►
From YouTube: HRA Seminar: Basement Waterproofing (2015)
Description
Tony Reich, Owner of AAA Reich's Landscape and Waterproofing, will help you solve those basement waterproofing and drainage problems. Learn about grading, gutter water control, window wells, waterproof membranes and effective landscaping to keep your basement dry.
A
The
seminar
tonight
with
tony
is
waterproofing
to
all
the
other
ones
that
we
had
earlier
position
turn
out.
We
anticipate
this
won't
be
the
same.
Tony
is
very
knowledgeable
in
the
field
of
waterproofing
and
landscaping
he's
been
doing
it
for
upwards
about
30
years.
Ok,
so
I'm
greater
get
toning
up
your
couple
things
or
we
have
refreshments
in
the
bath
guilt
yourself
to
those.
A
If
you
have
not
signed
up
for
your
prize,
please
do
so
up
here
at
the
conclusion
of
our
seminar
tonight,
we'll
draw
the
names
and
two
gift
cards
at
home
depot
will
be
given
away
conclusion.
Another
announcement
on
the
whole
affair
that
we
have
2016
february's
plenty
of
them.
Are
we
having
a
heart
buying
of
homeroom
affair?
It's
held
right
here
in
this
building
lots
of
vendors
a
lot
of
activities,
so
we
don't.
You
can
make
that
two.
A
One
final
note:
I'm
with
the
housing
redevelopment
authority,
we
do
have
home
improvement
loans
that
are
available
if
you
son,
making
home
improvements
and
want
to
create
a
way
of
finance
those
improvements.
Again,
you
can
look
on
the
website
and
when
he
were
housing,
green
apple
pull
up.
Our
loan
programs
I'll
be
here
at
the
conclusion,
also,
if
you
have
questions
about
that,
Antonio
lifetime
average
cancer
project.
Okay.
So
if
that
I
introduce
Tommy
Tony
right
is
with
triple-a
rights,
landscape
and
waterproofing,
as
I
mentioned
he's
been
in
the
business
for
up
to
30
years.
A
B
B
You
see
gutters
I'm,
all
for
gutters.
Gutters
are
a
good
thing.
Some
people
really
don't
like
gutters
people
say
they
don't
want
gutters
on
their
house
because
it
it's
bad
for
the
ice
dams.
They
say
it
causes
the
ice
and
ice
dams
different
related
deal,
but
that's
due
to
insulation
and
ventilation
in
your
house,
but
the
gutters
can't
certainly
kind
of
help
hold
the
ice
there,
but
I'm
all
for
having
gutters
these
gutters
here
I
like
a
lot
of
gathers
I
see
people
have
the
gutters,
but
they
don't
take
the
time
to
clean
them
out.
B
So
you
want
to
make
sure
you
clean
out
your
gutters
that
will
certainly
help
because
when
the
water
is
when
the
water
is
coming
right
off
of
the
gutter,
there
got
my
little
pointer
here
when
the
when
the
water
comes
off.
The
gutter
comes
right
down
next
to
the
foundation
wall
and
you
want
to
keep
that
water
away
from
the
foundation
wall
and
that's
really
what
gutters
do?
Is
they
catch
that
water
and
they
drain
it
out
the
extension
out
into
the
yard,
keeping
it
away
from
the
otherwise?
It
just
comes
right
over.
B
So
that's
really
what
gutters
do
is
really
help
in
water
prevention
in
your
basement.
So
if
you
have
gutters,
keep
them
clean,
it's
not
just
a
matter
of
cleaning
the
trough
out
and
the
gutter,
but
you
want
to
clean
the
downspouts
and
the
tubes
that
come
down,
because
if
you
just
scoop
the
top
out
a
lot
of
times
that
stuff
gets
plugged
in
the
tubes
and
the
elbow
is
going
down
and
the
water
is
just
going
to
spill
out,
anyways
people
ask
me
all
the
time
should
I
get
gutters,
I,
say
absolutely
I.
B
Think
they're
a
good
thing.
If
you
get
the
gutters,
they
have
the
big
four
inch
gutters,
like
you
see
over
in
West
Bloomington
at
the
new
homes
and
an
Eden
Prairie,
the
nice
big
gutters.
And
then,
if
you're
in
an
older
part
of
the
neighborhood,
you
got
the
traditional,
smaller
gutters,
but
those
plug
up
a
lot
easier.
B
So,
if
you're,
going
to,
if
you're,
going
to
install
gutters
get
the
bigger
gutters
to
you
know,
the
bigger
four-inch
got
is,
if
you
think
you
might
have
a
problem
with
your
gutters
and
you
need
a
gutter
man
to
come
out.
You
can
weave
the
gutter
troughs
up
there
and
just
switch
24
inch,
extensions
that
come
down
and
drain
the
water
out,
which
is
that
way.
B
You
don't
have
to
do
the
trough
all
the
way
around
the
house,
just
the
tubes
that
come
down
and
empty
the
water,
but
switch
them
to
the
4
inch
ones
at
least
a
more
room
for
debris
to
get
through
there,
which
leads
to
another
question
about
leaf
guards.
Do
you
like
the
leaf
guards?
I
have
the
leaf
guards
in
my
house
that
are
screened
and
then
there's
like
the
gutter
helmets
that
shed
water
over.
B
But
when
you
get
a
big
downpour
I
find
that
those
gutter
helmets
tend
to
launch
the
water
right
off
the
roof,
because
it's
coming
down
so
fast.
It
doesn't
have
time
to
curl
around
because
they're
designed
for
a
slow
to
moderate
rain
and
it
curls
around,
and
it
dumps
the
leaves
off
and
curls
the
water
back
into
the
gutter.
But
when
you
get
those
big
downpours,
it
just
shoots
right
off
the
side
and
comes
right
down
over
the
top,
so
I
like
the
gutter
screens
versus
the
gutter
helmet.
B
That's
what
I
found
I
put
them
on.
My
house
and
I've
had
absolutely
no
problems
with
them.
The
only
place
that
I
had
a
problem
with
them,
but
I
think
everyone
has
a
problem
with
them.
No
matter
what
you
have
is
on
your
valleys,
though
the
weaves
and
the
sticks
and
the
acorns
and
everything
get
into
those
valleys,
and
they
it
tends
to
just
kind
of
plug
up
there,
but
it's
not
the
screens
fault.
B
C
B
I
have
them
on
my
house,
and
I
would
say
it
catches,
probably
ninety
to
ninety-five
percent
of
the
water,
but
I
still
do
get
some
that
comes
over
the
top,
because
is
it
rains
hard
it's
still
kind
of
wash
over
even
the
top
of
the
screen,
but
it
catches
most
of
it.
That's
an
exterior
drain
tile
system.
