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things to do before we leave

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Post by dean Mon Feb 04, 2008 8:47 am

make sure there are screens on septic and house vents. metal is best.
cover all drains in sinks showers and toilet. use suran wrap and wrap your toilet and use the water from the RO tanks so when the water does evaporate it leaves no scale. put a few drops of chlorine in it too.
pay electric in advance, you can do this at the electric companies auto teller machines
pay water in advance
set watering system to turn on. I have a water pump that I set to turn the pump on half hour a day, thus not leaving the pump on at all time.
put storm security windows in.
set AC to turn on 30 minutes a day to keep moisture build up low. this will not pass first tier of the electric bill
turn off all other circuit breakers
take refrigerator doors off and store in separate place to prevent theft and they will not be closed.
remove all batteries from remote controls, flashlights, clocks, wireless phones, and so on.

email me more items to add or post them. this is just a start


Last edited by dean on Tue Feb 28, 2012 1:43 pm; edited 2 times in total

dean

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Post by dean Tue Jul 05, 2011 5:22 am

http://yucalandia.wordpress.com/diy-how-to-do-fix-stuff-in-the-tropics/prepare-your-house-for-an-extended-absence/

Things to do before leaving your home unoccupied in the Tropics:

This advice is geared to a typical NOB (North of the Border) owner who has a pool and pressurized water system (hydro-pneumatico)
1. Definitely drain the pool or treat it with a permanent larvicide like Copper.
Standing water is the main preventable cause of Dengue virus transmission here in Yucatan. Consider treating the residual water with extra doses of copper salts, to kill any larvae that grow in future rain accumulations. Adding extra copper also keeps your pool from becoming an algae swamp. (NOB snow bird untreated swimming pools in unoccupied homes are a major cause of Dengue transmission.)**

Note: If you add extra copper to your pool, then drain enough water out of the pool water when you return to give a final safe copper-algicide concentration. (The copper treatment works very well at treating the residual rain-water that accumulates in supposedly “drained” pools.)

2. Shut off the gas valves and lock/chain the cylinder or tank so something secure. (These are just too tempting: easy to carry, easy to convert to cash, etc.)

3. Definitely turn off your hydro-pneumatico, and open the water system’s air vent valve on the techo/roof. Use simple gravity feed to supply plumbing for watering plants etc…

4. If there are no plants etc to water, then give the water system a final chlorine treatment: 1/4 cup of normal un-scented NORMAL bleach per 275 gal/1000 liter tinaco – assuming your tinaco has only clean water. Turbid water or water with organic matter in it requires more bleach.

5. After the chlorine has mixed well in the tinaco, then drain some water through each sink & tub/shower until you smell a little chlorine (proving that you have disinfected the lines and the water in all lines).

6. Shut off the water system: Shut off the pump & possibly close the valve to the tinaco. This way, if your system has a subterranean / sub-floor leak while you are away, the pump is not running every 20 minutes to fill the tinaco. (This problem just occurred for a beach buddy – creating a $4,000 peso per month power bill just for running the pump and a few security lights in an unoccupied house).

7. Cover/block all drains…. sink drains, floor drains, etc. Put magazines over the floor drains & shower and tub drains, a bit/ball of wire screen/mesh in the kitchen and bath sink drains to stop:

Dengue breeding sites for mosquitos, and
Cockroaches that love to travel between the septic tank and the drains…. the big rascals (cucarachon!) even swim through the toilet water – back and forth between your home and the septic sludge -

8. Solution to diving cockroaches? Saran Wrap the toilet bowl. It stops the mosquitos from breeding and blocks the roaches from their super-highways…

9. Saran Wrap the top of the toilet tank (under the lid) to keep mosquitoes from breeding in the toilet tank water.

10. Either shut off each toilet’s water supply valve or close the valve between the tinaco and the house, since many toilets slowly leak – or at least shut off the water supply valves at each toilet….

Note: shutting off the water to & from the tinaco might be a problem if you have a caretaker watering plants, etc. – but it does discourage Semana Santa and Summer Vacation party-ers from using your patio and pool for their fun.

11. Shut off, empty and clean the fridge and prop the door open to keep it from molding.

12. Prop open the doors on closets, cabinet(?) and open furniture drawers a bit to allow air-flow & discourage mold growth. Some caretakers like to leave one or two windows open an inch and to turn on ceiling fans for several hours per week to keep things fresh.

** Are snowbirds good neighbors?
At Yucalandia, we’ve noticed that many NOB snowbirds return to sparkling pools and neat-as-a-pin homes – due to their caretaker’s last minute efforts. Before the hurried clean-ups, the typical reality is: a pool that has been a green scummy mess for months – exposing neighbors to Dengue while the house is vacant, weedy ugly yards and property frontages, etc. Caretakers often do nothing, until just before the owner arrives… It’s a sure sign that a snow-bird is migrating south when we see a flurry of activity at their home.
The result? The absent home-owner thinks that they are good neighbors, when they often aren’t – letting their places look just awful, weedy, brushy, with trash holding water: prime mosquito breeding grounds, until just before they return.

We mention all this not out of hostility, but because we have 2 friends who’s kids have gotten really sick with Dengue, precisely due to absent snowbird neighbor’s brush piles and scummy pools. These are conditions the caretakers are asked to maintain & paid to maintain, yet the absent homeowner had no idea how things really were. Good intentions with no follow-through = sick kids & sick elders.

13. In addition to draining, locking, and blocking, snowbirds could give their US or Canadian phone numbers & e-mail addresses to their neighbors, and also to close local reliable friends – and have the friends/neighbors check-up on the caretakers actual activities.

14. Make it clear to the caretaker who the local contact is, and emphasize that the caretaker should follow the contacts instructions, and not simply ignore the local contact’s requests for regular property upkeep and pool water treatment.
;* * * *
Feel free to copy with proper attribution: YucaLandia/Surviving Yucatan.
© Steven M. Fry

Read-on MacDuff . . .

dean

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Post by dean Tue Jul 05, 2011 5:39 am

I put my water pump on a timer when gone for on 30 minutes a day max, so if there is a problem the electric bill will not be bad and same with water bill.

take all batteries out of remote controls, phones, or put phones and other chargeable items on a timer for charging 30 minutes a day. Set an ac to turn on for short period of time in a room with items you want to be mildew free that will not exceed your low threshold of rate. use a mechanical timer for this for power failures not to interrupt the cycle. also mans you have to have at least one ac unit that has a mechanical timer.

If theft is a problem in your area, take the fridge door off and leave it at a friends. a fridge with a door off is not very valuable, same with the knobs and grates on the stove and other items.

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Post by dean Mon Mar 05, 2018 9:28 am

if heavy turn over any non-used planters, if they are light place under something that is heavy or indoors., do not leave things out that can hold water. make sure no tires are left outside,

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Post by dean Fri Mar 09, 2018 7:10 pm

someone noted... I put one screw in my tinaca lid so it doesn't screw off in hurricane winds!

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