I haven’t told a story about our property rehab projects in a while. My sister Ann and I have done almost 25 different rehab projects in the last 5 years, and the tales go on and on. 

This is one of those stories.

Patricia Valerio at Unsplash

The backyard in this account looked like the county dump except the dump is better organized. The best way to handle this, short of tipping the earth and letting the garbage slide into the alley, is to get to work with trash bags and rakes.

We always don safety glasses and gloves just in case. It’s amazing what you can find in a heap.

The backyard of this project had some promise. It was small and could be charming except for the bags of debris along the back fence. Well, and the litter all over the grass. Well, assuming there was any grass left under the junk. But you get the idea.

We started clipping hedges and trimming evergreen limbs that swept the ground.

And there we found a trash can, completely hidden behind the canopy of branches.

The trash can was overflowing, of course. 

I grabbed a handle, but the trash can was too heavy for me to move alone. “I need help,” I said.

So Ann gripped a handle, and we lifted. We pretended to lift, I mean. This trash can must have been full of concrete.

We drug the can to the alley, leaving nice trench marks behind. 

“Huh, it’s full of water,” Ann said. So, not concrete, as it turned out. All the rubbish was marinating in rainwater.

We decided to tip the container onto its side to let the liquid flow out. If this had once been rainwater, it had been transformed into swamp sludge. We hoped nothing had died under the junk, but it sure smelled like it.

An hour later, our nostrils had cleared out enough to return to the project. 

Seizing both handles, we started our dragging strategy again. The trash can was lighter, and we were able to get it to the dumpster in the alley.

This trash dumpster was a metal monster with a wide-open mouth hungry for garbage. We hoped it didn’t gag when we added our treasure to the feast.

The fact that the front jaw of the dumpster was about four feet tall presented a new problem. We couldn’t lift this trash can that high.

But Ann had an idea. There were brackets on the front of the dumpster where the truck could grab and pour the contents. “Let’s lift the cab up and set it on that bracket,” she said. 

We were confident we could hoist the container halfway up, to the bracket, reposition our grip and tip it over into the dumpster.

Maybe the trash can fumes had done something to our brains because this idea seemed totally doable.

And so we bent down and lifted.

Somewhere between the ground and the bracket, somebody’s hands slipped, and the trash can fell to the ground.

I was now convinced there was concrete as ballast because the trash can landed square on the ground, sending a geyser of bog sludge over both of us.

There we stood, baptized in marshland mud. 

But all was not lost: we should be inoculated against every germ known to mankind.

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