US Culture Shock: My First American House

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  • Опубліковано 25 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @tikidaron
    @tikidaron Рік тому +304

    Setting up an American dining room and then never using it is a time honored American tradition. Thank you for coming here and making our country better. Cheers.

    • @preserveourpbfs7128
      @preserveourpbfs7128 Рік тому +22

      Yeah that whole “two weeks until we migrate to the couch” was very on point

    • @EssenceOfHope
      @EssenceOfHope Рік тому +8

      My parents have two - a formal one, and one that got turned into my mom's home gym. 😂 The formal dining gets used maybe twice a year. They eat in the kitchen dining area.

    • @kathybouziane5269
      @kathybouziane5269 Рік тому +5

      My dining room table started to be a junk drop off so we made it into an upstairs laundry room. Best thing we ever did

    • @DrBojanglez105
      @DrBojanglez105 Рік тому +5

      😂 We have a nice dining room, but we tend to eat at the counter/bar in the kitchen. I eat like a prisoner, so I rarely even sit down.

    • @kathybouziane5269
      @kathybouziane5269 Рік тому +2

      @@DrBojanglez105 Yeah, we eat watching tv on the coffee table most nights. Just me and the old man living the good life 😄👍

  • @EvaHoffmann153
    @EvaHoffmann153 3 місяці тому +179

    Nice video there! In my childhood Chicago home, "the back porch" served as my initial bedroom. As I grew, I moved to "the attic" on the second floor, gaining privacy. These early experiences shaped my views on housing investment, from adaptive reuse to flexible living spaces - valuable insights for navigating today's dynamic housing and real estate market.

    • @MarshalWagner457
      @MarshalWagner457 3 місяці тому +3

      In Chicago, we affectionately refer to our mudrooms as 'snow rooms' - a practical space for shedding winter gear. Interestingly, UK house programs often term it a 'boot room.' Regardless of the label, having a dedicated, covered area for stowing shoes and outerwear is a valuable feature, enhancing a property's livability and resale value.

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      @EvelynBrooks0 3 місяці тому +2

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  • @mushroomhead3
    @mushroomhead3 Рік тому +1730

    In Ohio we would call that a "mud room". If it was a little larger with more windows it would be a "three seasons room". A place to sit outside without actually being outside, but for only 3 seasons of the year. And for the toilet just jiggle the handle a bit. It's an old American trick ;). But for real you probably need to replace the little rubber flap in the tank. They sell them at home depot for a couple of bucks and it only takes a few minutes to replace. As you know, Do It Yourself is an American pastime.

    • @dwaneanderson8039
      @dwaneanderson8039 Рік тому +85

      It could also be the float valve leaking. You can replace that yourself too, but it's a little more involved.

    • @janelle144
      @janelle144 Рік тому +44

      I hope he got someone to inspect the house from top to bottom for any problems. Then the person selling the house would need to fix any problems before you move in.

    • @alindasue
      @alindasue Рік тому +98

      You pretty much said what I was going to say. One thing, though. I found that more often than not, a constantly running toilet is caused by the chain going to the flap rather than the flap itself. Either the chain is adjusted too short or the chain is too long, and the flap is hanging up on it. Just adjust the chain length at the hook, and the problem should be fixed without having to buy any parts.

    • @evil1by1
      @evil1by1 Рік тому +49

      @@janelle144 they don't fix every little bump and lump, only major stuff that would hold up a loan. I mean you could try to put the screws to a seller over a toilet flap valve but in this markey he's got 6 other offers that aren't being petty and your bank don't care about that. Its actually kinda horrifying what an inspector will approve thats actually a big fucking deal ®️

    • @occheermommy
      @occheermommy Рік тому +35

      The chain on my toilet gets twisted sometimes and I just need to take it off and fix it and put it back on.

  • @sayrewilkin-dalby619
    @sayrewilkin-dalby619 Рік тому +318

    I'm American and my husband is British and when you were showing the "unheated entry room" he goes, "That's just a vestibule," and I go, "No, it's a type of mudroom," and then you said both of those things haha. We're also in Chicago, but it sounds like you're a year ahead on immigration & home ownership! Congratulations on both! Deepest condolences on your loss.

    • @boggy7665
      @boggy7665 Рік тому +13

      I see an 'enclosed porch', but maybe it's just me... Scanning the comments, I'm not the only one to call it that

    • @mamba101
      @mamba101 Рік тому +8

      “Porch” in Ireland. We don’t really have external Porches due to all the sideways rain.

    • @kenore4003
      @kenore4003 Рік тому +9

      Works like an airlock. Another layer of separation from the outside cold, heat and bugs.

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 Рік тому +7

      I would have called it a sunroom, but mudroom is also common. In newer ones, the mudroom is often between the garage and kitchen and also houses the washer and dryer.

    • @kenore4003
      @kenore4003 Рік тому +3

      @@Lawrence330 I suppose the proper name covering all the descriptions would be antechamber.

  • @freethebirds3578
    @freethebirds3578 Рік тому +716

    I love that you have so happily embraced the American way of life. You make this country even better.

    • @monicahamm3353
      @monicahamm3353 Рік тому +21

      he's been an american since he was 8 years old....... he's just lately made it official!!!!!!!

    • @uphilliceskater
      @uphilliceskater Рік тому +15

      He's going to become Mexican, next.

    • @karenmorrisette5027
      @karenmorrisette5027 Рік тому +9

      @@monicahamm3353 I read the first part of your sentence, b4 the ...... and in my head I finished it by saying... He just thought he was British. Lol

    • @monicahamm3353
      @monicahamm3353 Рік тому +11

      @@karenmorrisette5027 clearly we are both long time viewers! because we know he has loved America since he was a child! I'm so happy that he is now an American citizen and a homeowner....... so American!!!!!

    • @ColorMeConfused29
      @ColorMeConfused29 Рік тому +15

      The American Way of Life...of Endless Debt. LOL.

  • @markmaurer6370
    @markmaurer6370 Рік тому +257

    I'm sure your father would be bursting with pride if he could see your new home!

  • @karenrosen2983
    @karenrosen2983 Рік тому +132

    The mud room is one of the reasons we bought our house. Love being able to dry the dog off when weather is bad so he doesn’t track mud,water etc all over the hard wood floors!

    • @LostShipMate
      @LostShipMate Рік тому +8

      Mans best friend in winter, My breezeway(same purpose) is basically a shed that I don't care about getting dirty. Great for getting work done without freezing to death.

    • @oceana9294
      @oceana9294 Рік тому +2

      Oh my, what I wouldn't give for a mud room, always wanted one and always wanted the washtubs in the laundry room. So, this could be MY dream house! 😅

    • @tinydancer7426
      @tinydancer7426 Рік тому

      @@oceana9294 Ah yes. The wash tubs. Only, my part of the world (suburbs outside of Baltimore City), in the days of my youth, those tubes were generically called "set tubs". Why, I don't know, unless it was because the were made of concrete and so heavy that once you "set" them in place, that's where they were gonna set. ha ha 😆

    • @staciecarrel4492
      @staciecarrel4492 Рік тому

      @@oceana9294 one of the first things I’m putting in when I get a house is a utility sink in the laundry room or garage if there isn’t one already. Among their many other uses, they are perfect for hand washing delicate clothing.

    • @kenore4003
      @kenore4003 Рік тому +1

      @@staciecarrel4492 A laundry tub is a great place when your young toddler has a massive diaper blowout. You can stand them up and strip them down without spreading it all over.

