So, the wife noticed Tuesday that there was an off organic smell in the
basement. Not the cat box creeping back for the increased humidity but something
else. Wednesday evening it was more pronounced and we went to investigate. There
was a hint of the telltale dead rodent odor on the air but not a for sure, dead
thing smell. Even so, we've had critters get into and not get back out of the
dryer vent in the past and that was the first thing to check as there was the
sound of some seeds rattling in the aluminum pipe again.
Climbing behind the dryer and unhooking everything I set to work with the
shopvac and assumed the worst, another chipmunk mummy and all the assorted
grotesque crypt-keeper goodies that accompany this scent... I powered up the
little machine, a cloud of concrete dust shot forth from the last job making it
extra pleasant, and opened up the vent pipe... Nothing but some seeds and lint.
We decided that due diligence was done and might have to let it get a little
worse after prowling about with flashlights and all the lights on. There was a
cloud of fine particulates in the air anyhow and it was, and continues to make
for a scratchy throat.
Later in the evening as I was went down to the pantry for a restock on the
tinned catfood I hit the odor again. It was as I descended the stairs. No, it
was at the transition line for the floors, in the floor joists. Now I got
nervous.... I work in the natural gas/methane business.... For those who've
never thought about this the natural gas has no real odor, what we've all been
trained on as "the smell" is added by the distribution company, i.e. your local
utility shortly after what's called the city/town gate. That's where they buy it
off the transmission system. Methyl mercaptan is the common additive in North
America though it does vary by geographic region, and here it carries a rotten
egg, cabbage, organic smell....
Having worked for years in methane I've got some sense of the stuff, but I can
tell you that lesson 1, day 1 is this: The product is only worth something
because it burns. It's also lighter than air, so it tends to rise in an
enclosure...
I used to have a personal unit called an MXIV Ventis (4 gas detector) it picks
up O2, CO, Methane, and monitors the LEL (Lower Explosive Limit) That's the
minimum fuel air mix for combustion. And yes there have been times when gas
crews were safe to work because it was over the UEL Upper explosive limit! You
could clip these into a little pump body and screw on a wand and "sniff" for gas
or we also had SENSIT units that did the same thing for us. I however was no
longer a field guy...
I did the next best thing, I made up a soapy water solution in a spray bottle
and started bubble testing all the fittings in the house. We have hook up for
dryer, stove, water heater, furnace and they had recently moved the meter
outside of the house. Domestic hook up pressure if measured in inches of water
column in the US as we run pressures under 1 PSI but that being said if there's
a leak out side the house it can chase the disturbed soils and pipe into the
house over time. You usually see some chemically "burned" lawn where it's
bubbling up and killing the grass. But it's the end of winter... the lawn looks
as it had in the fall and nothing smelled out at the meter or by the old inlet
pipe, abandoned in the basement wall from the initial install in the mid 50's
Trust your nose, that's why we flavor this stuff. I bubble checked and smelled
my way around the basement deciding it was really strong near the water heater
and furnace. Getting closer and closer I was looking at the top of the water
heater. Plastic flanges had some melting damage and there was an odor here... I
reached up to touch the vent pipe and it was cold, but then again the unit
wasn't calling for hot water... Still, something felt wrong. It's a 3"
galvanized steel vent pipe up to a steel thimble unit someone installed eons
ago. I replaced this water heater in the last 5 years and plumbed it all in
myself. Something didn't seem right. Looking around I saw I had plenty of the
metalized tape for duct joints so I decided to cut loose the galvanized section
and look at it.
.... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL .......
BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY SQUIRREL ....... BIG DEAD GREY
SQUIRREL ...
Head down, dead from CO poising I assumes about a foot of grey squirrel was
filling the pipe like a cork does the neck of a bottle. You dumb bastard... We
have a lot of greys about, nothing hunts them (except me when they get to
destructiveness) around here. I took the pipe section outside, under my garage
light and swung it briskly into the dark of the yard.
FFFFFFffffooooouuussssshhhhh, a squirrel corpse torpedo was launched into the
night and I went back inside to restore my domestic hot water supply!
So, lessons... When you smell something check it out. If you think it's gas,
CALL YOUR UTILITY. They have people who'll come by and check it all out for you.
It should be free, nobody wants a gas explosion. Why didn't my CO detector trip?
Maybe it wasn't enough CO to reach up to the ceiling, but the warm air/spent
fuel with the oderant did? Carbon Monoxide isn't heavier than air, and it
usually diffuses though the space. CHECK YOUR DETECTORS!
I'm not going to be able to get the old Lynyrd Skynyrd song "That Smell" out of my head for days.