Friday, July 6, 2007

Domestic affairs


I finally finished fixing the apartment, so here are the pics I promised a long time ago. I love my work area. I can see the river from there, it's well lit, and there are always the comforting sounds of my neighbors' children playing and dancing outside, people conversing around the little peanuts, bananas, and beignets stall.

I like a lot where we live. It's an oldish apartment building from the colonial period that is attached to a building of private clinics and an ER. We have a corner apartment, more than enough space for the two of us, plus there's good natural light and ventilation. We don't need A/C.

It took us two years to finally get some furniture but finally, between having a couple things made by a local carpenter (my desk, the bookshelves and the dining table), stuff we bought from friends who moved back to France (the rattan couch and armchairs), and the armchairs lent by other friends, we had a place. Various expeditions to Ikea (in Bxl) with Françoise, Collette, Joelle and Sandrine completed the basic minimum to go beyond the "squatter look" to "something I can look at and not feel depressed."

I set up two armchairs to "honor" the living room at my parents' old house in Guate. It doesn't look exactly the same, but I get the same feeling. I like having once more my own reading corner from where I can see the trees, read, and keep homework for "later."



I had just finished rearranging the new furniture yesterday, when the door bell rang. The building's plumber and electrician were there to fix some problems I had asked them to look into. I must confess that it took me a couple of days to ask them because I have the feeling that once we start looking into mysterious leaks and pipe noises, the apartment will start collapsing. The building was built with the best materials of its time, I'm sure, but it's been several decades and the years are starting to show.

The first problem was quick to fix. The water heater had been making weird noises for a while and the pipe was also leaking. Like good Congolese handy men, the two guys arrived with the minimum number of tools possible. When they looked at the "problem" they both laughed and explained that since the water pressure is getting poorer and poorer, the water heaters need to be adjusted. That was it. The leak was fixed with something that looked like human hair. The plumber pulled out what looked like part of a blond wig out of his overall's pocket, tied it around the faucet, pushed it back, and voilà.

The other problem was more serious and hasn't been fixed yet. We started hearing "waterfall" sounds in the laundry room a few days ago. By the time the plumber came, water was already seeping from under the wood pane that covers the pipes. He removed the pane and we saw A LOT of water. Unidentifiable stuff came out too, it was all gray and wet, except for some small mammal bones that stood out because they were whitish.

The leak came from somewhere upstairs so the guy went up and later came back and told me it was in the 5th floor. What I didn't get is why the two apartments between ours and the 5th didn't say anything. If we're getting that much water three floors down, the other places must be flooding. The plumber said that he couldn't work on it yet because the owner had to be contacted first to get his permission to break the floor and the wall to fix the leak...So water kept falling and after staring at it for a while, it dawned on me that the main problem wasn't the water. Two years ago, Didier and AB sealed every single hole and opening in the apartment because of the RATS that move between floors through vents and openings.

About two hours had passed between the time the plumber removed the pane and my epiphany about rats. I closed all the doors and proceeded to nail back the pane. Unfortunately, the pane had begun to rot at the bottom, so it wasn't enough to protect us from the rats. Around that time Didier called me from Brazza and gave me some tips to secure the barricade against the rats.

I closed every door, moved the coffee maker to the bedroom (I was not going in the kitchen in the morning if rats were hanging around), locked myself in (rats can be smart), watched a horror movie, panicked when the power went out, realized it wasn't just at our place, fell asleep, and woke up to a still rat-free apartment.

Didier returned this morning. When he saw the result of the rat prevention work, he announced that he'd leave Kinshasa if rats ever made it through my barricade. Maybe I overestimated the local rats' skills. It'd be indeed unfortunate for us to find ourselves face to face with rats that made it through this.



After two years of plastic chairs and a mattress I am not even considering sharing our living space with whatever lives in the hollow spaces in this building.

3 comments:

Sandrine said...

I was at the same time laughing and feeling compassion about your rat adventure. I know the challenge to make your appartment cosy was great.. and you made it!
Bravo!

AntiguaDailyPhoto.Com said...

This barricade is dog-proof too! With your description and the photograph I felt your fear.

Your working and reading areas look awesome. Are you planning in moving out anytime soon, let me know, I am looking for a great apartment, I don't care if it happens to be in El Congo (Kinshasa). ;-)

ale said...

Hi Sandrine and Rudy,

So far, no rats. They fixed the 5th and, as I predicted, opening up that whole revealed other problems...but now it is all well, at least for the time being.

We're trying to get our landlord to change the doors that have been consumed by termites. We fear that once they're done with them (and they're almost done, for the amount of debris we find each morning), they'll move to the furniture. So Rudy, if we do get the termites out, then you are welcome to hop in after our Congo stint is over.

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