B
What
they
have
here
is
a
good
grade
away
from
the
house.
I
like
that
top
part,
you've
got
granular
fill
that
goes
in
here,
wash
gravel
around
the
pipe.
You
got
a
four
inch
pipe
that
goes
to
the
drain
tile
and
usually
a
system
like
that
will
bring
the
drain
tile
back
into
the
house
to
a
sump
pump,
and
then
they
pump
it
back
out
it's
similar
to
what's
an
interior
system,
but
instead
of
busting
up
the
concrete
and
along
the
foundation
of
the
inside
of
the
house
of
the
floor
and
putting
it
in
there.
B
This
is
not
typically
what
we
do,
I've
been
doing
it
for
30
years
and
if
you're
going
to
try
to
go
all
the
way
down
to
the
footing.
All
the
way
around
a
house
the
time
to
do
that
is
when
you're
building
your
house,
not
after
it's
already
up.
So
if
you
have
an
existing
home,
it's
just
not
real
feasible.
B
Usually
to
do
that,
because
you
would
need
to
get
a
backhoe
in
there
and
dig
it
all
up
all
the
way
down
to
the
footing,
which
is
over
eight
feet
deep
and
then
try
to
do
all
that
and
at
that
point,
you're
really
better
off
going
with
an
indoor
drain
tile
system,
but
I'll
go
through
the
other
reasons
why
you
should
look
at
the
outside
of
your
house.
First
before
you
decide
I'm
going
to
go
with
an
indoor
sump
pump
system,
because
an
indoor
sump
pump
system
won't
actually
fix
the
problem.
B
It
lets
the
water
in
and
then
they
pump
the
water
back
out.
So
the
water
goes
in
and
they
catch
it
on
the
inside
of
the
house
and
then
they
pump
it
back
out.
So
you're
not
actually
fixing
the
problem,
but
you're
you're
catching
the
water
and
pumping
it
back
out
of
the
house.
But
like
I
said,
as
they
go
on
here,
I'll
kind
of
explain
what
we
can
do
from
the
outside
of
the
house.
B
You
don't
have
to
bust
up
the
concrete
floor
and
do
that
and
actually
stop
the
water
from
coming
in
the
house
before
it
gets
in
there
and
you
got
to
pump
it
back
out
drainage
around
the
house.
You
see
they
got
this
landscape,
edging
that's
probably
about
18
inches
away
from
the
foundation
and
if
you
pulled
all
the
mulch
out
of
here,
you'd
find
that
that
soil
all
goes
back
towards
the
house
and
that's
one
of
the
biggest
problems
with
water
in
the
basement
is
bad
grading
around
the
foundation
of
the
house.
B
B
Also
have
you
can't
really
see
anything
on
this
one
here,
but
quite
often,
when
we
go
around
the
foundation
of
a
house
and
we
pull
out
the
mulch
and
the
rock
around
the
foundation
will
find
cracks,
it
can
be
just
a
crack
in
the
block.
It
can
be
cracking
a
poured
foundation,
it
could
be
a
crack
between
the
seams
and
the
black.
Sometimes
it'll
go
down,
it'll
turn
with
the
block
and
go
down
and
turn,
and
you
just
see
the
separation.
You
can
see
it
from
the
basement.
B
Sometimes,
but
I
see
a
lot
of
that
on
the
outside
of
the
house.
What
we'll
do
on
that?
In
those
circumstances
is
excavate
down
and
seal
the
wall
with
the
waterproofing
sheet
membrane,
we
clean
the
wall
off,
we
put
a
primer
on
the
wall,
and
then
we
have
a
big
sheet
of
the
sheet
membrane.
We
cut
off
a
measured
piece,
put
it
on
the
wall
and
seal
it
to
it
that
seals
up
on
the
inside
or
on
the
outside.
Excuse
me
on
the
outside.
B
Just
so
I
don't
forget,
we
do
have
an
in
terior
membrane
that
we
use,
usually
in
only
certain
circumstances.
Usually
the
water
can
be
controlled
from
outside
the
home,
but
I
do
have
an
interior.
It's
a
water-based
membrane
that
goes
on
it's
it's
a
two-part
compound
that
we
mix
up
with
a
high
speed,
mixer
and
apply
it
on
the
wall.
It
goes
on
like
a
thin,
concrete
coating
works
really
well.
I've
used
it
for
probably
eight
years
now
and
it's
a
water
base
interior
membrane,
that's
different
than
like
the
dry,
lock
paint.
B
If
anyone's
ever
tried,
dry
out
paint
in
their
basement,
they
find
out
it
doesn't
work.
There's
all
these
guarantees
on
the
paint
can
you
put
it
on,
and
the
water
still
comes
in?
It's
not
really
meant
to
hold
water
out
like
they
advertise
it.
The
interior
membrane
that
I
use
I
get
from
my
waterproofing
whole
salary
and
they've
used
it
on
the
big,
concrete
holding
tanks
that
they
hold
water.
In
its
you
know,
it
seems
like
in
Minnesota
we
all
got
the
the.
B
What
do
you
call
them?
The
water
tower
water
towers,
but
some
some
other
some
other
states
and
whatnot.
Don't
they
have
them
in
big
bins
and
they
actually
use
this
waterproofing
membrane
to
hold
that
water
in
there?
Otherwise
it
reaches
through
the
concrete,
but
we
do
have
some
things
that
we
can
do
from
inside.
B
This
is
kind
of
a
illustration
of
what
was
shown
on
the
one
before
you
got.
A
gutter
coming
out.
You've
got
poor
drainage
around
it
and
then
that
water
comes
right
out
of
the
gutter.
It
can't
get
away
from
the
foundation
walls,
so
it
gets
trapped
right
and
next
to
it
and
gravity
is
going
to
pull
it
down
every
time.
The
water
will
never
run
uphill
and
get
away
from
your
house.
If
you
got
bad
drainage
run,
it
goes
in.
It
goes
in.
B
It
gets
squeezed
in
between
because
there's
there's
dirt
in
here,
and
that
wat
is
trapped
in
there
when
it
goes
down
and
hits
the
footing
at
the
base
of
the
wall
and
squeezes
in
under
it
or
it
can
come
through
cracks
or
holes
in
the
wall.
Most
of
the
time
when
somebody
says
I
have
a
spot,
it's
really
bad.
This
is
where
the
water
comes.
In,
we
dig
down.
We
usually
find
some
sort
of
a
crack
or
a
hole
that
needs
to
be
fixed,
not
always,
but
that's
usually
the
case.
