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Ask TOH | Rain Garden, Lighting
05/25/17 | 23m 43s | Rating: TV-G
Protecting the environment – Watch Jenn plant a rain garden to keep runoff and waste out of marshlands. See Scott brighten up a dim bedroom with new overhead lighting. Tom gives tips on installing cabinet hardware accurately and consistently.
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Ask TOH | Rain Garden, Lighting
Kevin
Today on "Ask This Old House"...
Scott
This is the only light in this master bedroom. But I'm gonna fix that.
Richard
It has a handle, some small teeth, and some numbers. What is it?
Kevin
Have you guys been to the Carpenter Ball?
Richard
The Carpenter Ball? No. They never let me in.
Kevin
It's a very formal affair.
Tom
Installing cabinet hardware may look simple, but there's a few tricks to make it all line up.
Jenn
And I'm planting a garden that's gonna look beautiful and help protect this amazing marsh. And when it rains, that runoff is gonna hit this rain garden we just built, and then you're doing your part to help the marshland.
Janice
Happy to do my part.
Kevin
That's next on "Ask This Old House"... Hey, there,
Richard. -Richard
Hey, how are you?
Kevin
All right. How's the Twitter feed looking?
Richard
We are lighting it up today. Look at this.
Kevin
Tom, how are you?
Tom
I need some stuff at the hardware store.
Kevin
What do you need?
Tom
I need some 8/32 screws.
Kevin
Oh, here you go, 8/32. 1 1/4.
Tom
Okay, well, that's not all I need. I've got some other stuff I need you to get.
I actually need a -- -Kevin
I've got a sample of a knob and a sample of some pulls.
Hardware. -Kevin
Okay, good. If you use a photo when you respond to these things--
Tom
Okay, well, I need one more thing.
Kevin
Here's the jig, Tommy. That's all set for you right there. You're good. Okay? Oh, hey, one more thing, Richard.
Richard
What?
Kevin
Hashtag tea. There ya go, Pops. All you.
Tom
Is it green?
Kevin
Of course it's green.
Tom
It's probably cold.
Kevin
If you respond with a photo, you'll get a much better --
Richard
How did you know to have everything he needed? How did that happen?
Kevin
Come on, man, I'm a professional. I've been doing this for, like, a decade. And he left the list on the table last night, so I went out and got them before he showed up.
Richard
He is getting older.
Kevin
I didn't want him yelling at me.
Justin
All right, Scott. Here's the light here in our master bedroom.
Scott
Oh, cool. That's it?
Justin
That's it. No switch, no nothing.
Scott
It's not too bright.
Justin
No, it's pretty dark in here, except when it isn't.
Scott
What do you mean?
Justin
Well, as you can probably guess,
we've got a one-month old. -Scott
Cool. Congratulations.
Justin
Thanks, thanks. He sleeps here in the co-sleeper at night. So, when we turn this on, if he needs to feed or change his diaper, right in his eyes, he wakes right up, he just won't go back to sleep.
Scott
Yeah,
that's not good. -Justin
No.
Scott
What's above us?
Justin
There's an unfinished attic. It's easy to get to. You can walk right up.
Scott
All right. So, what are you thinking, switch on the wall, overhead light?
That sounds good to me. -Scott
Yeah, all right. So, let me show you how to lay it out. In a room like this, it's real tempting to get the light and put it over the bed or... But the problem is the bed's not always gonna be there. It could be here, it could be there, could be here. So, we like to center it in the largest mass of space. So, we got this wall to that wall and this wall to this wall. Let's measure it out and see what you got.
Justin
Sure. Okay.
Scott
All right, so we've got 138. Half of that is 69. So,
hold that up there. -Justin
Sure.
Scott
I like to use a piece of tape instead of marking up your ceiling here.
Justin
All right,
good idea. -Scott
So, put that at 69, right about there -- boom. Now let's go this way.
Justin
Okay.
Scott
See what we got. 168. All right, so half of that is 84. So, I'll adjust this here and move it over to 84. There you go. So, why don't we shut the power off? If you want to run downstairs, I'll tell you when this light's out. That's it!
Justin
Okay.
