Showing posts with label Condo Living. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Condo Living. Show all posts

Sunday, January 26, 2025

๐—ฆ๐—ฎ๐˜ƒ๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด ๐— ๐—ผ๐—ป๐—ฒ๐˜† ๐—ถ๐—ป ๐—ฅ๐—ฒ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ฟ๐—ฒ๐—บ๐—ฒ๐—ป๐˜ "๐—Ÿ๐—ฒ๐˜€๐˜€๐—ผ๐—ป ๐Ÿญ๐Ÿฌ๐Ÿญ": ๐—ฅ๐—˜๐—ฃ๐—”๐—œ๐—ฅ ๐—ง๐—ต๐—ฎ๐˜ ๐—ช๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ฒ๐—ฟ ๐—›๐—ฒ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ฒ๐—ฟ!

 Don't Throw It Out!

Jon Diagnosing What Was Wrong with Our Water Heater

Why did our shower water start hot and turn cold in less than five minutes? I hate having to rinse the shampoo out of my hair with cold water!

We had hot water, but only for a few minutes. So, the water heater worked, but not correctly. Jon was on a mission to diagnose the problem and repair it. This ten-year-old Calorex water heater (called a boiler here in Mexico) was a good-quality unit, and he did not want to replace it. Repairing it would save a lot of money, he was sure! It turned out to be multiple problems, but all were solvable for a reasonable price.

Jon Made Sure that the Pilot Light was Lit
He Set the Temperature Selector to Caliente (Hot)

We had warm showers for only four or five minutes! Jon began reading and watching YouTube videos until he understood the problem and how to repair it.

Over time, minerals can build up at the bottom of the water heater tank, interfering with the heating element and causing inconsistent water temperature. Sediment buildup inside the tank can act as insulation, preventing the water from warming efficiently.

Mineral Deposit Globs Found Inside Our Water Heater!

Our water heater is inside a cabinet in the condominium hallway connecting eight apartments. I envisioned a flood outside the eight condo units on our floor and convinced Jon to call a plumber to help with this mess.

This Could Result in a Flood in the 
Common Condominium Hallway!

Jon Gathered Equipment Needed to Drain the Water Heater

Regularly flushing your water heater can remove sediment buildup and improve heating efficiency. According to most recommendations, you should flush the sediment from your water heater at least once a year to prevent buildup and maintain its efficiency. This tank was ten years old and may have never been serviced!

This is important in RV water heaters as well as in condo units and standalone homes.

Plumber Poured Water Off the Sludge and Down the Drain

It took three men to do this nasty job—the plumber, his assistant, and Jon! They turned off the water supply to the water heater, then attached a hose to the faucet on the side of the tank, running it into a 5-gallon bucket. After opening the pressure relief valve on the tank, they turned on the water valve. Nothing happened. The faucet was clogged with sediment, so they removed it.

Holding the female end of the hose tight to the hole, they drained the tank water into the bucket, emptying it into the nearby floor drain each time it filled. After emptying the water heater, they briefly turned on the water supply to the tank to further flush it. Jon used a hacksaw blade to dig out the remaining sediment.

Jon Pouring Water Off of the Sediment, Down the Drain

Some Large Mineral Crystals Caught in the Drain
Grunge and Minerals Collected in a Garbage Bag
They disassembled the water heater faucet and cleaned it, then re-attached it to the tank. After making sure the pressure relief valve and faucet were closed, they refilled the tank and turned on the gas.

Jon turned on the house faucet closest to the water heater to allow it to flow. Water, air, and small bits of minerals were flushed from the water line. Next, he cleaned the faucet screen, now full of minerals and grunge. Every faucet and shower head screen would need to be cleaned to restore good flow. Great, hot water flowed!

Jon Cleaning the Minerals from the Bathroom Faucet Screen

After over three hours of hard work and cleanup, the guys finished the job. Jon paid them 1500 pesos for their time, about $75 US. A new water heater of the same quality would have cost over 10,000 pesos with installation ($500 US). This repair saved us over $400 US!