B
B
I
find
that
very
rarely
I've
not
found
it
in
Bloomington
I
found
it
over
in
Minnetonka,
where
it's
really
wet
and
sloppy
and
mound
where
there's
wakes
and
swamps,
and
you
got
people
actually
have
basements
that
are
lower
than
the
water
table
out
there,
but
I
found
in
Bloomington
edina
in
most
places.
You
don't
have
that
problem.
You
know
you
have
that
problem.
B
When
you
have
water
coming
in
an
equal
distance
around
your
house
all
the
way
around
the
perimeter,
because
when
water
rises,
it
doesn't
rise
like
this,
so
it
won't
just
come
up
on
one
corner
or
one
side
of
your
house.
It
would
come
up
equally
on
all
four
sides.
At
the
same
time,
so
you'd
have
a
perimeter
around
your
basement
where
water
would
come
in
and
you
can
see
that
you're
on
high
water
table,
because
you
can
see
where
it's
risen
up.
B
This
is
just
a
little
illustration
of
a
crack
in
the
foundation
while
and
then
I
told
you
a
little
bit
from
the
outside
of
the
house.
When
we
excavate
down,
we
clean
the
wall
off,
put
a
primer
on
it
and
then
seal
the
wall
with
waterproofing
membrane.
So
we
can
seal
right
over
those
cracks
in
the
wall
with
waterproofing
membrane.
B
You
get
mold
that
can
grow
in
the
house.
That's
usually
everyone's
number
one
concern
of
having
some
sort
of
black
mold
or
something
growing
in
the
house.
I'm
not
a
mold
expert,
but
I
just
know
it's
bad
and
you
don't
want
it
in
your
house.
So
I.
You
know
people
have
asked
me:
what
can
you
do
about
the
mold?
Do
I
just
use
a
bleach
solution
and
I've.
You
know
I've
heard
mix
different
things
about
it.
D
B
D
B
Okay,
thank
you,
but
yeah.
It's
just
something
you
don't
want
to
yeah
and
I:
wouldn't
try
to
get
rid
of
them
all
until
you
fix
your
water
problem,
so
fix
your
water
problem.
Get
the
water
solved,
wait
for
a
big
rain
and
then
once
you
know
that
you're
good,
that
no
more
water's
coming
and
then
you
can
go
ahead
and
clean
the
mold
up
but
I,
especially
if
you're
going
to
hire
somebody.
B
They
got
a
window
right
here
in
their
basement
and
the
wall
is
wet
underneath
it
and
then
I
have
some
people
who
have
a
window
right
here,
and
you
can
literally
see
a
line
on
the
window
where
the
water
is
filled
up
in
the
window
else
and
I
say
every
time
we
got
a
big
rain.
My
window
wells
fill
up
with
water
and
the
water
just
comes
in.
That's
usually
not
water.
B
That's
blowing
in
from
the
top
and
I
see
a
lot
of
people
buy
those
tops
to
their
window
wells
and
they
put
them
on
there,
but
the
water
still
goes,
and
then
they
go.
How
is
it
getting
in
there
if
you
got
the
top
on
it?
It's
going
in
from
the
sides
from
around
the
window
well
and
most
of
time,
there's
usually
either
mulch
or
decorative
rock
around
the
window.
Well,
and
you
can't
see
how
bad
that
grade
is
until
you
pull
all
the
rock
away
from
the
window.
B
B
Some
people
say
that
they've
grade
it
around
their
house,
but
they
can
only
go
to
the
top
of
the
window
well
and
then
they're
out
of
room
and
the
window
well
is
set
so
low
to
the
ground
that
they
can't
add
any
more
soil
to
get
it
graded
away
from
it.
So
what
we
like
to
do
is
either
it's
a
little
more
expensive,
take
the
well
out
and
put
a
deeper
well
in
there.
B
So
you
can
have
more
height
on
it,
it's
the
height
of
the
well,
you
need
a
higher
well,
so
you
can
get
the
dirt
packed
and
it
slipped
away
from
the
house.
So,
but
there's
two
options:
if
you
don't
want
to
try
to
pull
the
old
wells
out,
you
can
use
a
decorative
wall
block
around
the
outside
of
it
to
add
height
to
it
and
just
build
around
it.
B
With
a
decorative
wall
block,
giving
yourself
four
to
eight
inches
of
height,
there's
six
inches,
and
then
you
can
add
the
dirt
around
it
and
get
it
all
to
slope
away.
But
the
window
wells
like
I
said,
can
be
a
problem.
If
people
say
I've
done
what
I
can
do,
but
I
can't
do
anymore
because
I'm
at
the
top
of
the
window.
B
Well,
you
either
need
new
window
wells
that
come
all
the
way
up
and
I
like
to
I
like
to
bring
those
window
wells
right
up
to
the
top
of
the
siding,
and
you
want
to
keep
the
dirt
away
from
the
siding
as
best
as
possible.
They
want
to
keep
you
like
three
inches
away
from
the
siding.
What
the
rock
and
the
dirt
and
what
not
so
you
don't
get
anything
on
your
siding
because
it
can
tend
to
mold
behind
it,
and
so
you
don't
want
dirt
piled
up
against
your
siding.
B
That's
a
problem
with
some
houses
because
it
happens
where
the
siding
is
so
low
to
the
ground
that
you
don't
have
any
room
to
build
up.
You
got
the
siding
right
there,
but
there's
no
room
to
piled
dirt
up
and
get
it
all
the
slope
away.
Then
you
have
a
couple
different
choices.
One
would
be
to
come
in
with
a
bobcat
and
lower
the
soil
away
from
the
house
so
that
it
slopes
away.
B
The
other
thing
that
we've
done
before
is
to
just
grade
it
out
and
then
run
a
piece
of
drain
tile.
As
long
as
you
got
like
a
downhill
place,
we
can
run
it
too.
We
can
grade
away
from
the
house,
it
creates
a
low
area,
but
then
we
can
put
a
piece
of
green
tile
right
in
that
perforated
drain
tile
and
do
like
a
French
drain
that
carries
the
water
out
of
that
area.
B
Every
home
is
different,
so
it's
one
of
those
things
that
you
got
to
look
at
and
just
give
it
a
little
time,
sometimes
to
think
of
a
solution
to
it
because,
like
I
said,
every
home
is
different,
but
this
kind
of
shows
this
is
the
top
of
the
window.
Well
right
here
you
got
that
loop
top
and
then,
though,
it's
kind
of
corrugated
there
to
hold
the
window
well
in
place.
That's
why
the
window
wells
have
those
ripples
in
it
is
when
the
dirt
presses
up
against
it.
It
holds
it
in
place.
B
B
Well,
like
I
said
you
want
to
have
it
up
high
enough
so
that
you
can
get
some
soil
compacted
in
there
and
get
it
all
to
slope
away
from
the
house,
and
then
we,
you
know
I
like
to
finish
it
with
a
poly
water
and
weed
barrier.
