Matthew Dobson is correct in that with a properly lapped system of water protection underneath it, vinyl siding is no worse than any other type of siding. But the J-channel used to retain the edges of the vinyl panels tends to direct large amounts of water around window and door frames, right where contractors tend to mess up the interface between the window/door frames, flashing and house wrap, so you'd better be damn sure the guy doing your siding and possibly windows knows and cares what he's doing. Either way, the stuff usually looks like crap on the day it's installed and often gets much worse after that. Occasionally , a house gets just enough sun to keep it from getting algae and fungus, but not so much that it fades and cracks, so it looks not much more tacky after 30 years than it did on day 1. But more often the "maintenance free" house looks like a dirty, shabby mess after a few years; some get so slime-infested that power washing just feeds the problem. All in all, some combination of brick and stucco (which need waterproofing layers and flashing just as much as vinyl does), properly installed, will look much better for longer. It will also protect the house from fire and damage from severe storms, unlike vinyl.
"The potholes will always be with us."
Book of Transportation, 1:16.
Writing of potholes, one of the very first thing President Clinton did when he took office was raise the federal gasoline tax by a nickel. This has resulted in billions of dollars - maybe trillions - added to the road coffers and still we have potholes.
Fight back! Refuse to update/upgrade/replace - if it works, don't fix it!
Bill Gates showed the principle involved - run off with the consumer's money and let him/her figure out how to troubleshoot the premature release.
Great coluimn - AL
Bravo,,Nothin like a short story told well,, Yall dun well Mr. Jowers, My daddy hauled bootleg whiskey back in prohibition days,,but that I recon is another story
Walter, you're a born storyteller. I don't live in Nashville anymore, but I check in from time to time with the Scene to find out whats going on. Love your writing! Merry Christmas to you and your family.
KEEP THEM, COMPOST THEM AND USE THEM! WHERE THE HELL DO YOU THINK TOP SOIL COMES FROM! Get off of your FAT PHOOTBALL watching arse and just do it...MAKE IT FUN! Also don't forget...Please! ... SPAY and NEUTER your INBRED HUMANS!
The notion that we Americans are responsible to protect the "forests of the world" is a problem. The people and government of Brazil may want us to mind our own damned business. If we desire a certain wood and are willing to pay good money for it, they may be more inclined to keep a steady supply available. Money talks and "sustainable BS talk" walks....something like that.
Somehow, Taylor and Martin are managing to make pretty great guitars without resorting to using illegal wood that's destroying rainforests around the world and that is sometimes harvested using slave labor. Here's a clip from NPR:
Chris Martin, Chairman and CEO of the C.F. Martin Guitar Co. in Nazareth, Pa., says that when he first heard guitars built from Madagascar rosewood, he dreamed it might be the long-sought substitute for Brazilian rosewood, whose trade was banned in the 1990s due to over-harvest. Then the situation in Madagascar changed.
"There was a coup," Martin says. "What we heard was the international community has come to the conclusion that the coup created an illegitimate government. That's when we said, 'Okay, we can not buy any more of this wood.'"
And while some say the Lacey Act is burdensome, Martin supports it: "I think it's a wonderful thing. I think illegal logging is appalling. It should stop. And if this is what it takes unfortunately to stop unscrupulous operators, I'm all for it. It's tedious, but we're getting through it."
Taylor guitar CEO Bob Taylor has said similar things: "Here’s how Lacey has affected the way we do business at Taylor Guitars. It’s very simple. We now investigate the sources of our wood, and we ensure to the best of our ability that the wood was taken legally. We fill out the paper work required and we present our business, as an open book. The cost isn’t so much for us. It’s not an unbearable added burden, and we’re happy to do the extra administrative work.… If I could take any user of wood, whether it be a guitar player, or a purchaser of a dining room table, with me, on a trip to the forest of 2011 in many, many parts of the world, and let them see with their own eyes the state of the forests and the people living in them, I’d stake my last dollar on the fact that they’d come home and preach with a loud voice how deforestation has got to be stopped! You have to see it to believe it, and if you haven’t seen it, with your own eyes, you can’t argue against it. Period. I’m sorry, but that’s the truth."