  • @danielherman3841
    @danielherman3841 Рік тому +41

    As an American who grew up primarily in the south, I have usually only encountered mudrooms in states with colder climates! I always assumed it was so you could take your snow boots off and not track snow into the house 😂

    • @3653cdw
      @3653cdw 5 місяців тому +1

      That's exactly what they're for...🙂

  • @kimberlycasey5957
    @kimberlycasey5957 Рік тому +92

    "Mudroom" works in Oregon where I live. But if it's combined with the laundry and access to the furnace and water heater, it might also be called the "utility room." These are often all combined, because it's a utilitarian space that is allowed to stay a bit more messy or even dirty.

    • @thejerseylady1
      @thejerseylady1 Рік тому +4

      Yes, my parents called their mud room a utility room, It had the furnace and water heater and washer and dryer. Gloria

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Рік тому +6

      What we saw in this video was a structure that I would call an "enclosed porch" which serves the function of a "mud room." Where I live, most houses have basements (which is not true everywhere in the country), and the furnace and the hot water heater [sic] are usually located in the basement somewhere. The laundry room might be in the basement too, or it might somewhere else, but it wouldn't be located in an enclosed porch here because everything would freeze up in the winter. A mud room would normally be located on the first (ground) floor because it's gotta be where you enter the house. My question for you is: are utility rooms in Oregon normally located in an enclosed porch, or in a part of the house that is properly insulated and heated? Are basements common in Oregon?

    • @Alberto-wu1mj
      @Alberto-wu1mj Рік тому

      I always call it the utility room.

    • @knightwolf3511
      @knightwolf3511 Рік тому

      @@giantschick21 there usually on the side or back of the house, the garage is usually added on later although what i notice the name changes although utility room is normally in the inside usually water heater and furnace

  • @shadowofchaos8932
    @shadowofchaos8932 Рік тому +210

    Congratulations! Buying a house was one of the most stressful things I have ever done

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Рік тому +4

      I had to go through the whole process including pre-approval and underwriting and moving, in about 10 weeks. It was awful. And I only had 400,000 in a town where the average house goes for 6 to 700,000. That was a year ago. They're more expensive now

    • @someonesdad5986
      @someonesdad5986 Рік тому +3

      Truth!

    • @someonesdad5986
      @someonesdad5986 Рік тому +3

      @Linda C yeesh! If you can work from anywhere, please move to Roanoke, AL. My wife and I did five years ago. We bought a restored Victorian, 2000sq ft for 75,000.

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Рік тому +1

      @@LindaC616 really I just bought mine. 35,000$. Just bought it.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Рік тому +2

      @@timesthree5757 I live in a tourist town. Condos can easily go for $300,000 here

  • @victoriapride7575
    @victoriapride7575 Рік тому +57

    can't wait for spring/summer where Laurence gets to document his experience on American lawn culture

  • @mbilden
    @mbilden Рік тому +201

    You have an absolute Gem of a house! I love that it hasn't been "ruined" by a previous owners attempt to modernize the upstairs. Original doors, original floors and original baseboard and trim can be very difficult to find these days, The basement is vintage 1960's finished basement. Great find!

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому +4

      Is it just me, or does it seem a little older than 1942? Any houses built during WW2 surprise me anyway.

    • @tommymaxey2665
      @tommymaxey2665 Рік тому +2

      ​@Big Red it's a little hard to tell. I want to say 60s as well because of the style of wood floor and sink in the basement. But it could also be a 20s house because of the stair way and arched doors on the first floor. I think the bathroom is the biggest teller to when a house was built though. I might need to do more research (aka ask my parent who both love talking about older homes)

    • @WolfRoss
      @WolfRoss Рік тому +2

      It looks pre1950s to me. I was looking at the windows and floor.

    • @jillcrowe2626
      @jillcrowe2626 Рік тому +1

      It looks like it's from the 1930's or even the 20's from the door style and the width of the wood floors. I also noticed the exposed plumbing on the walls of the basement. That's likely because the original owners wouldn't have had a machine to do laundry and wouldn't need plumbing in the basement.

    • @ljb8157
      @ljb8157 Рік тому

      My house was built in the 1870s. It still has a ton of original features in it. Pine flooring in half the house, weird out of place doorbells for different floors. So if I'm in the dining room and my husband is in the basement I can ring a bell to get his attention. Why would I do that? I don't know... but I could if I wanted to! Original doors that don't quite line up correctly. I love it!

  • @michaelfink64
    @michaelfink64 Рік тому +78

    What an emotional rollercoaster you have been on, Laurence. Condolences on your dad and congratulation on your new digs.

  • @johnashen
    @johnashen Рік тому +104

    Congrats L. The more you deal with the issues of upkeeping a house, the more you'll appreciate the unseen things your Dad did all those years.

  • @christopherjs2142
    @christopherjs2142 Рік тому +188

    Best advice I can give you as an American homeowner is learn how to fix stuff yourself until you can't. A running toilet is an easy fix, as well as other small things. I was even able to fix my furnace with the help of youtube videos. When you call someone in, they'll often do a $20 fix for $200+. Plus, it'll make for great content!

    • @rogeraylstock3641
      @rogeraylstock3641 Рік тому +18

      This! You'll learn the closest Home Depot or Lowes and exactly how many trip to the hardware store it take to fix something (it's more than one trip!)

    • @christopherjs2142
      @christopherjs2142 Рік тому +6

      @@rogeraylstock3641 Literally always more than one trip! 😂

    • @wholesome122
      @wholesome122 Рік тому +1

      @@notaffiliatedwith7363 agreed. Sometimes watching someone work through the problem solving helps my family diagnose our home issues

    • @Dan-fx7qy
      @Dan-fx7qy Рік тому +3

      After I bought (in the Chicago area) I got the Home Depot credit card 😂

    • @robertdaniels2549
      @robertdaniels2549 Рік тому +11

      My father’s hard earned wisdom: never start a home repair project when the hardware store is about to close

  • @stevejohnson1685
    @stevejohnson1685 Рік тому +30

    I grew up in Chicago, and we called that room "the back porch". It had a communicating window with my parents' bedroom (note the correct placement of the apostrophe, because despite growing up in Chicago and largely on "the back porch" I'm posh, too). Eventually, my parents decided that I should have a different room, one not communicating directly with theirs, and moved me to the 2nd floor, which we called "the attic". Sometime later, my sister appeared.

    • @sorryifoldcomment8596
      @sorryifoldcomment8596 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, I just called the one on my house the back porch and the front porch. Even though only the back has a whole room with a separate door.
      I drive for Uber Eats and if anyone said "leave it in the vestibule" or "leave it in the mudroom," I'd be like what the hell lol. Everyone just says "porch." Even when I have to open a door to get into their porch.

    • @anatoliagolden-hall4553
      @anatoliagolden-hall4553 Рік тому +1

      That’s hilarious 😂

    • @cjb8010
      @cjb8010 Рік тому +1

      Hilarious. Wonderful memories.

  • @terrilynnnoss6993
    @terrilynnnoss6993 Рік тому +143

    Sincere condolences on the loss of your father. Congratulations on taking this huge life step into home ownership.

  • @dsm4462
    @dsm4462 Рік тому +105

    I’m so sorry to hear about your father. I’m sure he’s so proud of you for buying your first home, not a small feat in today’s financial climate

  • @Dreamer-gp8ye
    @Dreamer-gp8ye Рік тому +98

    Congratulations on your house purchase. It is so nice knowing that your payments are adding up to something you will eventually completely own and not just lining a landlord's pocket. Also, my sincere condolences on the passing of your father.

