It’s
always something, you know. If you own your house – and even if you don’t –
it’s always something with the abode.
Tap
tap tap. Tappity-tap-tap-tap. TAP TAP TAP. Tappity-tap.
Mike
tools leather on a sturdy table in the east dormer, so I thought nothing of the
tapping. He had gone upstairs, turned on the radio, and the tapping commenced. I
thought he had finished the current project, but the sequence of events was so
logical that I didn’t question it. I was sure he was tapping away at his work
table. Tap tap tap. Tap tap tap. Then – while the tapping continued -- I heard
him get up and walk down the hall. Pondering the feasibility of tapping and
walking, I concluded that Mike wasn’t the source of the tapping. And that meant
just one thing . . .
“Were
you tapping?” I asked as he descended the stairs. No, he hadn’t been tapping,
he said. And just then the tapping started again.
“Okay,”
I said, “we have a problem.” We moved to the kitchen and identified the sound as
coming from the northwest corner of the house in the vicinity of the kitchen
porch.
“Maybe
it’s the water tank,” Mike said hopefully. “No,” I said. The three of us made
several stealthy trips to investigate without seeing anything -- perhaps because
we didn’t want to see anything. Finally, I literally crept out the kitchen door
and just caught sight of the flicker as it winged away. Then we saw the damage
at the end of the porch.
But
that wasn’t all. We next discovered flicker damage on an unexposed board on the
front porch.
Two
years ago we hired Bi-State Siding out of Lewiston to cover much of the exposed
wood on the farmhouse. We didn’t cover those areas that we thought would be inaccessible.
Well, we were wrong to think they were inaccessible. “There’s no such thing as
‘can’t get,’” my mother used to say.
On
our last trip to town, Mike re-visited Bi-State Siding. The flickers are good
for business, they told him, especially in the vicinity of Dworshak Dam, and of
course, we aren’t far from there “as the flicker flies.” But the company doesn’t
keep records, so we have to match our trim color again before we can buy more
siding. KW
2 comments:
DARN it! Dumb birds! *shaking fist*
A big addition at my school a number of years ago included a new gym with a type of plaster facade. The birds loved it!! Holes everywhere! I think they were finally able to come up with some kind of solution, but the outside has many polka dots where the patches absorbed the paint slightly differently.
What Hallie said! :-)
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