Sunday, May 25, 2014

The sound of running water is never good


Last summer my youngest daughter Bronwyn got out our garden hose and had some fun with her friends. I heard later it was awesome.

The next morning I went downstairs to have a coffee with my wife Heather. We chit-chatted for a bit and then watched the news. As I sipped  my coffee I heard the unnerving sound of running water. My immediate thought was the toilet was running as it has a habit of doing. When I went upstairs to check it sat there silent. If it could have spoken (and I'm glad it didn't!) I pictured the toilet saying, "It wasn't me."

So who was it then?

I checked every sink in the house and found no running water. Then it dawned on me -- Bronwyn! I ran outside to check the garden hose but knew by the sopping wetness of the ground it was on before I could even see it. The water had been running for a good 12 hours.

Both Bronwyn and Daddy paid for that costly mistake. So you could imagine my concern when I heard the sound of running water again in March. It wasn't the same sound as the garden hose but it was running water. The outside hose was the first thing I checked but it had been turned off from inside since the fall. All the toilets and sinks were off too. So why could I hear distant, yet persistent running water?

The answer, I thought, resided with my neighbour who had water cascading down his driveway. A pipe had sprung a leak somewhere in his front yard and water was running to his driveway and down into the street. The Region of Durham came by, some very large holes were dug and the water mess was cleaned up. That was good for everyone, myself included, because I figured the running water sound I could hear from my laundry room would stop.

It didn't.

So I reluctantly called the Region of Durham myself to report the sound and my suspicion there could still be more leaks in my court. A guy came out and confirmed within seconds I was correct. There was a pinhole leak somewhere and that somewhere was within my own plumbing. A 'leak' specialist would have to be brought in and if the leak was on the wrong side of my property line I would be on the hook for the repair and all its costs. If the leak was on the Region's side it would be fixed by them. But I was warned, it would cost me a minimum of $500 and a maximum of $4,000 if that hole was on my side of that thin red line.

Gulp!

I didn't have $4,000. Actually I didn't even have $500 to spare on a plumbing problem so you could imagine the anxiety, the gnashing of teeth, the stress I went through awaiting the leak specialist's final word. When it came I breathed a HUGE sigh of relief. The leak was in the centre of my driveway, about a foot and a half on the Region's side of the property line!

I found out my neighbour's leak was also on the right side of his property line so he too dodged a financial bullet.

The repair work hasn't started yet so I can still hear the sound of running water downstairs. But at least I know its source. And the best part is that money won't be running out of my wallet to fix it!


Saturday, May 3, 2014

Investigating things that go bump in the night

Oshawa Community Museums curator Melissa Cole has given thousands of tours of two of the city's most historic homes, Henry House and Robinson House. There's nothing she doesn't know about these beautiful houses or the people who have called them home over the decades.

Most days she gives these tours while the sun is up but a few weeks ago she gave me a tour many hours after the sun went down. I was there with the Paranormal Researchers of Ontario (proo(f)) and we were on the hunt for ghosts.

I have seen television shows where investigators walk into old haunted buildings with special equipment. Something always happens whether it be a voice telling them to "Get out!" or an apparition appears walking down a hall or stairway. It's meant to entertain and creep you out.

But proo(f) doesn't operate this way. The organization is there to investigate, document and attempt to draw their own conclusions as to why strange things might be happening. Many in the group are skeptical ghosts exist at all while others have had experiences they can only attribute to the paranormal.

So on this night  I accompanied them as they investigated Henry House and Robinson House. Melissa took us on a tour of the two buildings explaining the strange things staff have reported to her as happening while they worked. Melissa herself said she's a skeptic when it comes to ghosts. She's never seen one and she spends a lot of time working and taking care of the two houses.

"I don't get a sense of fear in here ever," she said.

But that doesn't mean others haven't had rather haunting experiences inside the two historic sites. As Melissa explained it there has been more than one person who has had some anxious moments inside Henry House. One girl who took a tour of the house a number of years ago stopped dead in her tracks outside Thomas Henry's study which is just to the right after you walk in the front entrance. She refused to go into the room and didn't want to finish the tour. Something in there made her extremely uncomfortable.

"People have seen somebody in Thomas Henry's chair," Melissa said. "This room gets a lot of stories."

Caskets are stored in the basement of Henry House.
I figured if there was ever going to be a night where a ghost made his or her presence known it would be this night. After all, I was with a group of professional ghost hunters who had cameras, mel metres, electro magnetic field detectors, temperature gauges and other devices used to investigate haunted houses. If a spirit was going to make itself known, these devices, in the hands of these capable people, would do it.

We investigated both buildings from top to bottom. On this night no spirit set off any of their devices but there were a few unexplained sounds and flashes of light we encountered in Robinson House. Proo(f) investigators Rob DiVenanzo, Brad Mavin and Melissa also complained of feeling a little disoriented near the top of the stairs inside the house as well.

"It felt warm. It felt very uncomfortable," Rob explained.

Then, as quickly as it happened, the feelings these three experienced went away. As for me I must admit to feeling a bit uneasy during the whole tour. It's not every night I get to walk through historic old homes in the dark. And who wouldn't experience the heebie-jeebies in the basement of Henry House where old caskets are stored for exhibits held throughout the year by Oshawa Community Museums? Think about it, I was in a dark basement surrounded by coffins.

Despite the fact proo(f)'s various devices didn't go off during our investigation that didn't mean there wasn't something else in those buildings with us.

Did the cameras catch anything not visible to the naked eye? I spoke to Brad  a few weeks after my tour with his organization to ask him.  Was Henry House or Robinson House haunted, in his opinion? Nothing stirred in either house on that night, he said.

In other investigations in other alleged haunted houses proo(f) has returned multiple times and received a variety of readings. In other places they’ve left their equipment behind and it’s picked up some bizarre activities.

What about the strange feelings that overcame his colleagues at the top of the stairs at Robinson House?

“There was certainly a strange feeling up there,” he admitted. “I rarely ever get some sensation or feeling. I had no fear of that place at all though.”

I can't say I didn't experience fear in either house. Being new to paranormal investigations I was feeling a lot of weird things. Could it have been my imagination? Probably. Could something have been watching us as we searched the two houses? Or maybe on this night the spirits just didn't want to come out and play? Who knows?

But it was a cool experience nonetheless.