  • @pamelaleannefreeland9025
    @pamelaleannefreeland9025 Рік тому +74

    Lawrence, the noise the toilet’s making is most likely the plungerbulb thingy having become unhooked or disconnected from the chain under the lid. Easy fix you can do quite quickly and easily (and save you some cash). Hope you see this and it helps! I know I’m a bit behind schedule. Apologies. Congrats on the new house! It’s gorgeous! You’ll make it into your home in no time. Best of luck from Ohio! 💜

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому +4

      FYI, it's called a flapper. Anyone fixing them (you are right, very easy) should take a picture of the inside and outside of the tank, along with any name and number you can find, with you to the store. I have yet to need anything but the one size fits all variety, but the people in the hardware store give me grief about not knowing which specific one I need every single time.

    • @ncooty
      @ncooty Рік тому +2

      If the chain were disconnected from the flapper, it wouldn't flush at all.

    • @Maaad-maaan
      @Maaad-maaan Рік тому +5

      It’s the flapper not sealing fully. Quick and easy fix is to push down on the lever as if your flushing but don’t hold it down.
      Though rubber does deform over time so it might be that it needs to be replaced

  • @regina_filange2.0
    @regina_filange2.0 Рік тому +98

    Condolences on the loss of your father. My Dad passed 2 years ago, and he was my best friend. I miss him dearly. Your father would be proud of this home for you.

    • @angiebee2225
      @angiebee2225 Рік тому +17

      My father died December 2020, so it's been 2 years for me, too. His younger brother is in hospice care and isn't expected to make it through today, which is really bringing back a lot of memories of my dad's last year or so. If your father is still around, comment reader, call him, or text him, or give him a hug. Do it for yourself, do it for your dad, and do it for those of us who can't do it anymore.

    • @regina_filange2.0
      @regina_filange2.0 Рік тому +2

      @@angiebee2225 I'm so sorry for your loss as well. My Dad's brother also passed due to Covid about 3 months after him. It was such a hard time to have family in hospitals, due to visiting restrictions. I will always be grateful for now being able to visit family. My heart is with you, keep your head up❤️❤️❤️

  • @amysanangel76
    @amysanangel76 Рік тому +106

    Your vestibule or mud room is common in the Midwest, Alaska, Pacific NW, North East, etc. where the winters are really cold. It allows you to come in and close the front door before entering the second door into the main part of the house so you don't let as much heat out or cold in, as well as gives you a place to store your wet coats, boots, hats, etc. They aren't common out here in California where the winter temps aren't as cold. Congrats on the new house!!

    • @PittsburghGal85
      @PittsburghGal85 Рік тому +5

      Mud rooms are extremely common on Pennsylvanian farms. This fact I did not know until I was ten years old and my aunt's family moved upstate. We were there after their first big snow above Interstate 80 and I immediately saw the need for one LOL

    • @mkshffr4936
      @mkshffr4936 Рік тому +15

      A midwest airlock.

    • @crispy9175
      @crispy9175 Рік тому +1

      I wish I had a flood room in my house. Florida gets a lot of mud during the rainy season.

    • @Nunya_Bidness_53
      @Nunya_Bidness_53 Рік тому +2

      In Illinois your living room is colloquially the "frunch room" (front room).

    • @amysanangel76
      @amysanangel76 Рік тому +1

      I should say that homes here sometimes have mud rooms, but they are at the backdoor, laundry room, entrance from the garage, etc (not the main front door entrance).

  • @susanhartnett7062
    @susanhartnett7062 Рік тому +48

    Congrats on your new home! Regarding the toilet, we discovered our water bill was way higher than usual, and it turned out one of our toilets was running like yours is. A quick UA-cam instructional video or two, and a trip to the Home Depot (or in our case, an amazon order) will have you sorted in roughly ten minutes. The parts are pretty much universal. It's easy, fast, & not messy, so no need to pay the minimum $100 or so fee for a plumber. The flappers are made of rubber so they just wear out in the water over time. Ours end up needing replaced every few years & I always do it myself. You can do it!

    • @JEdwardBanasikJr
      @JEdwardBanasikJr Рік тому +3

      And it its the flush valve at the top depending on the model it's just a small rubber disc inside that is easily replaced. Or you can just replace the whole flush valve for under $20. Easy replacement. UA-cam is definitely your friend for DYI.

    • @joshuatheregularguy8974
      @joshuatheregularguy8974 Рік тому +4

      Good advice. Indeed.
      But of course the first step is just jiggle the handle and see if that 'fixes' it.

    • @terri2494
      @terri2494 Рік тому +2

      @@joshuatheregularguy8974 Or lift the lid and see if the chain is tangled.

    • @joshuatheregularguy8974
      @joshuatheregularguy8974 Рік тому +2

      @@terri2494 Yes. That would be a good diagnostic step, especially in a new house where you aren't familiar with exactly how that handle's action normally feels.

    • @ew4932
      @ew4932 Рік тому +1

      @@joshuatheregularguy8974 If the flapper chain is too long, you can always shore it up by hooking the hook to a higher rung on the chain.

  • @chuckconners6520
    @chuckconners6520 Рік тому +4

    Beautiful home! That’s a mud room. I was born in America and I’m glad you decided to joins us!

  • @marahdolores8930
    @marahdolores8930 Рік тому +61

    We would either call it a mud room or a "back porch", which in my grandparent's Michigan home also doubled as excess refrigerator space during the winter holidays. Unheated and enclosed comes in handy in the cold upper midwestern states.

    • @donnaroberts281
      @donnaroberts281 Рік тому +5

      I’m from Michigan too, and I’d also call it a back porch.

    • @lindak3030
      @lindak3030 Рік тому +6

      We just use the car...The entire back hatch is filled on the day before Thanksgiving. Pure Michigan!!

    • @casey8164
      @casey8164 Рік тому +4

      Wisconsin here, it would depend on the function of the room. If the room had a working function (such as laundry), it would be a mud room, if it were an empty space that served no real purpose besides taking off your shoes, it would be a porch.

    • @marahdolores8930
      @marahdolores8930 Рік тому

      @@casey8164 apparently in Michigan it could be either, then. My grandparents' back porch held the laundry tub, washers (her old wringer-washers were back there as well as the electric one) and dryer, freezers, spare refrigerator, plus overflow storage. It was actually a pretty large room - maybe around 15x30, with an outside additional 3 ft outside overhang running the length of one side. We still referred to it as the back porch, even if it was technically a mud room. We were a "back porch" family, but some of my friends had "mud rooms" containing not much more than a bench, trays for muddy or snowy boots, a shoe rack or storage tub, and coat hooks on the wall.
      I am a bit suspicious that what that unheated room on the back or side entrance of the house is called by might be influenced by either the age of the house/its occupants, if it was a newer custom-built or subdivision home, or maybe just as a result of good old family tradition. (Almost every home I've lived in since has an area we consider the back porch, even if it's not much of one. Our current back porch is an attached screened-in deck that houses a hot tub, tv, patio chairs & table, yet it is still my back porch.)
      Newer homes built from architects' plans had labeled and dedicated as "mud rooms" in their plans, whereas my grandfather built his house himself over a period of a couple of years during the Depression, and he grew up in a farmhouse built pretty much the same way.
      I think "back porch" is probably an older term that has been handed down over a very long time, and that "mud room" probably came into use after WWII.