Scott
All right, Justin, let me show you what I've found here. So, we have two sets of wires, two blacks and two whites at this location. What that means to me is that the power comes in from the circuit breaker panel
on a black and a white. -Justin
Okay.
Scott
And then it gets sent out again on a black and a white to something else that needs power all the time, like an outlet or something like that. Now, we need to put a switch here. But this is far too high for a switch. We need to put a switch at 48 inches to center. That's about typical. So, what we're gonna have to do, I'll cut a box here. And then what we'll do, we'll run a wire from here down to this box -- that's gonna give it its power -- and then from the box up the wall, over to the light fixture.
And that's called a switch light. -Justin
Okay.
Scott
First thing we need to do is cut a box in. So, before I cut this with the saw, I use this razor. It cuts the paint so it minimizes chipping as much as possible.
Justin
Okay.
Saw whirring
Scott
Before we get any further, I'm gonna send these locator rods through the ceiling into the attic. That way, there, I can see if there's any structure that's in my way. Okay, Justin, up here in the attic, you can see over here where the flag came up. I put a piece of white tape on it. Well, that came up in between these two ceiling joists, which is great, because we can now drill the hole from below and mount the box. Over here now, this is the one right above the switch box. I need to find the top of the wall so that I can drill down and get the wire in there. For that, I've gotta remove this floorboard.
Saw whirring
Whirring stops
Drill whirring
Scott
Okay, Justin, we're gonna use this plastic box, to support the light fixture and all the splices for the new light fixture are gonna go in here. This will hold 20 pounds.
Justin
Oh, 20 pounds.
Scott
Yeah, so what happens is these metal brackets swing out, and they push back against the drywall, really locking that in tight. So, it will support everything well. And we need to get a wire from here all the way over, down here. For that, you're gonna go in the attic and do some fishing.
Justin
Okay.
Scott
Put it in more. Good. All right, hold it. Hold it. All right, I got it. Okay, that's good. Now let's do the center fixture.
Justin
Okay.
Scott
This dimmer switch is designed to work with LED lighting. Look at what I found, Justin. So, years ago, instead of using a wire nut, they would actually twist the wires together and use solder and then just tape up the connection
and tuck it in the box. -Justin
Oh, wow.
Scott
We can't do that now. We are gonna cut this off, re-strip the insulation, and use a wire nut to splice our new wires in.
Justin
Okay.
Scott
We have to leave this junction box accessible, so I'll screw on this blank cover that can be removed if necessary. Okay, Justin, the power's back on. Why don't you go ahead and hit the switch?
Justin
All right,
let's see. -Scott
Nice.
Justin
Oh, that's really bright.
Scott
Go ahead, it's a dimmer, too, so...
Justin
Okay. Oh, that's perfect for the middle of the night, yeah.
Scott
Yeah. Those late-night feedings should go well.
Justin
Oh, yeah, I could use some sleep.
Scott
Good. Enjoy, all right?
Justin
Thanks a lot, Scott.
I appreciate it. -Scott
Yeah, you're welcome.
Richard
All right, it has a handle, it has little teeth, you can see right here. It has some numbers, too. What is it?
Roger
Got it, got it, got it!
Richard
You really got it?
Roger
All right, you better be careful. Tom,
you can identify with this. -Tom
I can?
Roger
You have a meal, right, and you want to make sure that you don't have a little leftover leftover stuff.
Tom
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Roger
So, you take and go in, right, like this. How's that look?
Tom
Nice.
A little more. -Richard
There's an egg there.
One more. -Kevin
Hang on.
Tom
Maybe you need a hair comb.
Hang on. -Roger
No, no. I got a big piece.
Richard
That's no better.
Kevin
Stay away from the soup.
Okay. -Tom
Hey.
Kevin
Have you guys -- Have you guys been to the Carpenter Ball?
Richard
The Carpenter Ball? No. They never let me in.
Kevin
It's a very formal affair. Well, I mean, it's semiformal. Actually, it's very dress-down, to tell you the truth.
But they do wear boutonnieres. -Tom
Yeah.
Kevin
And this is a carpenter's boutonniere for the ball.
Tom
It is?
Kevin
Yeah, it's right here. And you can turn any screwdriver into a boutonniere. You guys are notoriously frugal.
Tom
Talented. Talented.