In
a
decorative
rock
or
mulch,
on
top
and
people
ask
me
which
do
I
prefer
mulch
or
rock
rock.
B
B
You
could
put
grass
on
top
yep
as
long
as
long
as
you've
got
a
slope
away
from
the
house
that
will
usually
work
pretty
good
app
at
soil
slipped
away
from
the
house.
If
you
got
the
grass
coming
up
to
there,
it's
a
lot
of
weed,
whipping
and
stuff,
but
most
people
have
a
border
of
landscape
around
their
house,
not
always
but
I'm.
Just
saying
the
poly
does
give
you
one
more
added
layer
of
protection.
B
So
if
you
had
the
poly
down
in
some
river
rock
on
top
of
it,
it
would
be
just
a
little
bit
better
because
of
water
did
come
over
the
gutter
if
it
did
overflow
and
it
hit
that
area.
Sometimes
you'll
get
one
of
those
ruts
where
water,
Lance
off
a
house,
and
it
just
creates
this
little
dip
and
you
see,
rocks
in
there
and
stuff.
You
won't
get
that
if
you
have
the
poly
in
the
rock,
but
not
everyone
likes
rock
and
not
everyone
likes
mulch
yeah.
There
are
some
people
in.
D
B
Make
him
it
can
be
messy,
but
drainage,
wise
people
ask
me
all
the
time
should
I
put
mulch
in,
should
I
put
rock
in
you
can
put
either
or
as
long
as
you
got
a
really
good
slope
if
I
put
mulch
and
I
still
if
they
have
a
bad
water
problem,
I
like
to
put
poly
down
under
the
mulch
to
some
people's
away,
not
fabric,
but
the
fabric
lets
the
water
through,
and
these
people
got
water
issues
we're
trying
to
keep
water
out
of
their
basements.
So
that's
what
I'm!
B
You
know
regular
landscapers,
so
you
don't
put
poly
under
mulch.
You
put
fabric
or
nothing
under
it
and
I
agree
with
that.
But
if
you
got
a
water
problem,
you
want
to
keep
water
out
of
your
basement
just
having
that
poly
in
there
bringing
it
all
the
way
out
if
it
if
it
ends
up
dumping
in
there,
at
least
it's
going
to
ride
that
plastic
out
and
away
from
the
foundation.
So,
but
they
like
I,
said
I
dude
preferred
some
sort
of
rock
on
top.
B
Rock
rock
is
like
a
glass
of
ice
cubes.
If
you
get
a
glass
of
ice
cubes
and
you
go
over
to
the
faucet
and
turn
the
water
on
the
water
filters
quickly
to
the
bottom
of
the
glass
until
it
gets
to
the
top,
but
it
doesn't
splash
over
the
top.
So
rock
itself
doesn't
help
the
water
stay
out
of
your
basement,
but
it
helps
the
drainage
under
the
rock
for
the
water
to
flow
quickly
through
and
away
from
your
foundation
with
the
mulch.
B
When
water
comes
down
to
it,
the
mulch
holds
it
like
a
sponge
and
it
will
release
the
water
when
it's
so
full
of
water
that
it's
finally
just
it's
so
full
of
water
is
going
to.
Finally,
let
some
drain
out
of
it,
where
the
rock
doesn't
really
hold
it
and
it
just
can
drain
quickly.
So
that's
why
I
prefer
the
rock,
but
the
rocks
are
a
lot
tougher.
B
You
know
it's
more
expensive
and
it's
a
lot
more
work,
but
as
far
as
that,
we
just
did
some
work
at
a
house
in
richfield
and
they
had
a
water
issue
and
the
person
said:
mulcher
rock
I
mean
it's
totally
up
to
you
to
decide
and
I
said
best.
Drainage
is
going
to
be
River.
Rock
I
mean
it's.
Okay,
I
said
the
river
rock.
Otherwise
you
know,
if
you
really
don't
want
to
do,
it
will
do
the
mulch,
but
if
you
want
to
do
the
best
drainage,
I
think
the
rock
that's
the
way
to
go.
B
It
kind
of
just
goes
through
what
I
just
said
there.
You
got
compactable
soils
four
to
six
feet
away
from
the
foundation.
If
you
don't
have
that
much
room,
just
use
the
room
that
you
do
got
as
best
as
you
can.
If
you
only
had
three
feet,
if
you
only
had
from
here
to
there,
just
get
it
packed
in
and
sloped
away
in
that
area
and
it's
worth
going
when
we
do
it
and
we
got
a
big
area,
will
take
a
vibrating
plate
compactor.
B
We
start
that
thing
up
and
it's
what
they
run
to
compact
the
ground
like
if
you're
doing,
pavers
or
something,
but
once
we
got
the
dirt
in
and
sloped
away
from
someone's
house
we'll
run
that
vibrating
plate
compactor
over
that
dirt
back
and
forth,
and
just
pack
it
in
because
it's
we
really
want
to
have
that
stuff
packed
in.
If
you
just
leave
it
there
kind
of
fluffy,
it's
all
going
to
settle
through
the
years.
So
put
some
people
told
me
I
built
up
and
it
keeps
settling
on
me.
B
But
you
got
a
low
area
in
your
yard
and
water
pools.
There.
That's
always
wet.
As
long
as
we
have
some
place,
that
kind
of
goes
downhill.
We
can
come
in
there
with
a
bobcat
and
just
kind
of
greed
that
area
out
so
that
it
drains,
because
I
have
had
people.
I
said
this
area
has
been
wet
for
years
and
years
and
years,
and
I
can
see
where
we
can
come
in
with
a
bobcat
greed
that
down
and
just
empty
it
towards
a
hill
or
something
that
empties
over
one
side.
B
And
that's
really
all
you
need
to
do
you
know,
but
it
it
can
sure
tear
up
the
lawn.
You
get
a
bobcat
in
there
and
go
through
it.
We're
usually
going
to
need
12
feet
by.
However
long.
You
know
you
might
not
need
to
go
both
areas.
You
might
be
able
to
just
go
this
direction
with
it
too.
So,
but
sometimes
it's
not
a
matter
of
just
water
and
the
base,
but
water
collecting
in
the
yard
wet
spot
Bloomington's,
not
as
bad
as
Eden,
Prairie
or
new
hope
Plymouth.
B
They
got
a
really
a
lot
of
dense
clay.
There's
some
clay
here
in
Bloomington
too,
but
it's
really
bad
up
there,
where
they
get
water,
that
just
pools
and
doesn't
drain
away,
and
then
we
need
to
go
in
there
and
greet
it
out
with
a
bobcat
and
get
it
all
flow
away
from
those
and
sometimes
that
water
can
get
into
the
house.
