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Waterlogged Garage
The last few weeks it's been nice and cold, but today it's warmed up to a big 2, and the roads are a mess and my garage looks like a very disgustingly dirty swimming pool.
I've been in and out a lot today, and I've been brushing off the majority of the slushy gunk from the wheel arches on the road before I drive in to the garage but there is still a lot of water, and I can't think what to do with it. I can't brush it out as it will freeze on the drive, it's already back in the minus figures outside. I was thinking of perhaps getting one of those wet and dry vacs off ebay or something, just to suck up the filthy water, but I can't be the only one having this problem, what does everyone else do? I am mainly concerned that everyone is walking into the house from the garage with muddy feet, and the carpets are a pale colour of course, but also that the water will start to run out of the garage as we drive in and out, making the drive like a skating rink. I've just put down some of the moving boxes we have left, in the hopes that they will soak up some of the water. Any other suggestions? |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by snorkmaiden
(Post 5662242)
The last few weeks it's been nice and cold, but today it's warmed up to a big 2, and the roads are a mess and my garage looks like a very disgustingly dirty swimming pool.
I've been in and out a lot today, and I've been brushing off the majority of the slushy gunk from the wheel arches on the road before I drive in to the garage but there is still a lot of water, and I can't think what to do with it. I can't brush it out as it will freeze on the drive, it's already back in the minus figures outside. I was thinking of perhaps getting one of those wet and dry vacs off ebay or something, just to suck up the filthy water, but I can't be the only one having this problem, what does everyone else do? I am mainly concerned that everyone is walking into the house from the garage with muddy feet, and the carpets are a pale colour of course, but also that the water will start to run out of the garage as we drive in and out, making the drive like a skating rink. I've just put down some of the moving boxes we have left, in the hopes that they will soak up some of the water. Any other suggestions? havent a clue about the garage but in the house dont you do the canadian thing and take your shoes off at the door, and put them on a boot tray? |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
I've just come in from sweeping out the garage when I saw your post!
Yep the roads are disgusting today - black mush everywhere. I just brush out what I can and then use a long squigee to push the remainder out. I then tend to use the snow scraper to scrap the frozen yuck from off the drive when I finish. All ready to repeat in the morning when tonights yuck has fallen off the car and dissolved on the floor! :) There's got to be a better way - I agree - a shop vac that sucks up water would be a good option. Maybe I'll add it to the Christmas list... romantic huh? :blink: |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
I'm awaiting sensible replies also !
Our garage is already a gritty, filthy, soggy mess - and we've not really had that much snow. We have a wardrobe sitting in there also at the moment, and that is currently surrounded by piles of old sofa covers to try and absorb the c**p from the wheels of my car - I suspect the wardrobe might not last too long anyway after a winter in the garage, but I've got to try :blink: I think my kids would go for the skating-rink-drive option :lol: |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by daft batty
(Post 5662252)
havent a clue about the garage but in the house dont you do the canadian thing and take your shoes off at the door, and put them on a boot tray?
I might have to get them to get out on the drive and walk around the back of the house and come in through the laundry room. The garage opened onto the laundry room in our old house, and that made much more sense, I am glad I am renting and do not own this house :D I think my kids would go for the skating-rink-drive option Ladymoose, I think shop vac is going to be high on my Christmas list too!! |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Quote by SnorkMaiden,
"WaterLogged Garage." "but also that the water will start to run out of the garage". .................................................. ............................... Hi there, If the water level becomes a SERIOUS problem you'll have to change your Title to "Snorkel" Maiden!!;) |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by ann m
(Post 5662283)
I'm awaiting sensible replies also !
Our garage is already a gritty, filthy, soggy mess - and we've not really had that much snow. We have a wardrobe sitting in there also at the moment, and that is currently surrounded by piles of old sofa covers to try and absorb the c**p from the wheels of my car - I suspect the wardrobe might not last too long anyway after a winter in the garage, but I've got to try :blink: I think my kids would go for the skating-rink-drive option :lol: Seriously now, can you put the wardrobe on a couple of 2"x4"s to keep it out of the water. We have a detached garage and if we do have to put anything of importance out there we always try to keep it up off the floor by a couple of inches. There is virtually nothing that can be done to keep the floor dry other than to keep scraping, sweeping or squeegeeing at every opportunity. Cheers Steve |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by ScottishJim
(Post 5662293)
you'll have to change your Title to "Snorkel" Maiden!!;)
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Re: Waterlogged Garage
To some extent it's something you live with through the winter. Then, when spring arrives and the snow has finally gone (or when you think it has finally gone), you sweep our your garage, hose the garage floor, etc.
