June 10th

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SERVING HENDRICKS COUNTY SINCE 1847

Page 6

MASTERING THE HOUSE Tim Paino

Owner/Inspector Heartland HouseMaster

useful tips for homeowners

The Republican

Voices

We offer Voices as a place to share a story, a memory, an idea, a comment, a criticism, or a solution. Contributors must include name, address & phone number.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

ASK MR. TRAFFIC By Chet Skwarcan, PE, President/ Founder of Traffic Engineering, Inc. Chet@TrafficEngineering.com

Battling the Landscaping There is nothing like a beautifully landscaped yard to make our homes exterior appearance look better. The battle begins when landscaping starts to overtake our homes. It is a problem when trees and shrubs start touching the outer envelope of our home. Many times, the problem really starts with the original positioning of the plant. We purchase young, small plants because of the cost, ease of transporting, and planting. These small plants just do not look right positioned far away from the house or each other, so we end up planting them too close to both the home and each other. After a few short years they are not only crowding each other, but they are rubbing the siding on our home.

Maybe this is a little extreme but, this is a picture from a recent home inspection where the home’s roof was cut away to allow the tree to continue to grow, literally through the roof. Here are a few issues we want to avoid. 1. Limbs rubbing the shingles: As the wind moves the limbs across the roof it wears the shingles, shortening their life, leading to leaks, and advancing the need for a roof replacement. 2. Landscaping against the siding: The friction against siding can cause damage, but the more likely harm is holding moisture. The reduced air movement prevents the moisture on the homes exterior from drying bringing possible mildew, wood decay and in cold weather issues with freezing. 3. Path for insect: Plants are the perfect shelter for insect with both food and water in vast supply. When those plants encounter our home, a path is created to invite those insects to walk right over and into our space. 4. Blocking Air Conditioners: The outside compressor unit to our homes air conditioner needs to have room to breathe. Many times, we desire to hide the equipment with landscaping, but we must keep it far enough away from all sides to allow for proper air flow through the unit. 5. Roots: When large trees are planted too close to sidewalks, driveways, and foundations they have the strength to move anything in their way. Concrete heaves and foundations crack. Climbing plants, allowed to grow on a home’s exterior, have roots that cut their way into wood or mortar causing damage. Here are a few quick tips. Know your plants. If possible, before you purchase a plant know how large it is going to grow and position it in your landscaping knowing it is going to grow. Next, know when to trim. Different type plants should be trimmed at different times of the year to perform and look their best. And lastly, do not skip trimmings. When a plant gets overgrown it is difficult to ever return it to a manageable size. Use your bonsai skills and keep your plantings at their desired size. Build a trellis for those climbing plants and keep them off the house. Allow 12 to 18 inches between your home’s exterior and your landscaping. It will still look beautiful from the street and your home will breathe easier. ______________________________________________

What Are You Reading? In this age of social media, the pages of a book can still provide a sanctuary, an education, and an inspiration. Let us know what books are on your reading list and why you do or do not recommend them. You can leave your comments on our Facebook page, or send them to betty@TheRepublicanNewspaper.com. There is no Frigate like a Book To take us Lands away Nor any Coursers like a Page Of prancing Poetry – This Traverse may the poorest take Without oppress of Toll – How frugal is the Chariot That bears the Human Soul – Emily Dickinson Summer is a time for traveling - what books will you be reading to take you on a journey to somewhere new and foreign or to an old familar place from your past? Send us what’s on your summer reading list or what you pick up by chance and are swept into another world and new adventures. A recomendation: Thinking in Pictures: My Life With Autism by Temple Grandin. A professor in animal behavior, she gives a glimpse of the inner world of those who “think differently” yet have much in common with those who think of themselves as “normal.”

Trigonometry or Track: What Else School Should Teach You By Krishna Lathish Nearly two years later, I couldn’t tell you how a normal distribution represents data or the way a nuclear power plant produces energy. However, I can still feel how cold it was the October of my first ever competition as a speech and debate competitor. I came in 5th in my division; as I watched the other, more capable speakers accept their ribbons with good-natured promises of being champion next meet, the need to strive for better fastened itself to me much more permanently than the finer points of the Byzantine Empire. Many parents and students alike have the view that if you simply focus on maintaining the best grades in the hardest classes possible, you can check “well rounded education” off your to-do list. It’s certainly not an unfounded belief – we go to school to learn before anything else, so why not direct all your efforts towards the concrete, hard skills? The U.S. Bureau of Labor reported that unemployed high schoolers from 2011-2015 spent 15.4 hours of their day on sleep or education; with only 8.6 hours left to make use of in the years leading up to graduation, the choice between working on classes that may yield college credits or building a mock business presentation may seem clear. But as someone who is now turning the corner on my home stretch of the first 12 years of education, my biggest regret is that I wasn’t more involved. I’m glad I strove for the best grades I could maintain, but in retrospect, I can admit that I used that as a scapegoat when justifying why I didn’t put myself out there more. During the school year, you’re simply too busy with homework to explore seemingly superfluous clubs, and after a tough 10 months, not being industrious with 60 days of summer break feels well deserved. My sophomore year of high school was the first time I tried wading into the world of school clubs; I’m lucky to have only lost out on a year of my high school experience, but as I draft my final speech for next season, it’s the one I wish I could have back most. School is no longer about learning multiplication on an abacus and getting your knuckles rapped for wrong answers; it’s the first and last time you are forced to be around people for most of your day, nearly every day, in your whole life. In my very teen opinion, it seems like every adult bemoans the difficulty of maintaining friendships and hobbies after leaving school – so if your kids never learn how to connect with people and find their interests in their formative years, what are they left with at 30, when there’s no structures in place to urge you to form relationships and venture out into the world? A lighter course load in exchange for time in a club to develop soft skills that not only employers, but the world demands is a deal that you should encourage every student in your life to take as early as possible. _____________________________________________