B
Sometimes
they
get
to
someone's
house
and
they
got
water
in
this
corner
here
and
I
say
that
pool
when
it
gets
big
enough
comes
over
here
and
they
say:
yeah
I
know
and
that's
what's
going
into
the
basement.
So
you
know:
do
a
little
grading
here
check
for
cracks,
but
then
come
in
and
get
it
graded
to
flow
away
from
the
house.
But
I
would
say
we
need
a
bobcat,
probably
about
one
out
of
20
or
30
drops
most
work.
We
do
is
by
hand
what
just
wheelbarrows
and
rakes
and
shovels
and
so
forth.
B
You
get
a
concrete
saw,
asphalt
saw
and
you
cut
out
a
section
of
the
driveway,
and
then
this
channel
during
this
about
sits
about
that
high
six
inches
high
and
they
come
in
10
foot
sections
and
you
can
just
install
them
right
level
with
the
whatever
the
paved
areas
and
then
there's
a
piece
of
drain
tile.
That
comes
out
the
other
side,
but
you
need
someplace
downhill
to
run
it
anytime,
you're
running
exterior
drain
tile.
B
You
almost
always
are
going
to
need
some
downhill
place
to
run
it
too,
because
sometimes
people
say
I
want
green
tile
and
through
here,
and
it
goes
like
this
in
each
direction.
I
said
you
I,
don't
know
that
you're
going
to
get
any
drain
tile
through
here.
Sometimes
you
can
rent
a
machine
and
dig
a
really
deep
trench.
B
You
know,
but
it
gets
very
expensive
and
whatnot
so,
but
the
main
thing
is
that
if
you're
going
to
run
some
sort
of
a
channel
drain
or
X
ariad
drain
tile,
you
are
almost
always
going
to
need
some
sort
of
a
downhill
outlet.
So
if
you
ever
think
in
a
run
and
drain
tile,
you're
going
to
be
really
tough
to
run
it
uphill,
because
you're
going
to
go
deeper
and
deeper,
because
that
drain
tile
everything
else,
that's
gravity
fed.
B
So
it
has
to
go
downhill,
but
that's
what
we
do
in
situations
where
you
got
pavement
that
comes
down
sloping
towards
a
building
a
house,
a
garage
whatever
it
is
to
go
ahead,
put
a
channel
drain
in
there
and
at
the
end
of
the
channel
drain.
It,
like,
I
said
hooks
up
to
drain
tile.
This
is
for
rerouting
gutter
water.
Some
people
have
very
nice
gutters
they're,
the
big
four
inch
ones.
B
They
got
the
leaf
guards
on
them
and
everything
is
good,
but
they're
still
getting
water
in
the
water
is
not
making
it
far
enough
away
from
their
house
or
it's
just
coming
on
the
outside
of
the
edging
and
puddling
get
really
wet
and
they
don't
have
water
in
their
basement.
They
just
want
to
get
rid
of
the
soggy
area.
We
will
run
drain
tile
from
the
gutters
to
pop
up
out.
What's
out
in
the
yard.
B
Again,
it's
one
of
those
things
that
you
need
a
down
hill
area
to
run
it
too,
because
if
you,
if
you
hook
it
up
to
the
gutter
and
try
to
run
it
uphill,
the
water
is
just
not
going
to
stop
going
to
come
out
of
there
very
well.
You
know
it's
going
to
back
up
in
there
and
it's
not
going
to
come
out
the
way
you
want.
So,
if
you're
going
to
do
something
like
that,
you
got
to
make
sure
you
have
a
downhill
flow.
B
B
He
met
her
or
if
you
got
a
really
steep
slope,
sometimes
you
can.
You
can
just
run
the
drain
tile
out
to
one
of
those
little
end
caps
that
has
a
little
great
on
the
end
of
it.
They're
a
little
bit
cheaper,
I
like
the
popups,
the
one
bonus
about
using
a
street
shot
up
with
a
grade
on
it
is
there's
no
elbow.
B
B
So
when
the
water
comes
out,
it
has
to
go
out,
then
it
has
to
go
back
up
and
out
and
what
will
happen
sometimes
during
the
winter
is
the
water
will
go
through
and
before
it
can
drain
out
through
the
weep
hole
it
will
freeze
and
then
the
pop-up
won't
give
them
at
the
water
like
it's
supposed
to.
Yes,.
C
B
Well
that
people
ask
me
to
do
that
underneath
there,
so
they
don't
have
their
gutter.
That's
in
fact,
it
was
a
commercial
building
today,
an
apartment
building
that
had
several
gutters
that
came
right
onto
their
sidewalk
and
he
was
wondering
about
running
the
drain
tile
underneath
it
because
what
would
happen
is
the
water
would
come
out
during
the
winter
and
it
would
just
drain
out
across
it.
B
If
you
can
get
the
drain
tile
to
go
underneath
it
and
empty
out
here,
then
that
will
certainly
help,
but
you
will
have
a
time
of
the
year
when
it's
AIT's
mid-march
late
March
got
snow
in
your
roof
and
you
get
a
thunderstorm
and
start
srini.
You
got
two
inches
of
rain.
If
that
pop-up
emitter
or
your
outlet,
whatever
it
is,
is
covered
in
snow,
then
sometimes
the
water
can't
get
through
the
drain
tile,
and
it
will
just
come
billowing
out
right
here
where
it
attaches
to
the
drain
tile,
so
that
that
certainly
can't
happen.
B
B
D
D
D
B
Thing
happened
to
me:
I
have
on
my
house:
I
got
four
gutter
outlets,
so
there's
a
four
corners.
I
have
three
of
them:
hooked
up
to
drain
tile,
went
to
pop
ups
and
even
I
get
it
work.
It's
plugged
up
and
water
is
billowing
up
next
to
the
foundation.
I
don't
have
any
water
in
my
basement,
but
I
decided
I
like
to
have
that
for
the
summer
time,
anyways,
the
other
one
that
I
have
is
just
a
straight
out.
B
Gutter
in
it
was
downright
in
the
snow
and
it
got
plugged
up
and
it
was
billowing
out
next
to
the
house
too.
So
what
I
did
is
I
I
raised
it
up
higher,
and
then
I
put
it
up
on
a
couple
blocks
so
its
up
off
the
ground
about
that
high.
Then
the
water
could
just
shoot
out
and
it
wasn't
right
down
next
to
the
ground
where
it
got
all
iced
in
it
was
up
off
the
ground.
E
B
The
Bell,
the
gutter
guys,
can
usually
put
some
sort
of
a
metal
shield
on
there.
It
sits
about
that
high
and
it
kind
of
blocks
the
corner,
but
yeah.
Then
the
crud
butts
up
against
it.