Richard
What are you trying to say?
Kevin
There was a ball in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015.
Richard
All right.
Kevin
And you just -- that's it. Now you're dressed up. And so long as you have your apron, you're in.
Tom
Doesn't look good on you. Actually... Actually what it is is this is a problem solver on the job.
Richard
What's the problem, Tom?
Kevin
I thought that was your job.
Tom
Well, that, too. But I'm sick and tired of trying to figure out who's going to run for coffee.
Kevin
You seem to have no problem sending me for coffee every time.
Roger
That was the only thing he got right.
Tom
So, this is actually a spinner. See, and the numbers are there -- they don't mean anything, though. You spin it, and wherever it lands, guess who's going for coffee.
Roger
Two out of three.
Kevin
Is this why I get no coffee?
You're still going. -Roger
He's still going.
Richard
Good. You're still going!
Kevin
That thing would not be allowed in Vegas.
Richard
No. This is from my industry, and it's really cool. Now, in heating or air conditioning...
Kevin
Where you going?
Richard
Over here. Come over here. Heating or air conditioning, you got air conditioning coils like this. And they can always get dinged up. You see how this -- there's little tiny fins. There's little tiny fins. So, this is designed, you pick the right spacing. So, watch this. This looks really damaged right here.
Watch what happens. -Kevin
Oh, my goodness.
Richard
I'm gonna come down. Watch. It completely straightens it. Isn't that the coolest thing?
Tom
Wow.
Kevin
That's actually pretty good.
Richard
And if I had a moustache, I could clean it.
Kevin
So, I'll take a small black, sugar.
Tom
Half-caff.
Kevin
Kitchen hardware, Tommy. Right? I don't think most people realize just how many knobs and pulls you can have in a kitchen. I mean, you could have 30, 40, or 50 of these things
in a single kitchen. -Tom
A lot. And there's a lot of different choices out there.
Kevin
So, you want to make sure that you actually put them in the right place and that you put them up accurately.
Tom
Exactly. Well, let me show you a little trick. First of all, what to do, what I like to do with base cabinets. Now, let's take this handle right here. Some people say, "Let's put it in the center of the drawer here, the center of the drawer here, or the down here." Some like it on the center of the rail. But when positioning them on a drawer -- let's start at the bottom of the drawer -- you think by placing it in the center of the drawer, it will look centered. But if you stand back and look at it, the hardware looks too low.
Kevin
Almost as if it's down here.
Tom
Right. So, what I like to do is take it and move it up 1/2 inch off center on the bottom drawer and about 1/4 inch on the next drawer up and then put it centered there. So, now when you're looking at the hardware from up here,
it looks better. -Kevin
Good idea. All right. And so, on the upper cabinets when we have doors, we've got a rail, we've got stiles. And sometimes you would use the center of these, either top or bottom to locate a pull or a knob.
Tom
Right, a pull or a knob. Let's take a knob right here. So, you may position the knob right here, you could position it down here. Let me show you a little trick. You can take a piece of this two-face putty right here, stick it on the knob, and really hold it up there and say...
Kevin
Oh,
that's clever. -Tom
..."Is that where I want it to go?"
Kevin
Boy, I can't tell you how many hours I spent looking at these things, trying to decide where they go in my kitchen.
You can go crazy. -Kevin
Actually, I wasn't deciding,
I just agreeing. -Tom
Yeah, exactly.
Kevin
All right. But regardless of where you put them, you want to make sure that if you put one down here on this door, that it's in the exact same spot on this door,
and the same thing up top. -Tom
Right. And you can use a tape measure and a square like this -- it's actually a combination square. And you can set the offset right here to the center of that stile.
And then mark a mark like that. -Kevin
Mm-hmm.
Tom
And then come down here with the height here. Measure down from the top of your two points.
Right. -Tom
What I like to do is I like to make a jig. And with some scrap wood, you can take three pieces of scrap wood and put a piece on the top and a piece on the side
and let each one hang over just a little bit. -Kevin
Right.
Tom
That allows you to take this piece with the holes drilled for the hardware that I've chosen, take it and put it on the door, rest it on the top and on the side, and drill my two holes for the handle that I've chosen.
