Not my house. At least, not yet. |
Homeownership is about nothing if not vigilance.
When you buy a house, the bank wants its mortgage payments and the county its property taxes.
These are minor matters in the larger scheme, however. The real challenge is this: Nature wants your house back. Over the long term, nature will win.
Some years back, the Significant Other and I bought a newly built house.
The first time a big rain blew through, water pushed under the sill of a slider door and left a puddle on the living room floor. I ordered a piece of lumber cut to fit the space, nailed it in and caulked it all around.
Then another big windstorm came along and ripped a bunch of shingles off the roof. I called a roofer and had them replaced.
Next, a couple of skunks dug their way under the house one night. They got in a fight, and one of them died. I called a pest control company to remove the carcass and a handyman to build a barrier at the skunks' access point.
I planted climbing hydrangeas that grew so well they started covering the windows. I cut the hydrangeas back; they returned the next year. I applied herbicide; two years, later the hydrangeas returned again. As usual, nature had won.
Nature owns the world. We humans are just squatters.
I think about this sometimes, like when I see pictures of Detroit houses whose owners have moved on.
In fact, it happens all over the country. Here is a house that nature is reclaiming in Aberdeen, N.J.
And here is a house in the American South that is being swallowed by kudzu.
Below is a pioneer homestead cabin built in 1906 and abandoned during the Great Depression. Structures like these, all rendered unlivable, dot the prairies, the Dakotas, Montana and portions of Canada.
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Nature has won, and humans, knowing their defeat, cannot muster the energy to tear down the little that remains.
No matter. In time, nature will see to that.
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