  • @newmoonrising5151
    @newmoonrising5151 Рік тому +67

    My deepest condolences for the loss of your Dad. And welcome to the homeowners club. I hope many happy years to come for both of you. 👏🏻❤️✌️

  • @LiveFree123
    @LiveFree123 Рік тому +48

    I’m so happy for you and may your home be filled with love, laughter and blessings. My sincere condolences on the loss of your father. 💙

  • @aff77141
    @aff77141 Рік тому +45

    that my friend can't be described as anything but MUD ROOM! But Japan has a similar concept called the 'genkan', a lowered area in traditional houses or most of the time just an area of separate flooring where you stop to take your shoes off and store them, coats, etc, it can be fully inside or partially closed off like a mud room. Also mud room's aren't always completely patio style, sometimes it's more like a duo entry/laundry room especially those connected to a garage

    • @LoveMusic-pd5iz
      @LoveMusic-pd5iz Рік тому +6

      I once rented a home that had a mud/laundry/three seasons room that had a primitive shower in it. Next to the washer/dryer was a deep double sink. It was located in the back of the house, so it came in handy when coming in from the garden - and for dirty kids. Rinse the veggies, take off shoes and dirty clothes, and shower before going in the house.

    • @gracegrass4462
      @gracegrass4462 Рік тому +3

      You just described the non-patio style mudroom in the house I grew up in. You entered it by the "side door" but we never used the front door. It was fully inside but separated from the rest of the house by a door. It had laundry, a bench, coat hooks, shoe storage, and a door connected to the garage.

    • @xSwordLilyx
      @xSwordLilyx Рік тому +1

      I want that so bad, although it is a big problem to have laundry in the house proper if there is flooding, I don't think it would be a huge problem in a mud room and I hate trudging up and down the stairs.

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Рік тому +2

      A mud room with carpet. That's a weird combination. To me any real mud room must have tiles, off which you can clean the mud.
      You get my point.

  • @Chordonblue
    @Chordonblue Рік тому +71

    My wife and I are in our 50s and we just purchased our first home in March of last year. It is exciting and stressful, but so worth it! Congratulations to you and like everyone else, my condolences on your father's passing as well.

  • @janetd4862
    @janetd4862 Рік тому +94

    Sorry to hear about your father. I lost both my parents in the same year, nine years ago. It has to be extra hard being so far away from your family. Don’t forget to take special care of yourself as you go through the grieving process. Thanks for showing us your new home!

  • @thehorrorfanx
    @thehorrorfanx Рік тому +73

    You deserve all the success and more. I wish for you and your family much peace and happiness in this new year. RIP to your dad. I’ve lost both my parents and you have my deepest sympathy.

  • @ginacodding4135
    @ginacodding4135 Рік тому +11

    We called our unheated end room a “breezeway”. It had a rack with hooks for coats and shoes so we kind of used it as a mud room.

  • @stephenjordan8712
    @stephenjordan8712 Рік тому +66

    I’m so sad to hear about your dad, especially at this time of year, but I’m glad you’ve got such a great wife and all of us. Best wishes for 2023.

  • @markheit5870
    @markheit5870 Рік тому +54

    We would all be lucky to have new neighbors like you. Congratulations!

    • @judywright4241
      @judywright4241 Рік тому +1

      Wait till they get welcomed with cookies!🎉

  • @FleaChristenson
    @FleaChristenson Рік тому +16

    I’m so very sorry about your dad. That’s heartbreaking. But am so happy for you both being homeowners.

  • @ml48963
    @ml48963 Рік тому +14

    I'm terribly sorry to hear about your father Lawrence. He must have been an amazing man and very proud of you with your amazing videos and fantastic humor. Prayers for him and your family, even if I am a month late.
    Can't wait to see your upcoming videos (besides the ones I already watched)

  • @DollyMcD54
    @DollyMcD54 Рік тому +97

    First of all, I’m sorry for your loss. Next, congratulations! I’m so happy for you both!

  • @claranielsen3382
    @claranielsen3382 Рік тому +25

    I am so sorry to hear about your dad. Congrats on the house and becoming an American citizen. You are living the American dream! Wishing you all the best. Much love from Texas.

  • @shannon915
    @shannon915 Рік тому +27

    Congrats! We just bought our second house after living in a tiny townhouse for 18 years. We too were without furniture for ... months. The day we had a sofa delivered (which lessened the echoes considerably) was extremely exciting. Have fun decorating!

  • @Hippie_King15
    @Hippie_King15 Рік тому +1

    For the vestibule, if it’s at the front of the house, it’s a mudroom if it’s at the back of the house it’s a sunroom.

  • @Jeeperskip
    @Jeeperskip Рік тому +39

    Those hardwood floors are gorgeous. Congratulations on your first house and citizenship. Condolences on your Dad. Life has a way of saving up events to firehose you at any minute doesn't it? It goes along all peaceful and quiet for a while and then Wham! All at once.

  • @Julia-zj2ch
    @Julia-zj2ch Рік тому +27

    In Chicago, your mudroom can also be called a snow room. In all the UK house programs I watch it seems to be called a boot room. Having a covered place to leave shoes is excellent! Looks like a lovely house. Those wooden floors are gorgeous!

  • @xpatsteve
    @xpatsteve Рік тому +46

    My sincere condolences on the loss of your father. My own father passed away in September and as an American living in Austria I can really appreciate the stress and chaos of having to suddenly plan an overseas trip.
    And congratulations on your US Citizenship and new house! I have the exact same deck chairs, by the way. In the summer, I set one up in the shade out in the garden for a nap. Comfy indeed.

  • @pamelagabert4709
    @pamelagabert4709 Рік тому +3

    What a lovely home. Congratulations!!!!!

  • @le_th_
    @le_th_ Рік тому +26

    Congratulations on purchasing your first home! What a bittersweet experience to close on your very first house, and then to receive the crushing news that your father would soon be passing.
    I'm happy for you that your father lived long enough to see you achieve some of your lifelong dreams of becoming a US citizen and buying your first home. I have no doubt that it brought him great comfort to see you achieve that during his lifetime.
    May it be many, many years in the future before the pair of you have to fork over several thousand dollars for your first major home repair. Those are the moments you'll likely find yourself thinking..."Maybe I would have been better off, financially, just remaining a renter?" lol You're not a homeowner unless you have those thoughts at least once a year. lol
    May your heart heal, in due time, and may your memories of your father eventually bring you more smiles than they do tears. It can take quite a while to get to that place.

  • @psychobetha
    @psychobetha Рік тому +23

    congratulations! your cat is going to love all that space 😃 here in western NY we call it a mudroom as well. it’s the perfect place to put a wardrobe for outdoor clothing, a rack for winter gear (like shovels, snow brushes, and a bag of ice melt), an umbrella stand, a couple of baskets for gloves and hats, and a nice bench for sitting while you deal with winter boots. at least that’s what is in ours 😉

  • @matthill5426
    @matthill5426 Рік тому +20

    Congratulations! You know, now we need a video of... your first traditional Sunday Roast in your new house!
    We need the whole deal: roast beef, mashed potatoes, gravy, Yorkshire pudding, peas, carrots, the works!

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Рік тому

      Don't forget to refer to the roast beef as the "Sunday joint."

    • @agresticumbra
      @agresticumbra Рік тому

      Mmmm, Yorkshire pudding/popover!

  • @troubleinmind369
    @troubleinmind369 Рік тому +2

    Congratulatioms on your 1st American house🎉🎉🎉

  • @billboth6572
    @billboth6572 Рік тому +22

    I am so saddened and sorry to hear about your father's passing. Love and prayers for you and your family

  • @apt221bbakerst
    @apt221bbakerst Рік тому +18

    In reference to your want to be office, but wife wants guest room, you can have both in the same room. Just set up a futon or convertible sofa on one side of the room and your office space on the other side. That way both of you are happy and the room has two functions. A lot of people combine office with guest room.

  • @sjuts1
    @sjuts1 Рік тому +46

    Your father must be so proud of you. I’m very sorry for your loss. A cliche, but genuinely meant, sentiment 💙

  • @ginny5937
    @ginny5937 Рік тому +3

    In Minnesota we call it a mudroom, or a breezeway.

