As I told you last night, that is exactly what happened to me several years 
ago. This is however the water suppliers equipment so I strongly advise you to 
leave it to them. If you do damage it there will be one hell of a mess until 
the control for the street is located and shut off and that won't even start 
until you call them up and they dispatch a crew.

Some things are just worth waiting for.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Rossi 
  To: Blind Handyman List 
  Sent: Saturday, June 13, 2009 10:48 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Finding my curb box.





  So, in preparation for some plumbing work, I had to find my curb box, 
  where they turn the water off to the house. Most of my neighbors you can 
  easily find their curb boxes, they are either right in the side walk in 
  front of the house, or in the lawn, but uncovered.

  Teresa did a survey of our lawn, but no visual sign of anything. I have a 
  large metal stake and started probing the lawn for a bit each evening. 
  After only about 15 minutes of probing I did find the shut-off 
  for the gas, but no joy on the water all week.

  This is not a large area and I probed the hell out of it and pulled a good 
  sized pile of rocks, some quite large out of the lawn. It looks like a 
  deranged gopher had at my yard.

  Today I went and rented a metal detector. After practicing for a few 
  minutes, finding the gas shut-off a few times, I started sweeping the 
  lawn. I found a few more rocks. Then I kept getting a hit in this one 
  area. I would get a hit, probe with the stake, but didn't find anything, 
  a large rock, but no cap for the shut-off. I kept getting a strong hit 
  though.

  I started digging in that area and eventually found out why my probing had 
  not found the shut-off. The cap was missing and the pipe filled with 
  dirt. So, when I was probing, I might have hit it, but only the edge of 
  the pipe, so more probing wouldn't have shown me that there was a large 
  flat cap there.

  I dug, scraped, and shop vacked out the dirt until I got down to the 
  actual shut-off valve. I think I might have a problem as the head of the 
  valve seems to be up against the side of the vertical pipe, possibly it 
  has shifted.

  I think I have done as much as is required to save me the money of the 
  time required to pay someone else to find it, but I am thinking I might 
  leave it up to someone else to turn it off since, if they break it, it 
  should be their problem, not mine, to replace.

  Nothing is ever easy on an 80-odd year old house.

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [email protected]
  Tel: (412) 268-9081


  

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