We will put “Flush Water Heater Yearly” on our calendar. We’ve learned from the locals to repair appliances rather than replace them, as long as possible. We were ready to buy a new washer and dryer two months ago, but the serviceman told us they were good quality and worth fixing. He was right—a small repair expense saved us hundreds of dollars and extended the life of both appliances! He also suggested a product to clean our dishwasher so it would work better. Another cost savings!

Thank you to Jon for helping write this technical article. If you have any questions or suggestions, I'll run them by Jon and get back to you. You can leave comments below. Thanks!

Terry L Turrell and Jonathan P. Turrell, Authors

Monday, July 8, 2024

We're Ready for the Next Hurricane! Our Kitchen Windows Are Protected

 Jon Built a Hurricane-Resistant

Folding Window Stabilizer Device

These Windows Can Blow Out in a Hurricane!

Hurricane season started early this year. Will our home be ready for the increasing strength of these storms? These accordion-style windows in our condominium are wonderful during pleasant weather. They hang from a track at the top, free at the bottom so we can fold them back to open the kitchen. The downside is that they move in and out when the wind blows and let water in at the bottom when it rains sideways during a storm.

2023 Hurricane Damage In Puerto Vallarta

We are still reeling from Hurricane Lidia, which hit Puerto Vallarta hard in October 2023. Our kitchen windows shook and rattled violently during the ferocious winds, but they didn't blow out because Jon had secured them with an extra hook. Some condo units in our building with these accordion-style folding windows weren't so lucky.

Jon decided to create a device to further protect our kitchen windows. I invite you to watch the videos below to see how he built this system that we'll use during hurricane season.

Jon Started with Two PVC Pipes and Other Parts
He Attached Climbing Rope to One PVC Pipe
To Brace the Inside of the Window Frame

Jon Fed the Rope From the Interior PVC Pipe
Through Backer Rod Insulation Under the Window
And Sophie Didn't Like Him Moving the Window!
Jon Tied a Knot Securing the Exterior PVC Pipe

Jon Tied a Knot to An Eyelet Bolt in Each Square

Tubular Beam Under the Exterior Granite Shelf

Creating these videos gave Jon good speech and problem-solving practice—important exercises as Parkinson's disease advances. He's also practicing his speech by "writing" a book about his life, using the microphone in his Word document app, and is amazed at how quickly it records his story. He hopes his son will enjoy reading it someday. I know I will❤

Interior PVC Pipe Window Stabilizer
Exterior PVC Pipe and Tie-down of Window Stabilizer

We love living in Puerto Vallarta. Condo living is better than we ever imagined. This is just one adjustment we've made to make living in a tropical area more comfortable. I'm so grateful Jon can create safety features for our condo and motorhome. To read more about life as expats in Mexico, see my books, available on Amazon worldwide.

Monday, May 30, 2022

14 THINGS WE LOVE ABOUT CONDO LIVING (Part 2) IN OUR RETIREMENT YEARS

 What a Difference from our Sayulita Casita!
The Gourmet Kitchen in Our Puerto Vallarta Condo

     I’m still amazed that Jon and I are enjoying condo living this much. A year ago, we hadn’t even considered it. If you missed Part 1 of this article, the first 7 things we love, you can view it HERE.

     After living for six years in a small, classic hacienda-style concrete block and stucco house with a yard in a Mexican barrio (neighborhood) of Sayulita, we decided to move to a condo in Puerto Vallarta for multiple reasons. Life in a rustic casita surrounded by friendly locals was a great experience and we’re glad for that period of our adventures. But what a contrast our new home is!