Kevin
Gives you an offset from the top and offset from the side.
Tom
Right. And it allows me to take it and flip it over so I can do the same thing on the left-
or the right-hand door. -Kevin
Very clever.
Tom
I can also use it on my bottom and top cabinets the same way. Just flip it over. Do it here, do it there, drill my holes.
Kevin
So, homemade jig for you, although there are a lot of jigs out there that you can buy to help you with this job, as well.
Tom
There's all kinds of jigs, from this type right here, a simple jig, you figure out where the holes are, you're gonna use it. You put it here, and you punch a hole, you punch a hole, and then you drill it.
Kevin
So, that's just for marking.
Tom
Just for marking. All right, now, there's a jig right here that's come out, you can set the offset, put it on the side of the door. And this is for those wide handles that I set it up for. And I push it on the door right there, and it gives me -- I can line it up. For example, I'd line it up right here.
Kevin
All right, with the top rail.
Tom
And I'd take my drill, and I drill through there, and I drill through there. Because this is a metal, it gives you a nice metal guide to guide the drill and keep it straight.
Keep it straight. -Tom
All right, now what I use is I actually use this one right here.
Kevin
Ooh, fancy.
Tom
it sets on the door. It gives me my center. It drops down and gives me my height. And I can turn it around and do the other door the same way.
Kevin
So, here we've got the spacing for a pull. But then we've also got the center point for a knob.
Tom
Right. You can use it for a knob, and I can take and use this one for a knob as long as I'm consistent in what I'm gonna do. I can also use this on a drawer. I can take it and put it on the drawer and center the position off the top of the drawer, making sure that I use it on all the same-height drawers.
Kevin
All right. So, think about the positioning, make sure you get it accurate, and to do that, in most cases, you're gonna be using some kind of a jig.
Exactly. -Kevin
All right, good information.
Thank you. -Tom
My pleasure.
Jenn
Hi, Janice.
Janice
Hi, Jenn. Nice to meet you.
Jenn
Nice to meet you,
too. -Janice
Yeah.
Jenn
Incredible property. 100 steps that way,
you have the beach. -Janice
It's amazing.
Jenn
Over here, acres upon acres of marshland.
Janice
We love it. We love everything about it. We've been here about 10 years. There's only one thing we don't love about it. We can't seem to plant anything. Nothing grows. You can see we have these containers over here aboveground. But that's it.
Jenn
So, you've tried and tried. There's a couple different reasons. See this white marks?
Janice
Yeah, yeah.
Jenn
That's the salt. It's the salinity in the soil. Not a lot of plants tolerate salt on their feet. So, that is a difficulty, as well as...the soil. It's peat. It is decomposed plant material as your soil base. It's very dense, very acidic, and you can't grow anything here.
Janice
So it wasn't my fault that nothing grew.
Jenn
It wasn't. But I do have some good news for you. We have a plan to beautify your area and offer other benefits, as well.
Janice
I can't wait.
Jenn
Janice, I'd like to introduce you to an old friend of mine -- Peter Phippen. He is an environmental scientist, and he's worked for years on trying to restore these marshlands right behind your house.
Janice
Hi,
Peter. -Peter
Hi, Janice, nice to meet you.
Janice
Nice to meet you, too.
Peter
Wow, what a beautiful site you have here. Did you realize that you're sitting right on the part of the Great Marsh? It's a 25,000-acre marshland. It's the largest continuous marsh in New England.
Janice
I did not know that.
Peter
Yes, and it's home to a lot of important species -- native grasses and plants all find home here. It's also home to finfish that spend part of their lifecycle -- these are ocean fish that come in, either spawn or feed or whatever. There's also shellfish, as well as it's a major stopover on the North Atlantic flyway for shore birds that come along here.
Janice
Oh, yeah, we see so many birds.
Peter
Yeah. Do you realize that you also have an impact? Your property potentially has an impact on this marsh. What happens is when it rains out, rain falls down on your roof and on your driveway, on your lawn, and it runs down into the marsh. The first flush, which is the first 1/4 inch of rainfall, carries all kinds of contaminants, either fluids from your car, fertilizers from your lawn, dog waste, and whatever happens to be on the road that comes down your driveway, and flows down into the marsh. This changes the water quality of the marsh itself, causing all kinds of problems, allowing non-native invasive species to populate the marsh, as well as killing off some of the native grasses and vegetation that lives in the marsh.