A Note From Bee I have a very strong dislike of electronic games for children. You rarely see children playing outside anymore. They are inside with eyes glued to electronic games. Even children as young as three have an electronic device. In the good old days children played games outdoors, rode their bicycles, played in the sandbox, swung on swings, etc. My children spent at least three summers building a tree house in an enormous walnut tree in back of our lot. They were building houses in our addition and there was lots of scrap wood. Scrap wood, some nails, and hammers and it kept them busy a large part of the day. The construction crew consisted of six kids all about nine years old. There were two other kids but they were too young to be on the crew. There were a couple of scary moments. I was looking out the kitchen window and saw that one of the kids had climbed beyond the highest utility line. My first reaction was to run screaming out to the tree and yelling to the boy to get down. I got myself under control and talked the boy down. We immediately had a safety lesson on the dangers of climbing beyond the tree house. My daughter got her foot stuck on a nail. I had never climbed a tree and of course when the children were hurt my husband was at work. Fortunately a teenage boy lived a couple of houses down and somehow got me to my injured daughter. I did have to pull her foot out of the nail. We had another safety lesson. Those kids really pounded those nails in so hard that years later the boards were intact. They had weathered many a strong storm. Just the other day we got to reminiscing about the tree house. Our daughter said if we ever cut the tree down she wanted a piece of it. She had such pleasant memories of building that tree house. Bee Jones _____________________________________________ Every great person is always being helped by everybody; for their gift is to get good out of all things and all persons. John Ruskin

Cars Are Not Meant to Be Idle Do Your Fair Share By far, the question I get asked the most is, “Can I see your driver’s license and registration?” But another question often asked is, “As a homeowner, how much traffic do I generate?” Because think about it, most of us live in houses, apartments, or condominiums — so it might surprise you how much traffic you’re contributing. Vehicle tracking data is available for newer vehicles, but don’t worry, it is anonymized (to protect your privacy). So, although I may know a vehicle leaves your address every day (your house?) and goes to another address (your work?) and stops at Taco Bell on the way there (and the way back), I don’t actually know if it was you driving the car or a friend of yours or someone who just looks like you. That’s because the data is anonymized — your privacy is protected. And if you put all this data into a computer — thousands and thousands of vehicles, latitudes, longitudes, time of day, etc., we can see, for example, how great it would be to have a more interesting job. Fortunately, someone already did this. We know, for example, a typical single-family home generates approximately 10.4 trips per day (5.2 coming and 5.2 going). This number includes your share of friends, visitors, and deliveries. Also, keep in mind, this is an average number — your neighbor far exceeds this (and I know, you never get to go anywhere). So, if you and 99 of your friends live in a subdivision (i.e., 100 houses), traffic engineer’s would expect, on a typical weekday, approximately 520 vehicles entering and 520 vehicles exiting during a 24-hr period. More interesting, during the evening rush hour, we would expect approximately 60 vehicles entering and 40 vehicles exiting. And if there’s more than one entrance, these numbers would be distributed between all the various driveways. This information is based on hundreds of studies across the nation. And if you do not live in a single-family home, data is also available for apartments, condominiums, senior housing, mobile homes, campgrounds, etc. The bottom line is this: keep doing your fair share — go someplace 5.2 times a day (and then return 5.2 times per day). Traffic engineers depend on it. Thank you. ______________________________________________

A Squirrel About Town By Archy “Archimedes was wrong.” I had never seen a despondent squirrel before. Archy’s experiment to use a lever to balance out people’s opinions must not have been successful. “We tried to move chakras with our transcendental levers but they were so dense, they wouldn’t budge,” he muttered. I sat down and commiserated in silence for several minutes. Then, I recalled hearing a farmer tell a story about his grandfather’s mule. It ended with, “He finally lit a fire under him. Burned all the hair off his belly before he moved.” The squirrel chuckled. “Good one,” he said. “Force may subdue, but love gains and he who forgives wins the laurel,” I said. “Just like you to quote William Penn,” the squirrel laughed. I told Archy that I admired his intentions and he shouldn’t be discouraged. “It’s all about the timing,” I told him. “Sometimes people don’t reach a pivot point until they’re ready. It’s something they have to do for themselves. It bothers you more than it bothers them, but you can’t blame them for their faults. ‘Never despise what you can’t understand.’ ” “Penn again?” the squirrel asked. I admitted the attribution for the quote. I followed with another. “He also said, ‘The secret of happiness is to count your blessings while others are adding up their troubles.’ Keeping a positive attitude will make up for the negative behavior you see. Don’t keep company with misery. ” The squirrel shared silence a bit longer. “It’s just so sad to see humans waste their time and energy being angry,” he said. “I can’t understand why they seem to relish in it.” I admitted I couldn’t see the point either. “I guess we have to have patience when it’s called for,” I told him. The squirrel looked up and smiled. It was his turn to quote William Penn. “Let us see what love can do,” he said. ______________________________________________


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June 10th by The Republican Newspaper Hendricks County - Issuu