    • @vmj255
      @vmj255 26 днів тому

      In my experience here in Michigan, it’s called a breezeway if it connects the house to the garage, and a mudroom if it doesn’t.

  • @tatiannazutania7751
    @tatiannazutania7751 Рік тому +34

    I remember my first house. It was such a joy until it wasn't. Then I remodeled it, and moved away to another state. As an Interior Designer, that's what we do. I wish you many happy years in this house, and am so sorry about your father. Thank you for becoming a citizen. It means a lot to me.

    • @shinnam
      @shinnam Рік тому +2

      I think his house is lovely, envious of all that wonderful unpainted real wood wood and the fireplaces. I live in IKEA land, Might give him some tips on the 1970's wood paneling in the mud room.

  • @djijspeakerguy4628
    @djijspeakerguy4628 Рік тому +84

    That’s an extremely common layout for a house in the U.S. It’s called the American Foursquare. Most were built from about 1900 to 1930. That extra room in the back isn’t typical everywhere in the country. A cool thing about them is that they’re pretty much all slightly different, especially on the outside! I’ve been in a house pretty much identical, but without the back room. The upstairs might have been slightly different, the small bedroom and bathroom swapped, and the bedrooms were carpeted. If I recall, the living room was used as the dining room, and the dining room had a couch and a TV. The basement was one big room.

    • @abbyinwi
      @abbyinwi Рік тому +2

      I agree with you... its a four square like mine! I'm looking forward to his video about four squares! LOL

    • @11sfr
      @11sfr Рік тому +1

      Definitely looks like a classic Foursquare layout. I believe it was the most common middle class single-family home type built from the 1890s to the start of WWII, but was too labor and materials-intensive for the massive housing boom after the war, and had already come under heavy competition in the '20s and '30s from bungalows and Cape Cods to begin with. Aside from the US, also heavily built in Canada, and a small handful in Australia (mainly by US-based companies as worker housing)

    • @williamdory4375
      @williamdory4375 Рік тому +1

      Sears sold a lot of them as kits at one point. Entire house, plans, hardware and fittings all on a railroad car.

    • @djijspeakerguy4628
      @djijspeakerguy4628 Рік тому

      @@williamdory4375 I’m fully aware of the Sears kit homes. This is most definitely not one of them, but I think I found one or two in the city where I live. Sears was not the only manufacturer. Others included Gordon Van Tine, Aladdin Homes, and Wardway Homes (Montgomery Ward.)
      Funnily enough, I’ve found a spectacular use for the floor plans in the Sears catalogs, building a realistic town in Minecraft!

    • @sitara68
      @sitara68 Рік тому

      Definitely an early Craftsman.

  • @BacktheBlue60
    @BacktheBlue60 Рік тому +18

    I think your Dad had a hand in these fortunate things happening in your life. Just because you can't see him doesn't mean he isn't there with you 💓

  • @Avacarho
    @Avacarho Рік тому +4

    Congratulations on becoming a U.S. Citizen, Lawrence, and on Tara’s and your new home! You’re going to have fun decorating it, and you’re going to need a good lawnmower, weed whacker, and leaf blower for taking care of your yard. You’ll want to do videos on those experiences! And I’m sorry that you lost your dad.

  • @AngusHenry09
    @AngusHenry09 Рік тому +82

    Ok, I'm only in 2:25 in and I'm laughing so hard. I totally lost it when you said you give it 2 weeks before migrating to the living room for dinner. You described my husband and myself after getting our place. We're older, kids gone so no point.

    • @BigKy-Mart
      @BigKy-Mart Рік тому +2

      I have TV tray tables to eat in the living room. Our kitchen isn't big enough to really fit more than two people at a table, so it doesn't get used much. If we have company, the kitchen table is moved to the living room.

  • @kellcomnet
    @kellcomnet Рік тому +22

    Congratulations on the new house, it seems you you truly had a life changing holiday season.

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Рік тому +61

    Laurence and Tara now have their very own castle, excellent. 🏠
    Um, Laurence. That's not a walk-in closet. It isn't big enough. Especially when you have stuff stored in it.

    • @Revelwoodie
      @Revelwoodie Рік тому +2

      The closets confuse me. At first I was sure it was an older house, because like mine the refrigerator sticks out into the doorway of the kitchen. A sure sign that the house was built before the advent of modern refrigerators, lol. But then I saw the closets and I'm like, "What? How did he get closets?! I don't have any closets!"

    • @Watchoutforsnakez
      @Watchoutforsnakez Рік тому +2

      Cute house. Good for you both. Fireplaces are dope.

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Рік тому +1

      Welllll, he can walk into it. It's not just a "sliding door" closet that is slightly more than a hanger width deep.

    • @jasonrodgers9063
      @jasonrodgers9063 Рік тому +3

      My beloved late wife & I "downsized" in 2013 to a 1927 vintage brick home that had "period appropriate" sized closets. I just kept all my clothes on hanger rods in the basement. She referred to the closet in our bedroom as a "clos-ette" because it was so small. Middle class people in the 1920's didn't have huge wardrobes!

    • @trevor3013
      @trevor3013 Рік тому +2

      For English people I imagine a walk in closet is any closet that actually exists built into the house. Though I'm just assuming

  • @tabethadavis107
    @tabethadavis107 Рік тому +15

    Just found your channel this morning, and immediately subbed. Condolences on the loss of your Dad... I lost mine December 9, so I am grieving with you; my Dad was my buddy, my rock, and my inspiration in so many ways! This Carolina girl is loving your vids! Thanks for sharing!!

  • @lauriefrancisco1084
    @lauriefrancisco1084 Рік тому +28

    Condolences again at the loss of your dad. I don't suppose anyone ever tells you you look like him! BTW, I believe he DOES know about those thousands of messages you received after his passing. And major congratulations on your purchase of your first house here in the states. It looks quite nice, and your "rec" room looks like the perfect video room!. I hope the overload of life changes recently means you'll be getting a bit of a breather now. And though I live in Middle Tennessee, a belated welcome to the neighborhood!

  • @elsiestormont1366
    @elsiestormont1366 Рік тому +30

    Congratulations American Homeowner!
    In Fairbanks, Alaska, the little unheated room where you enter before you open the door to the house is called an "Arctic Entry" Not only does it act as a protective buffer from our wretchedly cold weather but it doubles as spare freezer (I am not kidding)

    • @Betharoot
      @Betharoot Рік тому +4

      My dad is from North Dakota and always referred to the enclosed porch as "the other fridge."

    • @JRandallS
      @JRandallS Рік тому +1

      Another Fairbanksian?

    • @elsiestormont1366
      @elsiestormont1366 11 місяців тому

      Yes! 33 years here and counting!

  • @vlink4071
    @vlink4071 Рік тому +27

    Condolences on the loss of your father. He would be so proud of what you have accomplished! The house is beautiful. Congratulations. Ps. You look 20 years younger without the beard! 👍🏻

  • @italiana626sc
    @italiana626sc Рік тому +6

    Sorry for your loss of your father. ❤
    We're all wishing you peace and the best of what America has to offer!

  • @rosymelanie
    @rosymelanie Рік тому +40

    Congratulations! My husband (who is Scottish) and I just bought our first house two days before you two down here in Georgia. It was built in 1930 and needs some work, but we love it. He was also impressed by how large everything is in America. It was always his dream as a kid to come and live here.