     Here are the next 7 of 14 things we love about condo living in Puerto Vallarta:

8.    Almost No Mosquitoes and No Scorpions!

     We’ve only seen one mosquito in our condo since we moved into it almost a year ago. Leaving all the windows and the patio door open for fresh air doesn’t bring mosquitoes in, even without screens! It seems mosquitoes live at ground level so that’s one reason we had more of them in our Sayulita casita. Living next to the jungle with a garden full of tropical plants there may have contributed to an increase in the mosquito population.

     Now we live about three floors above street level, so we have virtually no mosquitoes, even with mango and palm trees surrounding the condominium and potted plants on our balcony. We still have to be careful not to have any standing water where mosquitoes breed. But we don’t need those bug zappers any longer.

Potted Plants on our Condo Balcony

     My favorite bug-related improvement is that we have no scorpions! We had several scary scorpion incidents in Sayulita, even though we regularly sprayed for insects with an insecticide perimeter treatment around the house and garden. The condominium Home Owner’s Association hires a company to fumigate the building every two months, one of the services we pay for with our monthly dues.

     Living in a tropical climate means learning how to deal with insects. Moving to a condo has brought the unexpected benefit of minimizing those pests. (We still have ants occasionally and are glad we brought some Terro Liquid Ant Baits with us from the U.S.—that sends them away quickly!)

9.    No Iguanas or Tejรณnes in Our Home

     I don’t mind sharing our home and garden with geckos and other lizards. But I prefer that the iguanas and tejรณnes stay out in the jungle. In Sayulita, Bella did a pretty good job of running those critters out of the yard. In case you missed the story about Bella and the iguana, you can view it HERE.

     Here in our Puerto Vallarta condo, the only critter we’ve seen is a scraggly squirrel looking for a drink of water and to see if Sophie left any crumbs of her treats on the balcony after we play fetch in the evening. No iguanas or tejรณnes when you live above ground level, I guess.

     I did learn that there are iguanas in Puerto Vallarta because I almost got pooped on one day when we were hiking along the Rio Cuale and walked under a giant tree that they favor. Now we watch the sidewalk for signs of large, messy iguana poop and veer around those trees. But, so far, no iguanas on our condo balcony—they can be dangerous if a small dog like Sophie attacks them.

10.    My Favorite—Cabinet Doors on the Kitchen Cabinets

     In Sayulita, our casita had open cabinets allowing the dust to settle on the dishes and food. I understood the reason—in a humid climate, if cabinets are enclosed, the contents can become mildewy. But I never liked how the kitchen looked with the shelves open.

     With our new kitchen, there is minimal dust on the dishes. The kitchen looks so much less cluttered and more professional. The food doesn’t get moldy or stale, partly because I keep open packages sealed in Ziploc bags and partly because we run the air conditioner part of the day when the weather is too humid. Cabinet doors are great now that we have Sophie, still in her puppy phase. We can just imagine her dragging lids from the Pyrex dishes out to play with, probably destroying them before I noticed what she was chewing!

     11. A Swimming Pool!

Our Condo's Rooftop Pool and View is Wonderful!

     I always wanted to have a swimming pool built at our Sayulita casita. Our lot was small so it would have been a soaking pool. But wouldn’t that have felt so good in the hot, humid summer months? Jon said it would be too much to take care of. He was the one who would have been responsible for the maintenance, so I had to agree with him. Anyway, who needs a pool when the Sayulita bay was only a three-block walk from home and great for swimming or just cooling off?

     Now we have a beautiful pool on our rooftop. The view is wonderful and a good place to watch the sunset. There’s a bar and food service at the pool, so when I don’t want to cook, we head up for chicken skewers, hamburgers, a grilled chicken salad with fresh fruit, or another light meal. The best part is that we don’t have to take care of the pool, lounge chairs, and gardens on the roof—we pay for maintenance in our monthly HOA dues. During our retirement years, having less to take care of and more to enjoy is especially important.

12.     Jon’s Favorite: Low Maintenance

     Not everything was great when we moved into our 6-year-old condo unit—those terrible leaks in the master bedroom and laundry room ceilings during the early days after we moved here were extremely stressful. But our apartment has been very low maintenance since then.

