#Upholstery Cleaning Botanic Ridge
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
steam-carpet-cleaning-blog · 5 months ago
Text
Importance of Cleaning Upholstered Furniture
The cozy upholstered furniture in your home adds elegance and comfort to your living space. In time, upholstered furniture may accumulate dust, dirt, allergens, and potentially hazardous materials.
Regularly cleaning upholstered furniture ensures a hygienic and clean living space. In this blog, we'll look at the dangers hidden in upholstered furniture and the significance of regular cleaning to maintain a clean house.
Tumblr media
Why is Cleaning Upholstered Furniture Important?
Dust Mites and Allergens
Upholstered furniture is a perfect place for dust mites to live, microbes that thrive in humid and warm areas. They are attracted by dead skin cells and generate allergens, which can cause breathing problems and allergies.
It is the perfect time to employ a Couch Cleaning Service Melbourne for deep furniture cleaning, such as couches. This will help eliminate dust mites, their waste, and allergens. This reduces the chance of allergic reactions and improves indoor air quality.
Mould and Mildew Growth
In addition, spills, moisture, and high humidity levels could cause mildew and mould in the growth of upholstered furniture. The fungi not only emit unpleasant odours but also present dangers to health, especially for people suffering from respiratory ailments. When you have professional couch cleaning Melbourne, it targets moisture and removes mould and mildew, stopping their growth and creating the cleanliness and health of your living area.
Also Cheak: Carpet Cleaning in Melbourne & Commercial Carpet Cleaning Melbourne
Pet Dander and Odours
If you've got furry companions living in your house, Their presence could contribute to the build-up of pet fur, dander and smells found in upholstery furniture. The odour of pet fur is a well-known allergen that can trigger reactions in allergic people.
The upholstery cleaning services Melbourne can remove pet dander, hair, and persistent odours by using the most effective upholstery cleaning techniques, giving your furniture a fresh look furniture, and making it a more welcoming living space.
Stains and Spills
Stains and spills that happen accidentally can happen even on upholstery furniture. If they are not dealt with, stainings can be permanent, attracting dirt and grime as time passes.
A professional upholstery cleaning company such as 99 Degree Steam Cleaning Services has the experience to deal with various types of stains, employing specialized techniques and methods to get rid of any tough stains and make your furniture look and feel clean.
Restoration of Fabric Integrity
The constant use of your furniture, the exposure to the sun and the general wear and tear may cause damage to the upholstery of your furniture. In addition, over time, dust and oils can wear into the fabric and cause it to wear out and shed its initial beauty.
Upholstered furniture cleaning eliminates harmful particles, keeping your furniture's structural integrity and ensuring it is in good condition for many years.
Health Risks of Unclean Upholstery
Upholstery that is not properly maintained can cause health dangers. As mentioned previously, dust mites can be a frequent allergen that can trigger symptoms that include itching, sneezing, and eye-watering.
Mildew and mould can lead to asthma, allergies, or even infection in people with weak immune systems. Fur and pet dander may aggravate asthma-related allergy symptoms.
Furthermore, upholstery that is not cleaned can have germs, bacteria and viruses that could contribute to health issues. The Carpet Steam Cleaning Melbourne effectively removes these risks to health and ensures a clean living space.
When Should You Call a Professional Upholstery Cleaning Service?
The most frequently asked question is when furniture needs to be cleaned professionally. Although the frequency can vary depending on the factors that influence it, such as how often the furniture is used, the household members (including pets) and the amount of soiling, it's generally suggested to have a professional clean your furniture at least every 9 to 18 months. If you're looking for a professional upholstery Cleaning Botanic Ridge or the surrounding areas Contact us right now.
A regular cleaning schedule not only guarantees getting rid of dirt, stains, allergens, and dust, but it also extends the lifespan of your furniture. If you adhere to a routine maintenance schedule, you will keep the appearance and durability of your furniture. It will also create an airy and welcoming space in your home.
Opt For The Best Upholstery Cleaning in Melbourne
Do not let hidden hazards within your furniture's upholstery compromise the hygiene and safety of your house. A professional upholstery cleaning service is necessary to remove dust mites, mould, allergens, stains, pet dander, and odours. This will result in an environment that is healthier and improve the quality of indoor air.