  • @tonis5140
    @tonis5140 Рік тому +16

    It's adorable that he calls that a walk in closet

    • @janetpschwartz8991
      @janetpschwartz8991 Рік тому +2

      The british used freestanding wardrobes for centuries. Closets werent common. You should show him pictures of our REAL walk'in closets. My father had one lined in cedar, to hold all his expensive Brooks Brothers suits, during the 1980's....

  • @marybicanic8269
    @marybicanic8269 Рік тому +47

    Sorry about the loss of your father. My dad died, after a long illness, in December, too. Illinois in winter can be a bleak place to recover from a family death, so it's good that you have new home projects to get into. Your house looks terrific! Best wishes for your new home.

    • @rukus9585
      @rukus9585 Рік тому +2

      Mine passed a little over 2 years ago now. Also a long, painful death. I'm still nowhere near over it. I miss the old boy.

  • @TeacherMom80
    @TeacherMom80 Рік тому

    I'm from an agricultural community in south central Massachusetts. We call it a "mud room"! 😆 It's a room to kick off your shit shoes, work clothes & such, so you don't have to drag mud & a mountain of outdoor gear through the house, without freezing your ass off!
    We do not have a mud room in our current home & I very much wish we did. We have kids & a little backyard farm & have caused so many awful messes & wear & tear due to not having a mud room of the years...not to mention, heat loss!
    My grandparents called their mud room a breezeway! It was used more like a sun porch/enclosed patio during the warm weather & like a mud room for snow clothes & such during the winter.
    God bless you guys! I just discovered your videos & am so very grateful for the laughs! Boy, have I needed a good laugh! Thank you SO much! And yes ai subscribed! You are a joy! Both you & your wife.
    💖🙏🏼😇

  • @esmith712
    @esmith712 Рік тому +50

    Congratulations on the new citizenship/ landowner status! A lot of adulting steps!
    Mudroom = back porch, three seasons room, sunroom.
    Basement= extra square footage, storage, tornado shelter
    The house looks very solid! Hope you got a good inspection and keep up with maintenance - because it's all up to you now!
    I'd love to see how you & the wife decide to paint (an entire series could be made on just the ludicrously named paints or the zillion shades of white available) & decorate!
    Where the tiles in the bathroom pink? Hard to tell, but just an FYI that places in Michigan call that "Detroit pink" because of the insane amount of 50-60's bathrooms tiled in pink (often pink & black tile).
    Homeownership is exciting, exhausting, a steep learning curve & an adventure. Enjoy it & always keep your sense of humor.
    PS - condolences again on the loss of your father. Truly a bittersweet time for you. I bet he'd be proud of your accomplishments, even if technically bewildered by social media.

    • @JD-tn5lz
      @JD-tn5lz Рік тому +3

      Haha. Not quite.
      Up here that "mudroom" is usually an Arctic Entry.
      Ironically, it's purpose is to keep the Arctic out

    • @XSemperIdem5
      @XSemperIdem5 Рік тому +2

      Looking at the size of his room I'd call it a sunroom. I've typically seen mudrooms be smaller and even have a sink like the one he has in the basement.
      Yeah, it's the pink tiles 😅

    • @kathy2trips
      @kathy2trips Рік тому +3

      As a former Detroiter, I am familiar with marble window sills and utility rooms, but not "Detroit Pink". However, Mamie Eisenhower wore a pink dress to Dwight's inauguration ball, so "Mamie Pink" became a thing in fashion, home decor, and even cars.
      And yes, there are a lot of pink and black bathrooms in 50s decor; I'm on the side of keeping the tile intact and working around it.
      For the record, our 1956 house in Detroit had two bathrooms: cornflower blue tile with white upstairs, chlorophyll green and black downstairs.

    • @kbf9644
      @kbf9644 Рік тому +1

      “Florida room” is another I’ve heard.

    • @Beck248
      @Beck248 Рік тому +1

      I was going to say a screened in porch, or 3 seasons room.

  • @SarahRenz59
    @SarahRenz59 Рік тому +33

    Congratulations on your new home! It looks to be in great shape; like we'd say, it has "good bones." What Tara calls a mud room I'd call an enclosed porch because it's an add-on and has no heat. Looking forward to seeing videos filmed in your new digs!

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Рік тому

      Could be a back hall too.

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 Рік тому

      They also call that a "3-season" porch, or a Florida room. Mine is occupied by the dog, so I can't use it.

  • @rexcaverly3788
    @rexcaverly3788 Рік тому +35

    I lived in England for 18 years and was a housing inspector for about 8 of those years. I inspected houses for American military members, so I very much look forward to seeing your future videos on American houses from your perspective.

    • @newsaxonyproductions7871
      @newsaxonyproductions7871 Рік тому +3

      I agree with you on that last bit, but I myself I am actually really interested in your experiences. Would you mind describing your inspecting job? It sounds interesting, what with the cultural differences and stuff lol

    • @rexcaverly3788
      @rexcaverly3788 Рік тому +8

      @@newsaxonyproductions7871 mainly inspecting for safety and security. I also reviewed leases and advised members about problematic clauses etc. One of the things I loved about rental properties in England is the mandatory Deposit Protection Scheme, which made the landlord insure the security deposit in one of three ways and at the end of the tenancy, the landlord could not withhold any of the deposit without both parties agreeing on the amount. If they can’t agree, then it goes to an independent case examiner for a decision, which is binding. Something like 80% of cases are found in favor of the tenant!

    • @rexcaverly3788
      @rexcaverly3788 Рік тому +6

      @@newsaxonyproductions7871 also, British homes are still built as if they had a fireplace or stove as the sole source of heat. By this I mean that every room can be completely closed off (including kitchen and dining room) to prevent any heat escaping.

    • @newsaxonyproductions7871
      @newsaxonyproductions7871 Рік тому +1

      @@rexcaverly3788 That all sounds pretty cool! It's good to hear about the renting system being better there; I know that it can be really tough over here.
      Also, about the closing off parts of a house, not sure about all houses, but at least the few I've lived in, you can close or open each room's vents, so if you're not using one room, then you can close it off from the overall HVAC system to save money and/or fuel, and if it gets real bad, you could even push all the heating into one central room and stuff. Idk if this is like what you were talking about, but that's been my experience

    • @rexcaverly3788
      @rexcaverly3788 Рік тому +2

      @@newsaxonyproductions7871 I was talking about the houses in England where every room could be closed off with doors. Usually one fireplace in the “lounge” (aka living room) and radiators throughout with thermostatic regulation valves (TRV’s) that can control the heat output. Similar to the vents, the TRV can shut the entire radiator down, thus circumventing the main thermostat.

  • @aris1869
    @aris1869 Рік тому +1

    Some of things you pointed out exist because the houses are made so you can have friends/family over. The fireplace cover is so children don’t hurt themselves, the gest room is for your children or your in laws, the dining room is for parties, etc.

  • @margf.6773
    @margf.6773 Рік тому +12

    Sorry to hear of your recent loss. I bet your dad was really proud of you.

  • @alanrogers7090
    @alanrogers7090 Рік тому +11

    I call your "vestibule/mud room" an airlock. Not literally, but it separates the outside from the inside without allowing the outside weather to enter the inside warmth. This also works to keep out the rain and snow, etc. It is a room with one main function, it lets a person remove their outer clothing, (heavy coats, scarves, gloves, etc., before they actually enter the house proper, which helps keep the house much cleaner.

  • @clairenollet2389
    @clairenollet2389 Рік тому +7

    Here in Buffalo, where I now live, you might call that back room a "Florida room," which is basically a not well-insulated room that you mostly use in warm weather. The windows all have screens, so you can sit "outside" in lawn chairs in good weather with all the windows open, but not have to deal with mosquitoes. In the winter, you can use it to take off boots and coats without tracking in snow and ice to the nice part of the house. In Buffalo, the "Florida room" is usually in the front of the house, so you can watch your neighbors as they walk their dogs, etc. I grew up in New England, and "mud rooms" there were smaller, and usually had a bench, so you could easily take off your mucked-up boots.