     Gardening in terracotta pots on the balcony has been fun, not requiring much work. We installed a drip irrigation system with an automatic timer so we can leave for vacation and the plants continue to thrive. When the upkeep of our garden and the palm trees in Sayulita became drudgery, it was time to downsize the garden. So we eliminated the yard by moving to a condo and are glad we did.

     I thought Jon might get bored with no palm trees to prune and nothing to repair. But he enjoys reading the world news and planning small improvements in our apartment. Next month we’ll have our Mexican building contractor coordinate adding ceiling fans in the two bathrooms and repainting the bathroom walls. Oh, boy! That means a trip to Home Depot for supplies—Jon’s favorite place to shop.

     13.  Security on Site 24/7

     The lobby of our condominium has a friendly, welcoming atmosphere. The security guys greet everyone with happiness in their voices. We can now enjoy the bright smiles they give us when we come and go since the mask requirement has been lifted as of May 2022.

     But the security personnel do more than greet residents and guests. They close and lock the two doors into the lobby around 10:00 PM, ensuring that only those of us who live or rent here can enter with a scan card. They enforce the quiet hours that start at 11:00 PM. They take action when needed if guests at the pool become too rowdy—thank goodness we’ve never seen that happen, but it’s nice to know that security is there for us. They help keep our community quiet enough for everyone here to enjoy it.

     14.  A Community within a Community

     With over forty units in our condominium, it’s a little community within the Romantic Zone of Puerto Vallarta where we get to know our neighbors. There are quite a few Americans and Canadians who live in their units at least six months a year. The pool and surrounding common area are ideal places to meet others, make friends, and share information.

     Occasionally, there are special events held at the rooftop bar and pool area in the evening. The lighting after dark gives it a magical feel. The Halloween Masquerade Party of 2021 was one of my favorites, with performers providing entertainment including live music and fire-dancing.

Beautiful Violin Music at the Condo Pool Area

     As the event was held during COVID, masks were still required in public unless eating or drinking, so some of us wore decorated masks to the public gathering. The open-air setting allowed others to wear eye masks, uncovering their mouths and noses while social distancing. Everyone enjoyed getting together after almost two years of the pandemic. We talked and laughed with new friends that night, happy that we had chosen to move to this condominium community.

     Bonus: Our Amazon and Restaurant Deliveries are Accepted by the Front Desk Security

     This is a wonderful convenience whether we’re at home or away when Amazon delivers our packages! Sometimes the Security guys even bring the items to us at our condo unit. This is especially helpful if the item is heavy. Of course, we tip the guys for carrying the orders to our front door.

     Is Purchasing a Condo a Good Idea?

     We wondered a few times in the first month after we moved in if it had been a good decision to purchase a condo unit during our retirement, given the high prices of real estate in Puerto Vallarta. Some people choose to rent. But we don’t wonder any longer—we’re grateful that we made the move.

     We feel that withdrawing money from our mutual funds to purchase our condo unit was a good investment. (We were fortunate to have sold funds during a peak before the current recession started.) Our retirement funds are much less than our goal had been during our working phase. After the 2008 recession demolished our real estate investments in the United States, we stumbled financially. Then we realized we could live a good life in Mรฉxico on our Social Security and save the modest IRAs we had managed to hang onto to be used for health care.

     We’ve learned that during our retirement years, condo living is better than owning a house with a garden. We now have more time for day trips, vacations, exercise, reading, and other things we want to do.

In case you missed Part 1, see it at 14 THINGS WE LOVE ABOUT CONDO LIVING IN OUR RETIREMENT YEARS (Part 1).

Living in Mexico

More Lessons Learned

(Healthy Living in Mexico #5)

Available on Amazon Worldwide!


View my other books and blog articles on my Amazon Author Page

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     I Wish You Happy and Healthy Travels. 

