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ToughButterCup

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Everything posted by ToughButterCup

  1. Politely tell the ecologists that in this context, ( non dischargeable..... no evidence) you will do your own survey and subsequently follow published guidance on building and wildlife. Cue mini explosion from the ecologist Sit tight. And there's nothing the ecologist can do - nothing that is enforceable. Demonstrate how you have followed guidelines : evidence the process. Images, notes, photos.... Cost £ 0.
  2. Take a lesson from the Afghans: pile more mud (or whatever you want to use / have available) on top of the damage. Where is your local bulk clay supply - and is it suitable for building? Next to our house we have an old clay 'quarry' It was used to supply clay for the local canal (100 meters away). You could do worse than find out which quarries supplied clay from for the local canals. Idea? Got me interested now......
  3. Apply and wait. My guess is the same as @joe90's. Its a Material Matter. And, unless the issue is clear-cut, then the answer will always be to err on the side of caution. You could spend a bit of time looking for similar applications on your Council's Planning website - has anyone applied to do something similar - or not? If they have, there's your answer. If not, thats a hint you might get away without formal Permission. Thinking about what appears to be the local micropolitics, it may be better -anyway- to apply and get on with other stuff until the Council makes a decision. Don't be too concerned about neighbourhood objection: they need to make sure their objection is Material (that bloody word again 🤨), and Planners are used to pointless objections. Immaterial arguments are (should be) automatically rejected. Please remember, we are interested (some would say nosey) amateurs. We are not experts.
  4. @Jilly, if it's like I suspect it MIGHT be - there's in all probability a push-rod behind the button. The 'stroke' of that button may be adjustable. If I'm right thus far, then all you might need to do is rotate that push-rod clockwise or anti-clockwise such that the rod extends outwards (towards the user) a bit. If it's an old design, the linkage will be brass, and might be clogged up a bit. If its plastic, then you're in luck. If you are able to screw in (or out) that may well mean that the mechanism engages that bit more with the innards. It could be that the button itself is firmly attached to that push-rod - in which case, does the button itself rotate? I had a loo in Berlin that was just like this - it had a sloppy linkage (as in there was lots of play in the various bits) design. (Yes, there was an inspection panel in a cupboard next to the pan 😐)
  5. Another job for a cheap inspection camera with a fiber probe ? Here's one I found earlier 🫡
  6. The guy who fitted that (and it wasn't a woman) was getting his revenge for something.
  7. Manchmal können Deutsche Designers wirklich dumm sein. Echt doof. Foto bitte ..... Close-up if you can
  8. Wouldn'tcha just luve to talk to the dick'ed who left the system like that. Now, there's an exposed summat or other yes? Is soem sort of push-rod visible?
  9. Ideally is an understatement. Thats the only way you can do it and not lose your teeth swearing.
  10. Kaput eh? You sayin' German engineering is Scheisse? Or wot? Seen summat like this in The Fatherland. Does the button unscrew? If so Bingo. Access to the wall behind (as in the room behind) the assembly : in other words a service void accessible from a room adjacent ? Wenn nicht, dann ist hier Alles Quatsch. If not, sure as Hell a German didn't have anything to do with the design.
  11. Build the wall and the step(s) Make a little trench (200mm) between the steps and the lawn , fill with 10mm /20mm if you'd prefer to (say) 400mm .
  12. You have full PP? Or Outline permission? Have you submitted your plans to BC for approval? (Often called The Building Regs Application) If so ( and they are happy) , then No is the answer. No (as proof) is the answer to the second question too. One quick way I have heard of as showing commencement is to install a temporary electricity supply (you may already have one?). Photograph and date the installation. Send via email to Building Control. Job jobbed. As usual @Temp (above) has the definitive, official, water-tight answer. It's a bore though. And costs munee.
  13. People are where they are in the house-ownership cycle. Maybe their ' push ' to just get-on-the-ladder was (is?) harder than you realise?
  14. That's a good emetic now. Oooops there goes a biscuit. 🤮.
  15. Three aggressive tomcats.... on patrol most days - when not so deeply asleep that they appear to be in a different time warp.
  16. Welcome. I'm not sure if anyone here (on this board) has any experience of Baufritz: as I understand it they are a "Turnkey" company. Our focus is more on doing it on your own. Perhaps you could ask the company if they have any existing clients who are willing to talk to prospective customers.
  17. Yes Joe that's what everybody says, except when you live there loads of people who live in Shrewsbury always call it Salop - as well . That's quite interesting because 'Salope' is French slang for 'prostitute'.
  18. Wuster. It's another of those places like Shrewsbury - locals call it Salop.
  19. Smells sometimes evoke powerful reactions. The OP above presumably is talking about a smell that isn't wanted and that's really inconvenient. I can't think of a way of dealing with the problem other than to mask it in some way. Or presumably learn to live with it. I had a mate who lived in a flat in Worcester, not far from the Lea + Perrins Sauce factory. I used to visit him on my motorbike. I knew I was near his flat about half a mile from where he lived , sometimes from further away than that. When I asked him how he managed to deal with the quite intrusive smell, he said that after week or so he just didn't smell it anymore. Visiting his flat used to make me hungry -like - really hungry.
  20. Invite them to eat at yours? Our neighbours are 25 meters away : liver and onions, bacon butties, an indecent curry , our teenagers' armpits (when that age) - all within smelling distance at 25 meters. Years ago, I did an attachment in a hospital as part of my job - the doctors (with glee) sent me to work in the the morgue for the first week. A fabulously professional morgue attendant took pity and told me - breathe through your mouth only. 'Click' smell disappears.
  21. Morning, welcome! SWMBO and HWMBO together eh? So who's the boss? 🫡
  22. I'm on first name terms with the local rats. Mice are almost irrelevant. We have some field mice hereabouts so I'm quite careful about controlling them. The rats have already done some damage, they were in the roof. But I sorted that out - took the roof tiles off , clean the hole out filled it with foam , recovered and repaired the felt, popped the tiles back. That's one thing about being a self-builder you can get the job done instantly and you know how to do it and you know how to do it well. We all suffer from rats round here because we are right next to a pig farm. In addition we run a good few chickens so rats are never not a problem. They appear to me not to mind a weekly onslaught by me with my rifle . They don't take much notice of their colleagues being shot. In fact they sometimes use their dead colleagues as lunch. They are worthy opponents and in some senses I'm grateful for them keeping my shootings skills almost as sharp as they once they were. There is of course a dreadful temptation to use poison : but that seems to cause our three cats to have upset stomachs so we try hard not to use it. I will never shoot any of the birds that decide to nest in our Cellotex. They are all most welcome. No matter what Steamy Tea says, I'm almost sure that the U value of a warm starling is higher than the u value of the insulation
  23. A generous interpretation @TerryE. I am ground down by the build. Two new hips replaced in 6 months hammers you. And then I look back at all the work done in substantial pain before the operations... But Hell, there's a house here where there wasn't before. I am mindful of the privilege though. So very many have said that they would like to be able to build their own house..... But .
  24. Absolutely correct @Roundtuit. A local builder ( well respected and trusted) teased me about the issue yesterday. When he'd finished taking the proverbial, he casually mentioned that the new extension - that he'd built for for his own house - had exactly the same problem. Ya just can't get the staff these days.
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