  • @joycecylkowski6213
    @joycecylkowski6213 4 години тому

    Guest bedroom can also be an additional office space. Think of how often you have guests vs your UA-camr

  • @TinaSalamander
    @TinaSalamander Рік тому +34

    Congratulations on your new home! When my British husband and I bought our first house here in the US, he wanted 1) a single story house because he'd never lived in one before, and 2) a house with a 4-digit (or longer) house number because UK house numbers are typically (though not always) one or two digits long.

    • @katella
      @katella Рік тому +1

      😂 yup. Brit husbands can be quirky like that.

    • @simonupton-millard
      @simonupton-millard Рік тому +2

      Funny where I live in Wales they don't have any house numbers but to be fair 1 unnamed road Rhosgoch (Rhosgoch translation is red plane or field) doesn't sound good but Tyn Yr Allt Rhosgoch sounds better (Tyn Yr Allt translates as small holding on the hill, definitely sums up my house) house numbers are not that common on Ynys Môn (Anglesey) compared to England

    • @TinaSalamander
      @TinaSalamander Рік тому

      @@simonupton-millard Yea, the first house we lived in in the UK had a name (and a street name) but no number. Makes it harder to find people!

  • @LilliLamour
    @LilliLamour Рік тому +14

    I'm so sorry for your loss Lawrence. Sending you and your family love and strength.

  • @mikemcalister144
    @mikemcalister144 Рік тому +15

    I lost my dad last year on January 2nd after he was rushed to the hospital on Dec 26th. He'd had a hard road including open heart surgery in October. I can fully relate. Big hugs from Alabama.

  • @wurkinmachinefurya
    @wurkinmachinefurya Рік тому +11

    Your channel is just so much fun!! So glad you do them. You and your wife are a treat! ❤

  • @betagombar9022
    @betagombar9022 Рік тому +116

    So sorry about your dad x I bet he is so proud of you and the life you have made for yourself, he'll always be with you ❤ Your home looks lovely. It seems you get a lot more for your money when it comes to homes in America. The property prices here in the UK are ridiculously high. I'm looking forward to seeing more of your new home, I love a good nose around other peoples houses!!

    • @janicewebber5584
      @janicewebber5584 Рік тому +2

      Housing is much cheaper in the mid-west. Probably because it's more wide open.

    • @MayimHastings
      @MayimHastings Рік тому +1

      What a lovely comment! And I love seeing inside people's homes, too! When I was a teen i ran a small business of taking care of people's small farms, homes and pets when they left town. It was so difficult not to snoop around, but you never knew who had hidden cameras. I almost got murdered, so that was the end of that business lol! Big hugs, God bless ❤️🙏🕊

    • @MayimHastings
      @MayimHastings Рік тому +1

      @@janicewebber5584For sure! And prices have doubled, if not tripled here in North Atlanta just in the past few years. Same with apartments, so no one can afford anything anymore. It's heartbreaking to see, especially in Winter. Sounds like England is in the same boat, especially with heating 😢. Glad to hear it isn't so bad where you are! Stay warm up there, Janice! ❤️🙏🌞

  • @acooper6956
    @acooper6956 Рік тому +11

    To say you lived a lot of life in December is putting it mildly. What a roller coaster! Absolutely love your house. Hope you and Tara have many many happy years there!

  • @penihavir1777
    @penihavir1777 Рік тому +19

    My condolences on the sudden loss of your dad. I can only imagine how hard that was.
    Adorable and classic 1930’s house! Great hardwood floors, and a pretty staircase. The 1950’s pink update to the bathroom is another thing one sees so often. (You’re lucky - my 1922 house’s bathroom was re-done in the 1960’s - gold speckled tile ages far less well. 😉)
    The basement is so classic too, with the original 1930’s kitchen cabinets re-used in the laundry, and the wood trim around the ceiling in the rec room is also very nostalgic.

  • @thelostpsychosis
    @thelostpsychosis Рік тому +1

    In South West PA that's a mudroom, but small, but a mud room none the less, called a mud room cause if you're shoes/boots have mud on em you take em off there before tracking it into the house.

  • @lucih5709
    @lucih5709 Рік тому +7

    CONGRATULATIONS!!!! Moving in the snow is so much fun!
    😊

  • @lindacotton4045
    @lindacotton4045 Рік тому +38

    Congratulations Lawrence!! And welcome to the wonderful world of mortgages, home maintenance, furniture buying, and chores you never thought of. And I never got to tell you how happy I am that you became a dual citizen. You’re very brave sir!

  • @protoolpat1
    @protoolpat1 Рік тому +16

    Congrats on the house! My family call it a mud room as well and... we do wear shoes inside but the mud room is perfect to switch from mud/snow boots back to slippers/shoes :) Mud Rooms are such a nice buffer zone to keep the freezing outside creeping through the front door frame via the 2nd entry door.

  • @tjblue22
    @tjblue22 Рік тому

    That room was called a "breezeway" between the garage and main house. It had 4 doors. 1 front entrance for guests to stomp snow off 2 for backyard so dog could do his thing 3 to garage and 4 to main house. Breeze could pass through from front yard to back yard.

  • @julieoakley9193
    @julieoakley9193 Рік тому +28

    I'm so sorry to hear about your dad's passing. Please accept my condolences. Also congratulations on both becoming a U.S. citizen and your new home!!!

  • @adamt4742
    @adamt4742 Рік тому +81

    the toilet running is actually a pretty easy fix, watch a video or two, then go to home depot. I had pretty much the same problem and had it fixed in less than an hour. as a homeowner you can save alot of money (and probably make some on your channel showing your DIY projects) doing minor repairs and upgrades yourself.

    • @marilynmcelroy9634
      @marilynmcelroy9634 Рік тому +5

      It usually means the chain on the flush valve is loose

    • @adamt4742
      @adamt4742 Рік тому +1

      @@marilynmcelroy9634 true, personally I just replaced all the parts and called it a day

    • @AmyKozerski
      @AmyKozerski Рік тому +6

      Replace the flapper!

    • @ediefolta9494
      @ediefolta9494 Рік тому +2

      Yes, it's an easy fix. You can do it yourself. Even I have done it!

    • @AMD7027
      @AMD7027 Рік тому +2

      As noted toilet rebuilds are very easy for the homeowner and will save you a lot of money.

  • @outremer91
    @outremer91 Рік тому +9

    It's funny to me as an American we consider that a normal sized fridge and most of the time there's another one in the garage.

    • @Sunset553
      @Sunset553 Рік тому +1

      I’m surprised that’s not in lists of American things - the 2 refrigerators

    • @olewyrdd
      @olewyrdd 5 місяців тому +1

      That or a big arse freezer. Growing up in the Midwest (north and south) loads of hunter's would stock their kill in it. Or for me, loads of ice cream and frozen pizzas.

  • @KatherineCompton-c1x
    @KatherineCompton-c1x 24 дні тому

    Ohh my! I'm finally seeing this one on December 1, 2024. So much for one year, wow. I think your dad is still enjoying all this, by the way. 😉😊
    Looking forward to seeing what you and Tara do, for the holidays, now that it's your first year in your home.
    ❤❤

  • @kkerr1953
    @kkerr1953 Рік тому +18

    Congratulations on your home, it looks spectacular. Mud rooms have been popular “up north” for a long time and they are gaining popularity in the south. I discovered them when I lived in Montana, and they’re wonderful! Put hangers or coat racks in there, benches to sit on to take your shoes on and off, and lots of shoe storage. It’s also a great place when you have shoes (or animals) that have mud or snow on them. It’s also a good place to keep your snow shovels and salt in the winter.

