a contractor hell story of one kind or another. It seems like if it's not a million dollar job, they're not motivated to do it, expecially where I live.
I do some business out of my house and always make it a point to call my clients, give them updates, timeframes, and give them a part in the process - no matter what project they want me to do! People who don't respect me enough to call me, tell me when they're showing up or why they're not just offend me so much.
It's so frustrating as homeowners. I wish we could just rebel against these people, but we're at their mercy because we need their help to get a job done! After all, you can't do EVERYTHING yourself.
Wow, that's a bitter story. I'm amazed that you had so much patience, and that they got paid in the end.
Also want to mention, regarding the cat flea problem, that vets carry a new chemical called Fipronyl (sells as Frontline) that you put on the back of a cat's neck & it will soak into the skin overnight and make the cat toxic to fleas for a month. Goes for about $11 per dose around here.
Oh my god, Zelda. Those fleas. In addition to the cat at Mike's parents' house were his parents' two dogs. I was intelligent and gave the cat frontline, but Mike's brother kept insisting over and over that the dogs didn't have fleas and wouldn't take them to the vet or buy them frontline.
The problem intensified and intensified until the cat's Frontline could not even control it. You could see the fleas jumping up from the carpets. My ankles were covered in flea bites. If you dropped an article of clothing on the floor you'd have to shake the fleas off. If you bent down to pick something up, you'd have to brush them off your amrs and chest. It was horrible - a nightmare!
Mike's mother had been away taking care of Mike's grandmother for the past couple months as all this was going on. His dad was over in Iraq blowing up bombs. When Mike's mom returned, she made his brother take the dogs to the vet. Only then did the cat, the carpets, and my ankles start to recover.
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