[Note: This is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland. Since much of my news these days relates to trying to age gracefully, this series might be called The Geezer Gazette.]
11/22/25
Aloha All!
One of my past blogs was about "Whack-A-Mole Maintenance," the experience of having just taken care of one house maintenance issue when another immediately crops up to take its place. That's what happened here this week, and the new problem turned out to be a dandy. On Tuesday my handyman and I replaced the ventilation motor I wrote about last week and got the fan back on the roof and working perfectly. The warm glow of accomplishment lasted about two hours, until I went to check on a small leak in our pool pump that I had discovered a day before. Water was shooting out of the pump housing with such force that it went all the way across the room and hit the opposite wall. It looked much like one the lava geysers our volcano has been belching lately. The pool equipment is housed in a little room that connects with a room that we use mainly as a quiet retreat. It is open on two sides and it connects with our pool deck. We have a small couch and a couple of chairs there, and it's where I do my morning laptop computer surfing, meditating, and occasional napping. Anyway, the indoor/outdoor carpeting was soaked, as well as the couch cushions and all the objects we had on display along the wall. I managed to get the pump turned off pretty fast, but I think it had been going for awhile, judging from the puddles on the floor.
We spent the rest of the day dealing with all the water. I went over the carpet several times with my shop-vac while Karen dried everything else off and moved the cushions out into the sun to drip and dry. I was relieved to find that my laptop computer, which had gotten pretty wet, seems ok. One upside to this near disaster was that the carpet needed cleaning anyway, and the other things in the room needed cleaning too. This could have been so much worse if we had not been home to deal with it. If we were traveling several days could have gone by until my handyman discovered the problem on his next weekly visit.
I called my pool man and he came the next morning to take a look. The initial diagnosis is that the pump housing suddenly developed a hairline crack and water was being forced through it when the pump was running. The pump itself is separate from the motor that turns it, and even though the motor is fairly new, the pump is probably 30 years old. Like the rest of us geezers, it now has developed cracks and leaks. Also, being old, the pump is now no longer being made and repair parts are hard to find. At first we were going to try to locate a used housing but on further reflection it seemed that it would be better just to bite the (expensive) bullet and get a whole new unit.
If this were the mainland there would be many outlets nearby who would have a wide variety of pumps on hand that could be immediately installed. Not here. There are just a handful of pool supply outfits on our island, and the selection is much more limited. I searched the internet and found a lot of options, but --- you know what I'm going to say -- it would take at least a week to get it delivered. A week of the pool water not being filtered is not a good idea, and of course without the pump running we don't get solar heating from our roof panels. I did the rounds to see what was available here, and yesterday I bought a fancy new unit that should work, and should be reliable enough that we don't have to worry when we travel. My pool guy will start installing it today, and if all goes well we should be back to heating and filtering soon.
This pump (a Pentair WhisperFlo VST Turbocharged Jet Assist Macho Mega Machine) is supposed to be very energy efficient because it can be programmed to run at lower speeds for some of the cycle time. Lowering the rpms of the motor dramatically reduces the amount of electricity the unit uses. Of course, since we have PV panels that generate most of our electricity, this isn't much of an issue for us. The state has mandated a switch from single-speed to variable-speed pool systems, though, so we don't really have a choice. My intent is to just program the pump to run at one speed near what it does now, and forget all the fancy stuff.
In other news, we got rained out on another attempt to whack a ball at Makalei, so we went to PF instead. On Thursday I sent in my heart monitor for analysis. and I'll learn the results when I see my cardiologist in a couple of weeks. My new eyeglasses are still inching their way through USPS. Finally, we're making some progress in planning our spring trip to Panama and Colombia. Once the U.S. invades Colombia it should be safe, right?
Take care. Bundle up. Happy Thanksgiving!!!!

No comments:
Post a Comment