I
always said if I moved out and rented our house I would never want to live in
it again afterward and this is precisely why.
Tenants just don't care about your property the way you do and it is
hard to find one that does. There is no
screening process for apathy, I'm afraid.
When
I drove up I was greeted by a mountain of trash and a huge oil slick in the
driveway. I also discovered that
apparently they had been walking through the oil and tracking it into the house
as there is a path leading up to the front door and it was all over the front
porch.
When
I went inside it appeared clean at first and the strong odor of carpet shampoo
left us hopeful. However, the stains
from the grease tracked inside and a lot of dripping of something was
EVERYWHERE. I was absolutely sick.
Our living room carpet |
Stairs leading upstairs. |
My bedroom. |
My
tenant did not show up for her final walk through and I'm sure this is
why. Probably a good thing because I
would have definitely spoke rather frankly about the condition of the carpets,
to put it mildly. I couldn't believe it. This is NOT how I left my home.
Thank
goodness for wonderful friends.
Especially ones that happen to own one of the best carpet cleaning
machines you can buy. If it hadn't been
for them I think I would have broke down and cried. Once the shock wore off, that is.
After the first pass with the carpet cleaner. |
Eeeeewwww! Yuck!! |
We
discovered the washing machine was riddled with mold and leaked on the
floor. My friend, who happens to be a
plumber was all over that. He unplugged
the filter which was filled with sand and something he thought resembled lettuce. I have no idea what that was, nor do I think
I want to. We ran two cycles of bleach
through it and cleaned the rubber boot, door and the little drawer where you
put your soap and bleach. It was good to
go after that. My dear friend also
pulled what resembled a small dead animal out of the dryer vent which was
clogged with lint.
The
dryer wouldn’t run and we got an error message to check the lint filter. My daughter used her skinny hands to pull out
a ton of lint from below and around the lint trap, then used the wand on the
vacuum cleaner to suck out all kinds of junk.
After cleaning up the dryer it worked.
Thank goodness!
On
garbage day we hauled the trash to the curb.
The bins were so heavy and I assumed filled with food. They smelled like dead bodies and the flies
were abundant. I didn't want to check to
see if there were actually any dead bodies.
I'm going with it being food.
Our
neighbor let us use her trash bin to fill up some of the overflow too. Nothing like parceling out your trash to your
neighbors. But now it is all gone and
our trash man is high on my list of great people because he took it all with no
complaint. Here, if your trash can is
too heavy they can refuse to dump it for safety reasons. They don't want to injure their sanitation
workers. He was a trooper! Thank you!!!
We
loaded up the back of our truck with all the cardboard boxes the tenant had
left behind and added our own from our furniture deliveries and hauled it off
to the recycling center. When we got
back home and were able to see NO TRASH in our front yard I breathed a huge
sigh of relief. Now I just need to get
out there with a rake and clean up all the cigarette butts and little bits of
trash and what have you.
We'll
be working on things for awhile yet. But
I am happy to reclaim my home and get it back to the standard in which I am
willing to live in it. I realize I am
cleaner and pickier than most but for heaven's sake! I don't think there was much cleaning going
on around here.
We purchased a home that had been a rental for 5 years. Unfortunately it was what we could afford. We killed ourselves cleaning it for months, repainted everything, removed the nasty flooring and replaced with new. Still not finished but it definitely is not a dirty, nasty place to live anymore. Sad.
ReplyDeleteIt is a lot of work but worth it in the end. Amazingly it isn't as bad as when we first bought the house. It was a true mess. I hope to be able to afford new carpet or hardwood flooring next spring.
DeleteWe were landlords for several years also and I can empathize with you. We put so much work into fixing up the property and it was devastating to have people come in and destroy it. I am glad you were able to get everything clean again with the help of your family and friends.
ReplyDeleteBut, lettuce.... in the filter, REALLY?? Ick!
It is amazing what people will do to someone else's property. I can't imagine it. I rented for years before I bought my house and I always left it better than when I moved in.
DeleteI can say the same. First home rental post divorce, included a long distance landlord, whom I had never met. She inherited the home, rented it out, but hadn't set eyes on it for years. I had a long list of safety repairs prior to moving in, most she addressed by having a handyman with questionable skills tackle them. I did several repairs (smaller) on my own and left that home much nicer than when it was turned over to me. Second home rental, the LL did visit the place upon occassion, it was her married life home, she was now a widow, retired, splitting her time between NY and Fl. She refurbished the home prior to our tenancy. When I had the walk thru, she told me that she knew it would be in great shape. I got all of my deposit with interest back. The first LL? she nickled and dimed me for charges that weren't inlcuded in the lease like gutter cleaning. @@ She's in FL-am I really taking her to court? Karma is a biotch-she's got that coming back to her. Currently, I am renting a condo from a family who built a house in a neighboring town. While only 10 years old, the repairs done on this place aren't the best, esp. the cosmetic ones. They've had a series of tenants and when the place was turned over, I set to cleaning it myself before moving the smalls over myself, in preparation of the move. I found lots of gross areas of the home, esp the oven, range top, vent hood. I cleaned it, know that it's up to my standards.
DeleteOh my goodness.
ReplyDeleteWe just bought our first house (and it's perfect for us)! My husband wants to keep it in 5 years when we move again (he's got a 5 year contract here, I know, we are lucky!) and use it as a rental property. I'm thinking not so much.
But I am glad you have good friends to help.
- molly
I have the best friends ever!! Let me tell you. They went above and beyond!
DeleteAnd this is all after only a year of them living there?? Brutal!!!
ReplyDeleteYeah, I was shocked!
DeleteDid you charge the tenant for the carpet cleaning and trash removal?
DeleteTwo of our previous homes are rentals and every time tenets move out it nearly breaks my heart at how poor the condition is. My husband has finally told me I have to remove myself emotionally from the houses. I try, but it is really hard! Even when they say they will take care of it, they don't. I have been a landlord for seven years and I am still looking for a golden renter!
ReplyDeleteI agree with your husband that you definitely need to take the emotion out of it. I think it would be easier if I wasn't moving back in. I just keep plugging away at it.
DeleteWaving . . I am the golden tenant, but live too far away! Have you considered a cleanout charge of say $400 (average around here) and hire a cleaning service to go thru the place prior to the tenants walk thru?
DeleteI was that Golden renter twice over. When we first got married we rented an apartment above our landlord. When she decided to sell the house...the real estate lady said that over and over the potential buyers loved what WE did to the place. LOL! We were extra careful because it was not ours. I am so sorry that happened to you. I am sure the neighbors were thrilled to see them go. Good luck in the future and I hope everything works out.
ReplyDeleteBlessings, Joanne
Thank you Joanne. It is coming along and once again feeling like home. I was like you when I was a renter because, yes, it isn't mine.
Delete