Book 99 Degree Steam Cleaning Services professional Upholstery Cleaning Botanic services to revive your furniture, creating an airy, cleaner and more inviting living space.
Also Visit:- Top Benefits of Hiring Expert Upholstery Cleaners
0 notes
ask-de-writer · 5 years ago
Text
THE HOUSE, (part 1 of 3), a tale of Flocking Bay
Return to the Master Story Index
Return to Flocking Bay
THE HOUSE
by
De Writer (Glen Ten-Eyck)
7357 words
© 2020
Written 1990
All rights reserved.
Reproduction in any form, physical, electronic or digital is prohibited without the express consent of the author.
//////////////
Copyright fair use rules for Tumblr users
Users of Tumblr.com are specifically granted the following rights. They may reblog the story. They may use the characters or original characters in my settings for fan fiction, fan art works, cosplay, or fan musical compositions. I will allow those who do commission art works to charge for their images.
All sorts of Fan activity, Fiction, Art, Cosplay, Music, or any other thing is actively encouraged!
///////////////////////
I am John Peaslee, and I am writing this in the hope that it shall somehow be found and a cycle of greed and evil can be broken. Beware of Flocking Bay Realty Company and the old Wickes place!! But I am ahead of myself. Let me tell what has happened to me and you can judge for yourself.
It began innocently enough. My father died and I inherited a modest fortune. Taking a permanent leave of absence from my dull job, I left New York forever. I went north, up the Atlantic coast. Stopping for a day or a week as the whim took me, I came at last to the small town of Flocking Bay, Maine.
The bay, with its iron gray water and breakers like lead, flanked by headlands topped by hardwoods that became brooding pine forests on the inland ridges, captivated me. I determined to settle in that small New England town. Leaving my rented lodging near the water-front, I went to the Flocking Bay Bank of Maine. There, my funds were transferred and I inquired after a good Realtor.
I was directed to the Flocking Bay Realty Company and spent an unprofitable morning looking at small houses in the middle of town.
“I���ve showed you three good houses for a bachelor or a small family,” the Realtor said. “You don’t like any of ‘em. Tell you what I think. You want somethin’ a bit older, more atmosphere to it. Right, son?”
“Yes, Sir, Mr. Jason,” I replied, “that’s just what’s wrong with those houses. Good for somebody that just wants a place to live. Not for me. I want a place where I can feel the age of this town in my bones.”
“Hum, none in the current listings, I’m afraid … I can only think of two that might suit …” he muttered softly. More briskly, he stated, “Son, there’s the oldest house in Flocking Bay, the Hilstrom house. It was built in 1658. Actually it was the first house ever built in Flocking Bay. Been continuously occupied by the Hilstroms since it was built. Only hitch is you can’t buy it… yet.”
“What’s the problem?”
“Old Hilstrom was at least 95 when he wandered off six years ago. Hasn’t been seen since. It’s still a year before he gets declared dead so̓’s the place can be sold to settle the estate.
“The other prospect is also an oldie. Built in eighteen an’ fifty two, it’s got gas lights, indoor plumbing, and all the conveniences of when it was built.”
“Gas lights?” I interrupted.
“No kidding, they really let you feel the age of the house. It’s the old Wickes place. It’s not in the regular listings. It’s up to settle an estate. You can get it for a song, if your voice is in the $50,000.00 range.”
“Sounds great if it’s in good shape,” I ventured.
Mr. Jason escorted me to his car. “I’ll let you see for yourself,” was his reply. Only a short drive out of the town proper, an easy walk, waited the Wickes place.
It was all that Mr. Jason had declared it to be. The stone and wrought iron fence was in excellent repair. The yard was immaculate, with roses, pansies, and violets in orderly beds. There was not a crack or weed to be seen in the brick drive that looped through the porte cochere at the front of the house. This last was two sprawling stories of the finest Carpenter Gothic architecture that it had ever been my pleasure to see. The roof was perfect, with not a loose shingle to be seen. Not so much as a cracked window disturbed its perfection.
“How did an estate property come to be so well kept?” I inquired.
