Only not. And the rain was imminently imminent. Ooooo noes!

Falling water bulks up the string to about twice actual diameter, spiraling around it as it falls. That's Tam with the throat-clearing, by the way. Still plenty of pollen.
The further and continuing adventures of the girl who sat in the back of your homeroom, reading and daydreaming.
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I knew about rain chains. It never occurred that you could use rain ropes.
ReplyDeleteNext thought - use one more to route water to plants in the flower garden. The garden at one end of my house is covered by long eves that keep it pretty dry. This could be a way to get water to thirsty shrubs.
I suspect they don't hold up as well, but if you don't mind yearly replacement, it would do.
ReplyDeleteThe holes are 1/2", just barely big enough to keep from blocking (too frequently) and here they are in the side of the gutter. I used a couple of pre-existing small holes to start from; it would work better if they were on the the underside and better still, probably, with a little stub of a downspout: you really, really don't want water running back to the soffit or whatever one calls the vertical eavesboard.
It's magical!
ReplyDeleteThat makes a handy ninja fix for a dripping faucet, too.
ReplyDeleteJim
Nice fix. You can still get plastic or stamped tin downspount stubs, which rivet or glue in. harder to find for the old style gutters than new, but not impossible.
ReplyDeleteMy drs office has a rain chain made of thin tin bells. They make the most amazing sound with rain running down them, I bet you could do the same with large jingle bells.
They look pretty awesome frozen over in winter, too.
ReplyDeleteFirst I've heard of rain chains. Nifty.
ReplyDeleteOld Boy Scouts and GI trick. 550 cord works well to keep rain from running all the way down a tent or antenna guy line.
ReplyDelete