This BBC report shows exactly what Madagascar illegal logging looks like: http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8210000/8210355.stm
as does this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HH2OTfIcLVM
Pretty extraordinary that Gibson would keep importing from the same German importer (Nagel) even after the feds raided them the first time. Why didn't they just find a sustainable importer? Also, far from being "jackbooted" (do you really need to suggest they're Nazis?) these Fish and Wildlife Service agents are doing their jobs to protect forests around the world and Tennessee jobs - in sensible shoes.
You're ignoring the fact that the fretboards were taken because they were believed to be made from illegally imported Rosewood and Ebony from Madagascar. They're not just "completely harmless pieces of wood" when their harvesting damages fragile ecosystems. If your justification for contributing to the extinction of species is that your guitar sounds better, I commend your utter lack of character.
The true musicians: "...the Hammond B-3 organ, the monster machine that turned Steve Winwood loose on "Gimme Some Lovin'." A Hammond B-3 weighs about 420 pounds, and the rotating Leslie speaker unit weighs about 140 pounds. I know because I've been one of the four guys that it takes to haul a B-3 up a flight of stairs."
Check out a true musician who stays true to his Hammond B-3, no matter what! Real quality music!
http://music.napster.com/artist-music/tracks/13687438/?artist_id=13687438
The guitarist in my little brother's 80s power pop outfit played a 62 Strat plugged into a Fender Twin. Sometimes 2 of them hooked up in a sort of "stereo". No effects beyond an analog delay unit here and there, which sounded sort of like a Echoplex. He just played and the amp(s) screamed. Awesome. I got some live tapes, and between songs you can here that Twin up on the stage buzzing....
A guitarist friend of mine was on the road and was enticed by by a club sound man into playing his instrument through one of these modeling amplifiers--was told it could emulate any amp sound previously produced. My comment to him was that that is tantamount to telling a professional keyboardist that he should perform using a Casio keyboard with cheap sample presets since it will sound just like the real deal.
A very interesting observation. I've wondered for a long time why the "clean" music produced today still sounds so inferior to what I grew up with in the '70s. I understand now -- it's heft, my friend, heft. Gravity gave that music gravity.
should i be reading this in my andy rooney voice?
WELL...................Mr. Jowers, all I can say is I was born and raised in THE VALLEY, I am still here and I AM very proud of it. I must say also, The Valley is a much nicer place with you in Tennessee so please stay there and do not corrupt our little town.
i wasn't here in '85, but to those who were here in '98 know that this year's batch was NOTHING compared to that. i was so looking forward to the same.... really!
W.L. you were nothng but a jerk in high school and I see nothing has changed. As well as i remember you were always in trouble, and one of those dumb rednecks always wanting to staart a fight. You should remember its always easier to blame someone else for your problems than to just deal with them your self. Perhaps you should name that teacher you brag about, perhaps you could claim that your were damaged and get a large amout of money and ruin her life in the process. By the way your girlfriend Brenda, did she get her education at L.B.C. as well, did her hard work enable you to get your start. Did a valley girl make you what you are today?
Walter, WL....The only humor I find in your article is that it has been put on Facebook for many Valley people to see---and from the reaction of everyone...YOU have been deleted and fired from ever being a member of the outstanding, hard-working, good Ole people and alumni of the Horse Creek Valley and Langley, Bath, Clearwater High School. If you are trying to be another Pat Conroy...you have failed.
Re: “The truth about vinyl siding”
That is why you caulk around j-channel, where it touches your coil stock. Also i know in INdiana is is a building code to install fan fold insulation under vinyl. In addition, ever notice why brick masons put cotton robe every few feet under the first layer of brick? So the water that gets behind the brick has a place to drain from. Walter i doubt you have ever seen vinyl properly installed. Give me a 16oz. hammer and a brick sided house and i can be inside eithin 60 seconds .