     Terry L Turrell, Author

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

SOME TROUBLE IN PARADISE: Unexpected Problems Living in a Condo!

 What Is Going On?!

Water Damage on the Master Bedroom Ceiling!
     Let me take you back to the early days in our condo, days when we went from thrilled to be moving to Puerto Vallarta to what have we done?!

     It started the day before the closing on the purchase of our condo unit. We were so excited to do the final walk-through with the realtors—both our realtor and the sellers’ agent. The following day we would sign all of the official documents and receive the keys to our unit. We could move in that very afternoon. What a great birthday gift for me!

     We walked into the two-bedroom, two-bath apartment that would be our new home. In our minds, we already lived there. This was just a formality to approve the final condition of the property. Everything looked and smelled clean and fresh. Well, almost everything.
     When I wandered into the master bedroom, my eyes scanned everything from the gray and tan eighteen-inch ceramic floor tile to the beautiful dark woodwork, from the furniture and wall art to the ceiling. I’m a retired pharmacist and so, naturally, I’m detail-oriented and trained to notice flaws. I caught sight of a narrow, dark spot, maybe three inches long, at the juncture of the wall and ceiling near the minisplit air conditioner. Moisture? Mold?

     I asked the sellers’ realtor what that spot was and he dismissed it with a wave of his hand and said, “Oh, just a little mildew. You have plenty of paint in the laundry room to touch that up.” He walked out of the room as though it wasn’t worth another moment’s notice.

     Was I going to make a fuss about something that indicated water damage? If I did, the whole deal might be delayed, possibly even canceled. We could lose the option to buy the condo unit we had waited patiently to take possession of. I showed Jon the spot. We both shrugged and I thought, Whatever it is, we can deal with it later. Jon’s a retired building contractor—he can fix anything.

     About a month after we moved in, we were lying in bed propped against the headboard with pillows, contentedly reading on our Kindles. It was August, right in the middle of the rainy season when the heat and humidity are at their peak in this tropical area. We had the air conditioner running to cool and dehumidify the air in the master bedroom and all was cozy.

     It was the first summer that we had remained in the area and we’d been warned that it could be miserably hot, but we were pleasantly comfortable with three mini-splits in the 1200-square-foot apartment. We usually only ran one at a time, cooling whichever room we were using.

     I glanced up at the dark “mildew” spot on the ceiling and felt a twinge of fear. Had it grown in size? I pointed to it and said, “Babe, I think that spot is bigger.”

     He didn’t think so, or didn’t want to believe it at the time. I took a photo of it including the corner of the air conditioner for perspective. I would continue to photograph that spot for several weeks as it turned from a little mildew to a definite area of moisture on the drywall.

     One morning we woke up to find moisture had run down the seam between two sheets of drywall leaving a nasty water stain. The drywall tape had pulled loose and a six-inch strip was hanging down. Jon quickly turned off the air conditioner unit and said, “We’d better not use that unit until we have an air conditioning company check out this minisplit. We’ll just use the living room minisplit to cool the bedroom at night.”

     That day, I was in the laundry room filling the washing machine with dirty towels when I heard water running overhead. By that time, I was paranoid about possible water leaks. I looked up and saw a river of water flowing from the ceiling, down the wall, and puddling on the floor. I hadn’t turned the washing machine on yet, so it wasn’t coming from one of our water pipes. Not another water issue in our apartment!

     My next thought was... to read more, watch for my soon-to-be-released book Living in Mexico MORE LESSONS LEARNED. It'll be Chapter 17!

     Have you read Healthy Living in Mexico #3? Now might be a good time to check it out! Download it on Amazon at Living in Mexico LESSONS LEARNED. And please leave a brief review on Amazon to help others find it, too.

     Thank you for reading and reviewing my books. Follow me on my Healthy Living and Traveling in Mexico Facebook page.

Terry L Turrell, Author