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Douglas Street looking toward Second |
“everything falls apart
then I
get to try to put it back together
yeah, it falls apart
you can
count on that,
count on that
now whether it can”
“Everything Falls
Apart” by Dog's Eye View
“The Second Law of
Thermodynamics is about the quality of energy. It states
that as energy is transferred or transformed, more and more of it is
wasted. The Second Law also states that there is a natural tendency
of any isolated system to degenerate into a more disordered state.”
livescience.com
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The way we were in 1993 |
In
1993, a week before our son Ed was born, we closed on our home on
Fifth Street. That was an exciting moment in our lives: we were about
to become parents for the third time and we were about to take
ownership of our first – and to date – only home. In retrospect,
it hadn't been an overly complicated process. We had met with a
mortgage broker who had looked over our budget and had essentially
set our price range. We could buy anything we wanted so long as we
stayed within those parameters and at the time there were only two
homes in Chetek that we could afford. So, we looked at both of them
and chose Door Number 1. It was far older than the other house but it
came with a double lot and a couple of extra (albeit small) rooms.
For the grand total of $29,000, then, we closed on a five bedroom one
hundred-year-old house that has been our home now for over
twenty-three years.
|
Then |
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Taken a few years ago but pretty much how it looks now |
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Day 1 of Phase 1 |
Shortly
after moving in – and taking a little time-out to have the baby –
we began to realize that a little bit more than TLC was needed on our
aging bungalow. In fact, a lot more. There was no insulation in the
walls. There was no carpet on the floor. The windows were all single
pane. The wiring, while still code, made you nervous just looking at
it. As I recall, we were only going to do a “little” remodeling
but as we have since learned you never
do a little remodeling because in a house everything is connected
together. If you're going to open up a wall – a plaster wall that
is so brittle that it is beyond saving – in order to install
fiberglass insulation then you might as well replace the wiring. And
why not install new windows while you're at it? No sense tearing the
walls open yet again? And thus it began, Phase 1 of many, many phases
that have since followed.
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The same spot looks a little
different today |
In
twenty-three years of ownership, we have remodeled every room in our
home – and some of them, twice! Front room, kitchen, bathrooms,
bedrooms, staircase – the lot. With the help of generous donations
from both sets of parents as well as taking advantage of the
Community Development loan from the city, slowly but surely our now
120-year-old house has been transformed into the simple beauty that
she is – or, at least, we think she is.
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Not too many years ago |
But
you never really finish
with a house, do you? I mean, truly – like the Second Law of
Thermodynamics clearly states – everything falls
apart. If you have kids
running around, as we once did, things get nicked, dented, broke,
scraped. Throw in some pets and new carpet gets stained or collects
hair like a magnet collects metal fragments. Wood glue
dries and
those beautiful rosettes you paid to jazz up your trim
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The same corner this morning |
display fall
off the wall. Walls get smudged with dirt and grease. A seal comes
loose in your upstairs bathroom tub causing water to pour like rain
onto your brand new kitchen ceiling that has just been installed.
(Yes, this happened to us). Again,
everything falls
apart. To own a home is to
commit to a labor of love that never really ends until you sell it to
the next owner.
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Kleve Street by Chetek Veterinary Clinic |
Now
here's where I'm going with all this reminiscing: just like with our
home or yours, our city property is always in a constant state of
falling into disrepair. That's why municipalities have outlay
accounts setting aside money to replace vehicles that will break
down, equipment that will need maintenance and, ultimately, upgrade
and facilities that will need to be remodeled or built anew. It is
the way of things – everything falls apart –
and like the song goes, “you can count on that.”
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City Park Drive |
Just
last week the grinder came through and tore up a number of streets in
Chetek – City Park Drive, Douglas Street between 2nd
and 4th,
Kleve Street between 2nd
and Tainter, and 15th
Street along Bailey Lake. It's part of the street maintenance
schedule that is followed every year in order to ensure that Chetek
remains a town with good roads. Instead of a patch here or there
relatively long stretches of pavement are resurfaced for its
aesthetic value. Plus, you get a better price that way. Next year
another set of streets will resurfaced because as everybody knows the
extreme temperatures we endure during the winter months contribute to
our roads splitting, cracking and falling into a state of disrepair.