So
that's
I
was
saying
I
had
that
problem
at
my
house,
I
got
one
Valley
and
we
put
up
one
of
those
corner
deals
to
keep
the
water
from
shooting
off
there,
but
now
it
all
the
weaves
and
the
acorns
and
stuff
back
up
on
it.
B
You
know,
so
it's
there's
no
perfect
answer
to
it,
but
I
still
think
gutters
are
good.
You
just
got
to
do
the
best
you
can
to
keep
them
clean
and
any
places
where
those
valleys
are.
You
know
these
houses
is
bad
in
minute
in
Bloomington,
but
Minneapolis
and
st.
Paul
if
some
of
those
got
really
steep
pitches
and
lots
of
angles
and
stuff,
and
they
can
put
I've
seen
some
places
that
the
gutter
they
have
in
their
house
is
that
big?
B
E
B
Yeah
you're
going
to
want
to
make
sure
yeah
and
if
you
got
water
coming
in
that
place,
if
you
actually
got
water
coming,
if
it's
just
wet
over
there,
then
just
try
to
get
it
guided
away.
If
you're
actually
getting
water
in
there,
then
I
would
suggest
pulling
out
what
you
have
next
to
the
foundation
and
doing
a
little
investigating
digging
down
and
sealing
up
any
cracks
or
anything.
B
D
Chris:
did
you
say,
egress
windows?
Are
you
know
right
in
line
with
the
window
wells
that
I
show
it
earlier?
I
get
a
lot
of
people
who
said
I
got
water
in
my
egress
window
of
nowhere
else,
but
right
there
again,
it
has
to
do
with.
What's
around
the
outside
perimeter
of
your
egress
window,
l
and
egress
window
wells
are
notorious
for
being
too
low
to
the
ground.
B
I
told
you
you
want,
you
want
them
to
kind
of
come
up
near
the
siding,
but
you
got
the
ground
right
here
and
then
the
egress
welcomes
just
right
up
level
with
it,
where
there's
no
room
and
of
course
that's
a
whole
lot
tougher
than
one
of
those
little
steel
window
wells
to
replace
you
know.
But
if
it's
timber
you
can
add
more
Timbers
around
it.
If
it's
a
metal
one
you
can
still
do
like
I
said
what
the
small
ones
is.
B
D
D
Is
how
they
put
on
the
able
to
go
up
into
the
air
fit
the
shortest
one
is
three
feet?
That's
on
the
side.
How
does
appeal
illegal,
sound
yells,
not
worried
about
that
like
a
two
step
back
of
house,
it's
that
time
plattner
and
it
goes
out
more
like
four
to
six
feet.
Is
that
far
enough
I
don't
know
yeah.
B
If
you're
not
getting
water
in
the
basement,
then
it
probably
is
far
enough,
but
you
know,
as
far
out
as
you
can
get
them
as
good,
but
no
one
really
wants
a
10
foot
extension
out
in
their
yard.
You
know
so
what?
If
you're?
If
you,
if
you
can,
if
you
can
get
by
with
this
short
as
you,
can
you
not
getting
water
in
your
basement,
then
I
think
you're,
okay,
but
there's
no.
You
know
absolute
length
that
you
need
it
to
you
know.
I'd
say
three
feet
is
definitely
the
shortest.
B
F
A
E
B
B
So
I
like
I,
like
a
nice
drop
to
it.
So
if
I'm
going
50
feet,
if
I
can
get
at
least
a
good
five
inch
drop
over
50
feet,
that's
good!
If
I
can
do
it
better
than
that,
I
would
certainly
take
it.
A
little
bit
deeper
I
want
the
water
to
row
as
fast
away
as
possible,
the
less
of
agreed
away,
the
more
you
could
have
a
possibility
of
silt
settling
in
there
and
stuff
like
that.
B
B
Well,
if
it's
coming
from
the
gutters
and
the
leaf
guard
should
take
care
of
most
of
that.
If
you
got
leaf
guards
on
there's
not
going
to
be
too
much
stuff
going
into
your
gutters
and
down
into
there
the
pop-up
emitters
that
I
talked
about
have
a
green
cover
on
them.
They're
not
screwed
on,
but
they
just
fit
snug.
B
I've,
never
done
that.
The
s
one
thing
you
could
tap
into
I've
had
some
people
say
we
poked
a
hole
here
and
now
water
just
kind
of
squirtin.
Through
all
the
time
and
I
say
yeah,
you
shouldn't
have
poked
a
hole
there.
So,
but
you
know
I
think
if
you
really
actually
have
ground
water
problem
with
water
rising
up
like
I
said.
Usually
it
would
kind
of
run
around
the
whole
perimeter
of
your
house,
because
water
doesn't
come
up
left
or
right
when
it
rises,
it
rises
equally.
B
And
if
you
actually
have
that
type
of
a
problem,
I
call
like
an
indoor
drain
tile
system,
because
at
that
point,
then
you
need
a
sump
pump
but
I
think
ninety
percent
of
all
the
water
problems
I
seen
could
be
cured
by
just
working
from
the
outside
of
the
house.
Digging
down
sealing
the
cracks
with
the
membrane,
doing
green
tile
systems
on
the
exterior
and
then
just
getting
a
good
grade
away
from
the
house.
B
But
if
you
do
end
up
there's
times
where
I
go
to
somebody's
house
and
like
I
said
around
the
perimeter,
you
see
the
water
and
they
say
during
the
winter
in
january.
Water
comes
in.
I
say:
that's
a
real
clue.
If
you
don't
have
any
weakened
during
mid
winter
and
stuff,
there
probably
isn't
ground
water,
but
if
you
got
water
coming
in
january-february,
when
the
ground
is
frozen
solid
and
you
got
water
coming
in,
then
you
might
have
a
high
water
table,
it's
not
impossible.
I
just
I
find
it
rare.
B
I
just
find
it
very
rare
and
there's
certain
parts
of
town
like
I
set
out
west
by
Lake,
Minnetonka
and
mound
where
there's
just
it's
a
lot
wetter
over
there,
but
I've
gone
to
people's
homes.
Seen
it
and
said
you
better
try
standard
water
control
as
a
company.
If
you
want
to
do
an
indoor
drain
tile
system,
I
always
recommend
standard
water
control,
but
they
do
a
sump
pump.
B
They'll
go
in
and
bust
up
the
concrete
and
do
a
sump
pump
system
and
patch
it
all
back
in
and
they
do
really
good
work
but,
like
I
said
it's
only
very
rarely
that
I
see
a
home
where
I
say
you're
going
to
need
drain
tile.
Almost
all
the
time
I
can
walk
around
a
house,
and
sometimes
I
can
walk
up
to
someone
house
and
safe
I
can
tell
your
water
problem
is
right
here
before
they
even
say
anything.