That sounds horrible. -Peter
It is.
Jenn
Peter and I have been working on a design for you, and we have designed a rain garden so you could help with that impact.
Janice
Wow, what's that?
Jenn
So, your driveway pitches this way. All the water rushes down this way. So, this rain garden that we have designed, we're gonna make a bed starting here and wrapping around this portion of the driveway. And we're gonna also dig down about 18 inches, remove that really tough peat mass of soil. We're gonna put in flowering shrubs and native grasses. Everything's gonna be native, but what the function of this is to catch that first runoff, and it's gonna filter all those contaminants and stop it before it goes out to destroy and harm any of the marshland.
Janice
Sounds perfect.
Jenn
So, you feel like digging a hole?
I'm excited. -Jenn
All right,
let's get some shovels. -Janice
Let's do it.
Jenn
Pretty tough, huh?
Janice
This is not an easy job.
Jenn
There is a lot of clay.
Janice
Yes.
Jenn
With our hole at the right depth, we're gonna add one to two inches of course sand all along the bottom.
Janice
Okay.
Jenn
I think that's good. All right, Janice, we are going to unload the plants and put them in the wheelbarrow. I like to lay the plants down in the truck bed. It protects them from the wind, and it doesn't damage them.
Janice
Great.
Jenn
All right, so we're gonna take these out of the pots and place them, and then we're gonna backfill around them. I'd like them staggered.
Peter
All right.
Jenn
And after they're placed, we'll go along and score the roots.
Peter
These plants!
Jenn
I know, they're gorgeous.
Janice
They are so beautiful.
Jenn
They're gonna sound really amazing in the wind.
Peter
Yeah.
Jenn
So, all the plants are placed. What do you think?
Janice
Beautiful. I love this.
Jenn
This is called switchgrass. It's a native grass. It keeps this vertical, upright structure. Sways in the wind. It's just beautiful to listen to and watch.
Janice
What happens when the snow plow comes and puts the snow on top?
Jenn
Well, you can cut them down at the end of the season, snow could come on top, and in the spring, they'll emerge again.
Janice
Great.
Jenn
And so, then you come down here to anchor this corner, we have clethra, which is summer sweet is a common name. And it's just starting to flower right now. See that?
Janice
Mmm!
Jenn
Smell that? It's like a sweet, peppery smell. But it's a native plant, and it's gonna be hearty for this situation. Over here, we have two different blueberries. And the blueberries are gonna be great for the birds, but you probably don't want to eat them, since we're filtering off all the contaminants. But we have two different varieties for the cross-pollination that will produce more berries.
Janice
Great. Happy birds.
Jenn
They'll be happy birds. I can't wait to see them come. All right, so we're gonna backfill these plants with a third coarse sand, a third compost, and a third bark mulch. Bark mulch and the coarse sand are gonna act as a filtration system to filter out the contaminants, and the compost is gonna give nutrients to the plants.
Janice
Sounds good.
Jenn
And now we're gonna water in the plants to settle in the soil and get the plants established. Then we'll put down a layer of mulch.
Peter
How's it look?
Jenn
Great.
Beautiful. -Peter
Nice.
Jenn
That's the way to do it.
Peter
Well, Janice, keep on watering, just like this for about another month, once a day. And that's all that it will take for the plants to become established. And after that, it's up to rain, and rainwater will keep them alive.
That's great. -Jenn
And when it rains, that runoff is gonna hit this rain garden we just built, and then you're doing your part to help the marshland.
Janice
Happy to do my part. Thank you so much for your help.
Thank you. -Jenn
Thanks for having us.
Bye-bye. -Jenn
Bye.
Kevin
Next time on "Ask This Old House"... we'll finish our tour of the U.S. with a visit to our 50th state. Welcome to Hawaii.
Richard
I'll take a look at the latest upgrade in home solar systems -- onsite storage.
Tom
This Hawaiian keepsake box is all about the grain of the beautiful hardwood. And we'll show you how to build it.
Roger
And I'll show you how to plant a garden -- Hawaiian style.
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