Though hurricane season typically doesn’t send Michigan residents into a weatherproofing frenzy, last weekend’s deluge proved that we’re not out of floodwater reach.
Since Hurricane Ike-driven storms soaked the metro Detroit area, water damage has taken its toll, and some homeowners are still desperately trying to dry out.
“We have had tremendous call volume since Sunday morning,” said Matt Downey of Harrison Township, owner of a Puroclean 24-hour franchise that services the metro area.
“Rochester Hills, Birmingham, Dearborn, Farmington Hills,” he said. “It’s kind of all over the map.”
Kim Berry, 41, of Clarkston was one of the lucky ones. She made it through the soggy week without damage to her home; her yard was another story.
“We live on a pond, so our yard was totally flooded,” she said this week. “Our boat started to float away and sink.”
Berry said she had to clean up large amounts of sand and branches that washed onto her lot, but she acknowledged, “We were lucky.”
Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 through Nov. 30, so the coastal storms — and subsequent deluges in Michigan — may not be over. Cleanup can be daunting and expensive, so keep in mind these tips for the next rainy day.
Ooh, that smell
First things first: Get the water and mud out with a wet-dry vacuum or broom. Then spray all surfaces with lukewarm water. Scrub the surfaces with hot water and a heavy-duty cleaner, then rinse using a brush moistened with a solution of 2 tablespoons of chlorine bleach per gallon of water. Repeat scrubbing and rinsing until the odor is gone. If it’s humid in the flooded space, do not open windows. Instead, run a dehumidifier, air-conditioning or fans to dry things out.
Disinfecting duties
If there is sewage in the water (or you just want to take precautions), clean with a solution of one part chlorine bleach to nine parts water. Use rock salt (1 cup per gallon of water) on plaster and painted drywall, but not on concrete floors, which the salt will damage.
Rug redemption
If a carpet has been soaked with water and sewage, ditch it. Wear rubber gloves and be careful not to scrape your skin, to avoid infection. For slight water damage, remove the carpet if possible, roll it up and take it outside. Drape it over a sawhorse or chairs so it will drain, but don’t let the rug dry this way — it might stretch out of shape. Once the water drains, lay the carpet on the ground. Be sure it’s dry before bringing it back inside — residual moisture can breed mildew and mold. Toss the carpet pad and wash the floors. Have the carpet cleaned professionally or rent a steam cleaner.
If the carpet must stay in place, use a wet-dry vac to remove mud and water.
Walls and floors
You may need to remove baseboards to ventilate wall cavities. Unless moisture there can dry, odors will linger. After you have removed the baseboards, drill holes a few inches above the floor between the studs to drain water. Insulation might have to be removed, dried and replaced — it’s useless when wet, can breed mold and mildew and will stink.
Plastered walls and washable vinyl wallpaper can be cleaned. Allow plaster to dry thoroughly before washing. Use a mild soap and water to clean painted walls. If you have to repaint, wait a couple of months for the walls to dry or new paint will blister.
Clean woodwork with a stiff brush and non-sudsing detergent while still wet. Wood floors will buckle, so leave them alone to dry. Open doors and windows on non-humid days and maintain an indoor temperature of about 55 degrees, or the wood will warp or shrink.
Inspect the furnace
Heating systems exposed to flooding should be checked by a pro. The chimney and smoke box could be clogged with dirt, and the furnace could explode. Check where the chimney meets the foundation, to ensure mortar hasn’t washed away.
Preserving papers and photos
Drain water by placing upright in a box, separated by wax paper. Stand books up on their spines. Place papers in plastic bags and store in the freezer until you are ready to deal with them. If photos are stuck together, don’t pull apart. Wet them again, then try separating, so emulsion isn’t damaged. Clean photos carefully in a photo tray, and place between clean blotters to absorb the water, changing blotters frequently.
Free Press staff writer Kelly Kozlowski and the Philadelphia Inquirer contributed to this report.
Source: http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080920/NEWS05/809200356