B
You
know,
but
it
walk
around
the
house
and
we'll
walk
around
and
look
at
the
whole
perimeter
of
the
house,
and
it's
not
always
just
you
know.
Some
people
get
water
and
right
here,
but
they
got
concerns
about
areas
around
their
house.
Almost
every
place
I
go
to.
We
look
at
their
problem
area
and
then
make
our
way
all
the
way
around
the
house.
Looking
at
the
back
and
the
sides
and
I'll
point
out
areas
that
people
don't
have
a
water
problem,
but
I
tell
them.
This
is
one
waiting
to
happen.
B
Sidewalks
that
run
alongside
your
house
that
tip
in
towards
the
house
and
then
when
water
gets
onto
that
Sidewalk
it
goes
in
and
so
driveways
that
but
up
to
the
house
patios
another
really
bad
spot
that
I
found
under
your
deck
people
have
wooden
decks.
You
know
sometimes
they're
this
high
off
the
ground.
This
high
ethicon,
but
underneath
the
deck
I,
always
see
the
ground,
I'll
slope
and
back
in,
and
we
pull
the
boards
off
and
find
cracks
in
the
foundation
and
all
kinds
of
stuff
so
under
under
wooden
deck.
B
Well
then,
what
we'll
do
is
we'll
pull
the
boards
up,
not
all
of
them,
but
as
many
as
we
need
to
access
next
to
the
foundation
and
then
we'll
regrade
in
there
will
dig
and
seal
cracks
in
the
foundation
wall
and
then
put
all
the
boards
back
on,
but
a
lot
of
people,
just
they
just
don't-
have
a
clue
when
they're
when
they
get
water
under
their
deck.
What
to
do.
B
Usually
yep
I
you,
you
need
to
have
your
basement
unfinished,
then
so,
usually,
there's
no
sheetrock
on
the
wall
or
anything
like
that.
Then
you
can
see
the
cracks
and
like
I,
said.
If
it's
something
like
that
and
we
can
get
to
it
from
the
inside
and
it's
really
hard
dude
get
from
the
outside
the
interior
membrane
that
I
use
you
can
use
on
cracks.
That
has
reinforcements
tape,
and
it's
got
this
its.
B
It
was
like
300
bucks
for
a
hundred-foot
role
of
it,
which
I
thought
was
outrageous,
but
it's
the
only
product
sold
only
tapes
sold
with
those
products.
It
has
to
be
used
with
it.
You
can't
it
goes
on
similar,
like
drywall
tape,
so
you
put
a
layer
of
membrane
on
and
then
you
can
use
the
reinforcement
tape.
You
press
it
right
into
the
wet
membrane
and
then
you
put
another
layer
over
it,
so
it's
very
similar
to
how
they
do
sheetrock
and
tape
up
the
seams
like
that.
B
But
this
tape
that
they
use
is
as
special
I,
don't
know
what
it's
made
of,
but
it
it's
a
special
type
of
fiber
and,
and
it
goes
on
what
they
call
cold
seams,
where
you
have
to
two
things:
a
concrete
that
weren't
poured
together.
That
would
be
a
cold
seem,
so
you
can
use
that
interior
membrane
on
the
cold
seams
or
if
you
got
a
crack
coming
down
the
wall,
that
crack
can
be
sealed
with
the
with
the
interior
membrane
and
the
reinforcement
tape.
D
B
B
As
far
as
your
greeting
away
from
the
house,
if
you're
going
to
grade
6
feet
from
your
house
it,
if
you
can
it's
good
to
get
a
good
6
inch
drop
over
that
six
foot,
because
it's
only
going
to
bring
it
up
that
much.
So
it's
not
ridiculous!
You
don't
want
to
look
at
your
landscape
and
go
up.
You
know
it's
just
you
know,
so
you
don't
want
that.
You
just
you,
know
six
inches,
and
but
not
everyone
has
six
feet
that
they
can
go
out
over
either.
B
So
we
can
only
add
so
much
in
there
and
get
it
pitched
away
and
I
tell
people
you
want
to
stay
three
inches
away
from
your
siding
with
the
dirt
and
the
rock.
But
if
that
doesn't
get
you
a
good
grade
away
from
the
house,
I
like
to
bring
it
up
closer,
it
has
a
possibility
of
rotting
out
your
siding
or
something
like
that.
But
you
got
two
choices:
you
can
have
rotted
siding
or
water
in
your
basement.
Most
people
say:
I
want
the
water
out
of
my
basement
I.
B
E
F
F
B
It's
the
slope
comes
to
and
then
do
the
drain
tile,
the
crushed,
gravel
and
then
you
know
a
decorative
rock
over
the
top
of
it
or
something
you
know,
and
then
then,
when
the
water
runs
away
from
your
house,
it'll
run
right
into
the
drain
tile
and
down
and
out,
and
that
can
be
three
or
six
feet
away
from
your
house
depending
on
how
far
you're
going
to
slope
it
away.
But
a
lot
of
times,
they'll
put
it
people
put
in
a
piece
of
landscape
edging.
B
So
you
got
your
piece
of
landscape
edging
here
and
then
the
ground
slopes
this
way
and
then
the
drain
tile
will
sit
right
here
and
then
run
along
parallel
to
the
edging
and
then
down
a
hill
some
way.
But,
like
I
said
you
got
to
have
a
downhill
place
to
run
it
too,
but
I
I
like
to
run
it
right
there
at
the
surface.
B
Some
people
say
why
not
put
it
next
to
the
foundation
and
down
in
there
I
see
because
we're
going
to
we
want
to
catch
that
water
before
it
gets
there,
and
so,
if
you
can
run
it
away
from
the
house
out
to
the
edging
into
that
drain
tile
and
then
out,
then
then
you're
catching
that
water
and
getting
it
out
of
there
before
it
can
get
in
down
next
to
your
house.
Otherwise,
if
you
put
in
the
drain
tile,
you
know
under
the
ground
in
next
to
the
foundation
and
then
sloping
it
all
away.
B
C
F
C
B
B
I
also
like
to
dig
down,
depending
on
how
much
room
we
got
I'd
like
to
dig
down
next
to
it
and
seal
that
well
with
the
waterproofing
membrane,
and
will
also
come
up
in
bridge
right
over
that
that
seam
between
the
the
top
of
the
the
well
room
and
the
well
room
wall,
because
most
the
time
I
see
it
coming
in
from
the
tops
and
then
other
times.
You
see
the
cracks
and
the
corners
that
are
really
bad
and
stuff.