“It gets seen to,” was the cryptic reply.
“And the windows?” I pressed.
“What about ‘em?” he parried.
“They’re all there. Aren’t there any rock-throwing children hereabouts?” I wanted to know.
“There’s kids. They mostly stay away, it’s a landmark,” he replied, abruptly changing the topic. “Notice them scale shingles? You don’t find ‘em that good any more. Shall we go in?” The elaborately carved front door opened onto an entry hall with wainscoted walls. The entry gave onto a transverse hall that ran the length of the first floor. To the left of the entry was a formal parlor. Its walls were of flocked paper, disturbed by well-executed but vaguely unsettling paintings that closer inspection revealed to be signed “Wickes.” All the furniture was early Victorian: end tables, settees, and chairs were elaborately carved, the upholstery perfect. The carpet on the floor was a genuine Persian antique.
The room across the entry hall was a sitting room. It, too, was impeccably appointed. The study was done with inlaid desk, escritoire, Mogul carpeting and oak paneling.
And the library! Books rose from knee level to ceiling on all four walls. There were sliding ladders to give access to those above reach.
I will not dwell on the mahogany paneled dining room or the bright copper-filled kitchen, except to say that they looked freshly cleaned. I assumed but did not ask, that some one from the town came in regularly to clean and care for the place. Even the upstairs bedrooms, bath and large ‘workroom’ showed not a spider web or speck of dust.
I had to have the Wickes place. The low price indicated that the estate was eager to sell. Back at Jason’s office, some sharp bargaining began. In the end we settled on a price of only $45,000.00, to be paid in a lump sum at closing. Since my money was already in a local call bank, there was no obstacle. I could scarcely believe this excellent piece of fortune.
In only a few days, my small car was parked in the porte cochere. Each trip in and out of the vestibule to unload my things told me that I was truly home… My clothing, cameras, a bit of camping gear, and a few other odds and ends of personal possessions were all that I had. I passed one of the most restful nights of my life in the massive four-poster in the master bedroom.
It occurred to me that I wanted to find out more about my unusual abode. As the next day was bright and sunny, I set out for a brisk walk into town.
I started at the Flocking Bay Courthouse. There, a clerk was very helpful in searching out tax and transfer records on my property. At first, she seemed a bit startled at which property I was looking up. A few dollars saw to the copying fees for the records that I wanted. She suggested that I might also try the town library.
Fortified with a pleasant lunch from a small café, I walked into the gloom of the library to continue my research. As soon as I identified the object of my quest, Mrs. Alderman, the librarian, pegged me as ‘one of them spook writers.’ Nothing short of force would have changed her mind. It did save me from a lot of rooting about on sagging dusty shelves. She had gathered most, if not all, of the information on that ‘creepy ol’ Wickes place’ into a single bulging file. I saw at once that there were several days worth of studying to do. The library had no copier and Mrs. Alderman refused to allow file materials to leave the library. I did not wholly blame her. The file was the result of much work and most of the things in it could not be replaced. There were letters, newspaper clippings, land records (including my own recent purchase!), an assay, a strange gold coin, court documents, a botanical report, and more. Some of the materials went back to 1851.
Begging some file folders from Mrs. Alderman, I began the task of sorting the file by subject and date. Long before I was done, I had to stop. The library was closing.
I walked home in the deepening twilight. A gentle breeze helped me on my way. The sky became pocked with stars. My mind was in a whirl from briefly seen headlines.
WICKES’ GOLD GOOD AS GOLD … FAMILY VANISHES … BOY GOES MAD …
And more, None seeming to fit any rational pattern. Once home, I spread the papers from the courthouse out on the beautifully inlaid desk in the study. In the soft glow of the gaslight I began to study. Just as a pattern was beginning to emerge, I heard something.
It sounded like a rat or perhaps several of them on the floor above. Seizing the flashlight that I kept in the kitchen, I went to look. As I went up the stairs, I became convinced that the rats were in the attic. It took a few moments to remember where the attic door was.
A comforting circle of light from the flash preceded me up the attic stair. No rats. Also no spider webs or dust.
