Stop in for a cup of coffee

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morning Mike!, it's raining here, but I'm still on the sunny side of the grass, it's all good
 
truth is - it's all good here too - I kept it out of the basement! ..rather fight it out back than have to do the basement thrash again
 
I don't know how car people of the 70s can get old and just stop caring about cars .......if I ever stop caring then someone needs to smack me over the head and tell me to wake up.


I'm less than 10 years away. I hope I won't loose my spark. Hanging around here and with fellow Mopar people really helps keep the drive alive.
 
I plan to eventually call a landscaper and see if/what can be done... meanwhile, I fight. First two years in the house we literally had water pouring into the basement - full on stream from the chimney clean out - :violent1: :banghead: :banghead: - realized 1/2 way through year three what the actual cause was and have been buying sump pumps and garden hose ever since.. basically it's frozen ground and too much rain.
Dam! No places to channel it out to?
 

Looks like it is in a small "valley". Is it feasible to run drainage pipe under ground to the street? They make this one with holes in it that works pretty good.
 
10 years away from 70. I need to pull the tranny in the 66 and rebuild it. I want to be able to power shift second with ease when I'm 70 or so.
 
like a french drain? I doubt it, my septic system is on the north side and to the south there is no way
Looks like it is in a small "valley". Is it feasible to run drainage pipe under ground to the street? They make this one with holes in it that works pretty good.
 
like a french drain? I doubt it, my septic system is on the north side and to the south there is no way
The french drain system can be ran over one, 5 to 6 inches deep just below the grounds and work real well :glasses7:
 
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