B
But
yeah
we've
seen
a
lot
of
well
rooms
that
are
our
problems,
but,
like
I,
said,
I
like
to
dig
around
those
there's
been
times
where
we
had
to
pull
out
the
concrete
in
front
of
it
because
it
a
tip
back
towards
the
house.
So
all
the
water
was
just
running
back
into
that
front
side
of
the
well
room
where
the
sidewalk
was
so
pull
the
concrete
out,
then
we
can
dig
around
it
seal
it
with
the
membrane
and
then
we
pour
a
new
slab
of
concrete
new
walkway.
D
A
B
I,
don't
know
if
just
any
caulking
or
anything
would
work
on
an
outside
crack.
I've
never
used
anything
like
that.
I've
just
used
a
waterproofing
membrane,
so
I
don't
know
for
sure.
If
you
could
use
something
like
that,
I
guess
the
the
homes
that
I've
gone
to
where
they've
tried
to
use
something
like
that.
It
starts
pulling
back
out
of
the
crack
and
it
starts
falling
out
site.
I
haven't
seen
oh,
but
I
guess
the
people
that
have
had
luck
with
it.
Don't
call
me
it's
the
people
that
don't
have
left
with
it.
B
B
B
It
doesn't
usually
hurt
anything,
but
I
do
occasionally
see
a
foundation
wall
here
and
then
this
fire
from
the
house
a
big
tree,
this
big
around
and
the
ground
always
mounds
up
around
these
big
trees
and
then
the
what
you
got
the
tree
and
then
it
just
slopes
this
way
and
there's
about
this
much
room
between
the
house
and
this
tree
and
we
had
a
basswood
tree
and
st.
Paul.
That
was
that
big
it
was
it
was
that
big
and
it
was
right
next
to
the
house.
B
I
said
it
needs
to
come
out
and
I
said
you
know
this
is
you
know
we're
going
to
need
to
have
a
crane
come
in
there?
They
had
a
big
crane
come
in
and
but
yeah
we
took
that
whole
tree
down
and
when
we
got
the
tree
down
and
they're
cut
in
the
trunk,
it
was
hollow
in
the
center
and
my
tree
guy
says:
I
can't
believe
that
tree
didn't
fall
in
their
house.
B
It
was
just
it's
just,
but
they
only
need
to
get
out
of
there
because
of
the
wet
basement,
but
he
says
had
they
waited
I,
don't
know
if
it
would
had
gone
30
years
or
five
years
or
ten
years,
but
he
says
the
whole
inside
was
Hollow
and
you
could
actually
get
a
human
being
could
get
on
the
inside.
He
says
the
ants
had
eaten
it
out
it
rotted
or
something,
but
he
said
it
was
just
yeah.
So.
F
B
You
know
like
a
wharf
korean
lilac
tree,
those
the
little
pom-pom
trees.
You
know
you
see
the
dwarf
korean
trees
are
going
to
come
up
and
they
got
a
little
top
on
them,
but
I
wouldn't
put
anything
really
big
next
to
the
house.
So
you
know
if
you're
talking
to
shade
tree
I'd,
say
a
good
20
30
feet
off.
If
it's
a
crabtree
you're
still
going
to
want
get
it
15
20
feet
because
those
Crabtree's
get
pretty
big.
B
If
it's
an
ornamental
lilac
or
a
hydrangea
tree
or
something
that's
only
going
to
get
10
15
feet,
then
you
can
put
those
even
right
off
the
corner
of
your
sidewalk,
where
it
goes
out
and
takes
a
turn
that
way
put
one
right
there
or
you
got
a
house
with
a
retaining
wall
on
the
corner
and
it
kind
of
loops
around
like
that.
You
can
put
a
smaller
nuh
mental
tree
right
out
there,
but
keep
keep
anything
like
that.
B
That's
going
to
get
big
away
from
your
house
because
you
don't
want
the
wind
blowing
and
the
branches
growing
in
it,
but
a
lot
of
times
people
say
yeah
I
planted
that
tree
15
years
ago,
and
it
wasn't
thinking
when
they
planted
it,
because
now
it's
all
growing
into
my
house,
you
know
we
bought
done,
got
another
glass
question
here.
So.
C
Thanks
for
scheduling
is
just
after
the
massive
storm
we
had
anyway.
I
have
a
storm
window
for
a
basement
window.
There's
one
of
the
Scylla
when
those
that
you
have
near
your
typical
window
well
and
during
last
storm
I
had
water
flowing
like
a
river
through
the
wood
frame
of
that
window,
which
is
next
to
a
well,
and
we
knew
we
had
water
coming
in
around
that
area.
I
didn't
know
what
was
coming
in
through
the
window.
I
thought
it
was
coming
up
from
under
now
increase,
so
I'm
wondering
him.
C
B
But
if
you
go
into
the
well
and
dig
that
soil
out
and
then
like
I
said,
if
you
can
get
it
pitched
away
from
the
house,
you
don't
have
to
put
any
rock
in
there,
but
at
the
very
least
kind
of
get
it
pitched
away
from
now.
So
if
some
water
does
get
in
there
at
least
it's
pushes
far
away
from
it
as
it
can
be,
but
it
is
trapped
in
there
and
that's
kind
of
tough
spots.
I.
B
No,
if
you
dig
it,
if
you
dig
it
down,
is
just
going
to
fill
up
where
there
some
people
put
the
rock
in
there,
but
you
don't
necessarily
need
is
just
if
you
got
to
hop
in
there
or
do
something.
Then
you
don't
have
that
that
void.
That's
their
the
rock
just
kind
of
fills
up
that
space,
so
it
doesn't
look
as
deep,
but
you
still
got
the
space.
One
last
question:
do.
F
B
A
shovel
dig
around
it
and
pull
the
thing
completely
loose
and
then
dig
the
soil
out
and
then
just
get
it,
but
it
up
against
the
house.
Almost
all
window
wells
are
not
bolted
to
the
house
and
I
found
that
the
ones
that
are
bolted
to
the
house
sometimes
have
problems
where
they
bolted
to
the
house.
The
water
comes
in
there
just
it
doesn't
happen
very
often,
but
it's
usually
due
to
when
they
put
the
window
well
in
the
ground
and
get
packed
around
it.
B
So
once
that
wells
in
at
the
proper
height
make
sure
you
put
the
dirt
in
and
pack
it
around
it,
and
then
those
waves
in
the
steel
when
the
when
the
soil
is
pressed
up
against
it
and
Pat
in
place,
should
hold
it
in
I.
Only
see
them
come
up
now
and
then
it
does
happen.
I
go
to
somebody's
house
and
I
see
when
that's
like
this,
some
that
pulled
away
and
turned,
but
I'm
pretty
sure
that
that's
because
the
ground
wasn't
packed
in
to
begin
with,
and
they
just
weren't
done
right.