It ceases to be good housekeeping when an attic has no cobwebs or dust. It is unnatural.
The rats seemed to be beneath me on the second floor. I followed the sound. By the time that I got there, the sounds had gone down to the first floor. Returning to the first floor, I could hear the rats sporting about in a basement that I did not know of.
A quick look around the first floor showed no doors that might lead to a basement. Giving up on the search for the spectral brigade of rats, I went to the kitchen and fixed myself a light dinner. Looking at the dates of sale, I saw the pattern that had eluded me before. Hiram Wickes had built the house in 1852. It was first sold in 1873, next in 1880, then at exact seven-year intervals until 1985. The last date marked my purchase.
I was the seventeenth owner of Wickes’ house. There was only one thing that I could think of that could account for such a regular cycle of sales. The file at the town library would show whether my notion was foolish. But that was for morning. I retired in the master bedroom’s four-poster. I slept fitfully.
In the morning, I walked into town once more. Light puffy clouds were gamboling in the sky like puppies. At a gnarled old oak in the park, I turned left. Dubbing the ancient oak the “Hanging Tree” in my mind, I strode under its branches, straight across the grass to the library.
Mrs. Alderman was pleased with the sorting that I was doing. She set the file before me once more. “You’re the best of them spook writers so far,” she told me. “You’re not just after a haunted house or mysterious disappearances. You’re settin’ the whole story into order. Make a great book, the way you’re goin’ at it.”
“I do hope so, Mrs. Alderman,” I replied.
“I hope that you’ll remember us with a copy of your book,” she fished hopefully.
“If I get published, you certainly will,” I hedged, feeling a bit guilty at the deception, as there was no book in the works. How could I explain what I was doing when I was not sure myself? That morning I finished sorting and started to take notes to try to keep the mass of information straight.
Since Hiram Wickes had built the house, I started with him. Little enough was known for sure. He had been apparently fluent in at least eight languages, and carried on an active correspondence around the globe. He was independently wealthy, although the source of his funds remained a mystery.
He was once jailed briefly, for counterfeiting. He was cleared when it was pointed out that it was perfectly legal to use foreign coin, provided that it was used by weight and not passed as a U.S. coin. An assay proved his coin to be 24 carat gold, exactly 2/5 of an ounce, troy. Hiram always paid for everything with his strange coins, at three to the ounce. He would never accept change. (One of the coins and the assay were in the file.)
In the year 1852, Hiram finished the most modern and up-to-date house in Flocking Bay. Even maids and other servants hired from town could not keep up with the sheer clutter and disorganization he caused. Hiram was not popular with servants. They came and went until 1866. There was no further mention of servants after that date.
Hiram’s disappearance in that year was a nine day’s wonder. His mail had been impounded for possible clues but nothing turned up. No heirs claimed the estate. In 1873 he was declared dead and the house was sold for back taxes.
A quick check of the court records part of the file turned up, not one, but fifty nine(!) court ordered death certificates, and seventeen land sales since 1851. The records revealed a seven year income merry-go-round for whoever would take advantage of it. Flocking Bay Realty Company had handled every sale since 1908. They had always sold the house to folks from out of town …
It was closing time before I had finished putting this picture together. As I crossed the park the wind was buffeting me from the left and clouds roiled overhead. Just at my ‘hanging tree,’ my foot caught on something in the grass. When I had recovered my balance, I saw that I had tripped on a bronze plaque on a low stone.
It said:
“This tree is dedicated to the memory of Hiram Wickes. If ever he returns, may he be hanged therefrom!
Dedicated by Harold Oates.
- 1880 -”
I turned right, up the street, and made for home. I was pursued by clouds like hounds baying wind at my back and slathering rain drops at my heels. I barely beat the storm home. Watching the lightning from the bay window of the dining room, I ate a cold supper in silence. I saw the lights fail in the town and was glad of the gaslights in the house.
Shortly after sunset, I heard the rats again. They were in the basement that did not exist. I resolved to find the basement, if there was one. I figured that it had to have a hidden door or trapdoor. I moved the furniture and carpets of the first floor. Nothing.
Next==>
Return to the Master Story Index
Return to Flocking Bay
6 notes · View notes