    • @rabbi4skin666
      @rabbi4skin666 Рік тому

      I must live too far south I’ve never seen a mud room below Indiana

    • @kkerr1953
      @kkerr1953 Рік тому

      @@rabbi4skin666 Haha! I live in Texas and we’re starting to see them here! No basements yet, but mud rooms….it’s a start!

  • @CasperLD
    @CasperLD Рік тому +19

    Congratulations 🎊. The bit you saying that your young self would never believe was exactly how I felt when I bought my first house in 2004. I walked around the house with a big grin saying to myself still in disbelief "This is my house.....I own this house..." Another milestone is coming up for me. Years and years ago, probably first when I started using Gmail, I put in the calander the "Crossover" date, which is the day that I will have lived longer in the United States than I did in Ireland. Well, that date is 23th Feb 2023. When will that date be for you? Work it out and put it in a calendar.
    Anyway congratulations again.

  • @bigscarysteve
    @bigscarysteve Рік тому +78

    In regard to the room on the back of Laurence's house, its function is as a mud room. Its structure is called an enclosed porch. The two things do not necessarily have to coincide. In my town, there are plenty of houses with enclosed porches, but the mud room seems to be a foreign concept here. My parents built a new house when I was three years old, and for about the first fifteen years of its existence, my parents would not let anyone wear shoes inside the house. Everyone was required to remove their shoes in the foyer (which we pronounce the same way as Laurence does) before they could proceed further into the house. Everyone I knew thought that that was weird. I was first introduced to both the name and concept of the "mud room" in the late 1970's by watching the TV series _This Old House._ Because of that, I thought the mud room was a New England thing, but it appears to be more widespread across the country than that.

    • @bridgetgrimes7524
      @bridgetgrimes7524 Рік тому +3

      It's a mud room here in New Jersey or a porch enclosed nice in spring and summer to be outside with out the bugs good place to remove boots no tracking dirt in plus if you leave your slippers in that room slip them on if you don't like being barefoot. Congrats can't wait til you have to do yardwork, shovel snow your going to love it.

    • @narr0wm1nd49
      @narr0wm1nd49 Рік тому +6

      This is correct. Not only that many houses have 'mud rooms' that are not external rather just a smaller room with an external door. Its very common in rural or areas where climate can require external cloths that can get very dirty. The only other key part is that its not the formal entrance to the house. Given that wet or dirty cloths can often be left in a mud room its not uncommon to see washers, driers, chest freezers, or other appliances that a family would need but not have on display.
      As for enclosed porches they also common in the front of houses. Often done as a later upgrade to keep a outdoor space but keep it insect free. There are common in the US where seasonal insects can not only be annoying but produce a large mess and even be disease vectors.

    • @marilynmcelroy9634
      @marilynmcelroy9634 Рік тому +3

      Apparently we here in California don't have mud, because none of the houses have mud rooms. I encountered my first mud room when staying with a friend in Buffalo, NY. I've always lived in suburban "ranch" houses, where you enter the livingroom directly and the mud comes in with you. Thus the first thing I always heard when entering the house as a kid, was the disembodied voice of my mother calling out from the kitchen "Wipe your feet!"
      Additionally, California homes (at least the ones built during the post WWII housing boom - the aforementioned suburban "ranch" houses), do not have basements. That is another thing I experienced for the first time upon my visit to Buffalo. Most of the homes in southern Calif are built on cement slabs directly on the ground.

    • @LysaW.
      @LysaW. Рік тому +3

      In North Carolina we call it a mud room too, which can also double as a laundry room. I thought it was just a southern thing, lol. But our enclosed porches are a completely separate thing-either the front or the back of the house, depending on the owner and where they spend most of the time. Mosquitoes, bees, wasps, etc. are relentless during the summer. And some also have a sun room which is completely different!

    • @CaptainFrost32
      @CaptainFrost32 Рік тому +1

      @@marilynmcelroy9634 I would bet that some would be mystified by the "Pittsburgh toilet". When homes were built, obviously basements were built first with the foundations.
      The basement would have the utilities (furnace, fuel storage, water, sewage, etc.) while upper floors were built to provide more space for storage, bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, living room, and possibly more. The idea was that new homeowners could live with the basics in the basement while finer options were set upstairs. Sinks and toilets were installed in the basement. When kitchens and bathrooms were finished upstairs, laundry remained downstairs.
      Laborers in the steel mills would leave their houses in the hills and hike down to the mills and plants in the valleys to begin shifts, then hike up to home at the end of the workday. They never entered the front door but the basement door. They would use the basement toilet and sink before putting on fresh clothes and going upstairs to the clean house. If the family had a car, the garage would be on the uphill side normally where the front door faced the street.
      When kids listened for their dad to come home, the first clue was the basement door closing. There would be an interval before they would hear him trudging up the steps.

  • @michb71
    @michb71 Рік тому

    I’m next door in Indiana and I would call that unheated room a back porch. We live on a farm so that’s where the barn clothes/ boots, etc. would stay. Since you’re not on a farm, I would set up a table or some shelving and use it for extra cold storage for food in the winter months. Great for storing fruit and Christmas goodies! Lovely home! I’m enjoying your videos and I was sorry to hear of the passing of your dad. Losing a parent is such a heartache, no matter how old we are. Glad to have you in our country. Welcome!

  • @johnnabuzby6103
    @johnnabuzby6103 Рік тому +64

    Congratulations on buying your first home Laurence and Tara! You are really chasing and embracing the American dream.
    I work at a production plant in my hometown of New Bern, NC, with lots of people who came to this country from around the world. My work partner, Mang [rhymes with pong], came here from his home country of Myanmar 🇲🇲 (Burma). A couple of years ago he became an American citizen and in 2022 he purchased his first home. I can't tell you how proud I was for him...I got all choked up when I reminded him that year he became a citizen that it would be his first Fourth of July as an American. I feel like that for you as well. Welcome home to America and your first home! Have a blast making it your own. Btw, where's the gorgeous cobalt blue couch? I hope it moved into your home with you... I love the color.

  • @lisamoore8858
    @lisamoore8858 Рік тому +15

    I'm sorry for the loss of your dad. Please know that I'm praying for your family. Congratulations on becoming an American citizen. Wow! Loved the house tour! I can't wait to see how you decorate your new home.

  • @DavismTXAG98
    @DavismTXAG98 Рік тому +24

    Congrats on the house! The mud room is limited to only areas where there is significant, regular snow fall or rural areas. The rural areas use it as a literal mud room where you strip off muddy shoes and clothes and in snowy areas you can remove snow shoes and heavy coats. In the American South and most of California you are less likely to find mud rooms in more urban areas. Enjoy the house!

    • @SenoraCardgage
      @SenoraCardgage Рік тому

      Indeed. I’m Texan, and I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen one of these before. Possibly I’ve entered through one while visiting relatives in the north at some point in time? The word mudroom is new to me, though.

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому

      The first time I heard it was on This Old House, and they are not out in the country.

  • @pegwatts6120
    @pegwatts6120 Рік тому

    We did the identical thing. My husband and I this wasn’t our first house it’s actually our third but… We sold our previous home and purchased our new home on December 27 and moved into our new home on January 3. We have had about 420 boxes too. Lol. And our homes are even somewhat similar. Many blessings and happy days in your new abode. Welcome to being a homeowner.