It's not only an issue of the snow that you will have tracked into your garage and that will have melted to form mud. It also will be an issue of the sand / fine stones that you will have tracked into your garage over the course of the winter. This is one of the reasons for having generously sized doormats at each door and for taking off your outdoor footwear when you enter the house. It also explains why many Canadian houses have mud rooms. A mud room is a room at the back entrance of the house that has a linoleum floor. It sometimes is combined with a laundry. We have built-in wooden cupboards along one wall of our garage, the wall that the garage shares in common with the interior of the house. The wooden cupboards reach from the floor to the ceiling. The first winter that we were in this house we noticed that the water accumulated on the garage floor. This meant that the fronts of those wooden cupboards were standing in an inch or so of water. We knew this eventually would result in the wood rotting. My husband made a couple of shallow, U-shaped "dams" to contain the water and keep it away from the cupboards. This solution has been effective, in the sense that it has kept the water away from the cupboards, and the cupboards have remained dry. The way my husband made the dams was to glue long, thin strips of wood onto the garage floor. There are two sets that consist of three strips each. In each case, the three strips describe a U shape on the garage floor. The open end of the U faces the driveway, and it allows us to drive into the garage and park the vehicle. Imagine a parking spot in an outdoor parking area, say at your local supermarket. You can tell where you're supposed to park by the three sides of a rectangle that are indicated by yellow lines. The edge of the imaginary rectangle across which you drive has no line. But, once your vehicle is parked, it has three yellow lines around it -- one in front of the vehicle, running at right angles to the length of the vehicle, and two lines running parallel to the length of the vehicle, on either side of the vehicle. Now imagine that you took long, thin strips of wood and glued them on top of those yellow lines. You would end up with strips of wood outlining a large letter U in the parking lot, and your vehicle would be parked inside the boundaries of that U. That's what our garage floor looks like, except that it has two U-shaped "dams" like that, and they are separated from each other by some distance. My husband figured out where to place the U-shaped "dams" by parking the vehicles in the optimum spots, and then placing the strips of wood at suitable distances from the edges of the vehicles. Don't know if I'm making any sense. I suppose you could buy a wet/dry vac, but I bet it would be a nuisance to haul it out and clean the garage floor on a regular basis, to say nothing of the financial investment that would be required. My husband's low tech solution, combined with doormats before and after we enter the house from the garage (admittedly also combined with a mud room / laundry room that we walk through before we reach the carpeted hallway) does the trick for us. Just read the responses that have been posted while I've been typing this. The additional information makes a lot of my suggestions useless for snorkmaiden, but they still may be helpful for someone else. I like Steve's suggestions of raising cupboards off the ground slightly, if they are the free-standing kind. |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by Judy in Calgary
(Post 5662338)
Just read the responses that have been posted while I've been typing this. The additional information makes a lot of my suggestions useless for snorkmaiden, but they still may be helpful for someone else.
Along the floor at the end nearest the house, there is a strip of carpet, which has become waterlogged, but if I can dam before the carpet, I can dry that out, and the kids can remove their boots there and then carry them into the laundry room. I feel a trip to Rona coming on :D |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by ScottishJim
(Post 5662293)
Quote by SnorkMaiden,
"WaterLogged Garage." "but also that the water will start to run out of the garage". .................................................. ............................... Hi there, If the water level becomes a SERIOUS problem you'll have to change your Title to "Snorkel" Maiden!!;) |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Id say brush all the water onto your drive as best you can then put as much of that ice melter stuff down as you can.
You can buy it in huge bags in Wallmart and Superstore and we used a ton of it last year on our drive in Calgary, worked a treat. Good luck mrs minihaha x |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Do you not have drain in your garage??
Both houses we have lived had a drain, maybe you haven't found yours yet? You know one of those discoveries that one makes when living in a new house 'Oh so that's what that is!:blink:' I'm sure you haven't got a drain if your posting about this. I know your not stoopid. Just as a thought....... As you all know my hubby is a little fanatical about cars, one thing he does like to do is keep his cars sparkly clean, (he finds polishing relaxing) well the 1st winter here we had a warmer day (+1 or so was the high), so he cleaned one car on the drive, alls well, then got out the other and cleaned that, the night fell the drive froze and we couldn't stand up on it for the rest of the winter. Now the cars get dirty and it really bugs him. |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Originally Posted by Piff Poff
(Post 5662852)
Do you not have drain in your garage??
Both houses we have lived had a drain, maybe you haven't found yours yet? You know one of those discoveries that one makes when living in a new house 'Oh so that's what that is!:blink:' I'm sure you haven't got a drain if your posting about this. I know your not stoopid. Just as a thought....... As you all know my hubby is a little fanatical about cars, one thing he does like to do is keep his cars sparkly clean, (he finds polishing relaxing) well the 1st winter here we had a warmer day (+1 or so was the high), so he cleaned one car on the drive, alls well, then got out the other and cleaned that, the night fell the drive froze and we couldn't stand up on it for the rest of the winter. Now the cars get dirty and it really bugs him. |
Re: Waterlogged Garage
Garages do have them (I had one at my last place) but they apparently don't allow the installation of drains into garages now, something to do with the oil and other pollutants going down them and into the land. Not sure if this is a provincial code thing but definitely something I heard in passing earlier this year.
Originally Posted by snorkmaiden
(Post 5662874)
Nope, that would be perfect though, we've been talking about it and I wondered if some garages would have them.
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