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Currently we are a pole short out on the bridge |
Right
before Liberty Fest one of the light poles on the Long Bridge fell
over. It wasn't run into by a vehicle. Straight line winds weren't
the culprit. No, it just fell over. The pole, installed back in the
70's when the new bridge was built, just rusted out. Fortunately
nobody was hurt. But when Public Works Director Dan Knapp informed
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Thank God the pole fell on an empty road |
Excel Energy about the matter he was informed that forty years ago
when the poles went up they became city
property. While the State handles any improvements the bridge may
need, the poles are our worry. Who knew? And the pole that fell is
not the only one in need of replacement. Yeah, everything
falls apart.
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This is the pipe outside of Ohde's front door |
For
those of you who do any walking in our downtown area you know that
there are stretches of pedestrian pavement that vividly demonstrate
the Second Law of Thermodynamics in action. There are sections in
serious need of replacement. In front of Ohde's and the Flor building
across from Gordy's there are city water pipes sticking up above
the sidewalk creating a potential hazard to walkers and runners
alike. A few years ago we were
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This is in front of the Flor building |
fortunate to tie into a grant that
brought new sidewalks to the entire stretch of the south side of
Dallas Street as part of the Safe Routes to School program. I don't
think First and Second Streets would qualify for the same. So what's
a municipality to do? You could encourage businesses and home-owners
to replace the walk in front of their property but they will either
have to pick up the entire tab or a part of it (with the city picking
up the other part). Or you could do it the way Barron does it –
spread the expense over the tax rolls under the premise that a safer
and more attractive downtown area benefits everybody. Personally, I
like that approach. Reality is most people are going to avoid an
extra expense if they can help it. And if we leave it up to the
individual there's a good chance we'll end up with a hodge-podge of
new and old sidewalks strung together. That's why I opine that as
long as we have a street schedule why don't we add to it a
sidewalk-one? Because – yes, I'm going to say it once again like
another beat of the drum – everything
falls apart.
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Which one is next? |
I
didn't run for legendary Chetek High School Cross Country Coach Dan
Conway but I have it on good authority that among the plethora of
witticisms and anecdotes he would share with his runners at practice
was the old story about the king of a certain country who wanted all
the wisdom of the ages gathered at his fingertips (obviously, this
was way before Google) so he could pass it on to his posterity. So
this regent commissioned certain advisers in his kingdom to go forth
and collect every sage saying and wise counsel that could be known.
They returned a year later with their work gathered into twelve
volumes of comprehensive wisdom. The king was aghast. “This is way
too large. People will never read it. Condense it further!” he
thundered and then sent them out of the throne room. They returned
six months later with three enormous volumes to present to their
king. Once again he was disappointed with their efforts. “This is
still too large. Condense it further!” This time the delegation
returned a month later with the project now reduced to one behemoth
book. Not surprisingly, the king disapproved of this solution as well
and sent them out charging them to reduce the size of the volume once
again. They returned 15 minutes later with a slip of paper and
ceremoniously handed it to their liege. Upon it was a single five
word sentence that in their estimation was the sum total of the
wisdom of the ages that the king could pass on to future generations:
There is no free lunch.
Coach
Conway would share that story with his runners as a reminder that
there are no short-cuts to success, that it's just you diligently
applying yourself to your craft and learning from your mistakes. You
can't get something for nothing. What's true in running and other
matters in life also applies to those of us who own a home or call
this city our home – if we want to continue to ensure our town
remains a thriving, beautiful community we're going to have to invest
in it on a regular basis so that our roads remain drivable and our
sidewalks help us get from here to there without twisting our ankle
or falling on our chin or backside.
Sidewalks were always my beef. Why a town that wants to be a tourist destination would put up with such awful sidewalks was beyond me, but when I brought it up to the council, it was just brushed off as a ridiculous idea. Hopefully you will have a better time getting them updated, because the state of your sidewalks really does reflect on your city.
ReplyDeleteSorry, I didn't sign that previous one. This is Chris Fritz commenting!
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