I've told it somewhere on TBN before; no idea where...
We came close to buying a lakefront house one time on Lake Lanier north of Atlanta. Beautiful traditional 2-story with full basement. Everything was just about perfect, especially the surprisingly low price.
On some whim, I decided to have a look up in the attic. There was only a few leftover shreds of fiberglass insulation left! EVERY visible wire had the outer jacket completely chewed off. Every bit of the white neutral wire insulation was chewed off. Every few inches on the black hot wire you could plainly see rodent bite marks through the jacket. Most of these had a small arc burn.
I noticed an unusual light over in the corner of the attic and went to investigate - the original roofer had punched out two holes in the chimney cap, one for the fireplace, and evidently one for the furnace/water heater flue. But the house had electric hot water and a heat pump. That 10" hole in the roof had been there for roughly 15 years since the house was built. Squirrels considered the house their Taj Mahal. They had also chewed their way down through the walls, all the way to the basement. I considered it a TOTAL loss. It is quite a miracle that it had not burned down.
We came close to buying a lakefront house one time on Lake Lanier north of Atlanta. Beautiful traditional 2-story with full basement. Everything was just about perfect, especially the surprisingly low price.
On some whim, I decided to have a look up in the attic. There was only a few leftover shreds of fiberglass insulation left! EVERY visible wire had the outer jacket completely chewed off. Every bit of the white neutral wire insulation was chewed off. Every few inches on the black hot wire you could plainly see rodent bite marks through the jacket. Most of these had a small arc burn.
I noticed an unusual light over in the corner of the attic and went to investigate - the original roofer had punched out two holes in the chimney cap, one for the fireplace, and evidently one for the furnace/water heater flue. But the house had electric hot water and a heat pump. That 10" hole in the roof had been there for roughly 15 years since the house was built. Squirrels considered the house their Taj Mahal. They had also chewed their way down through the walls, all the way to the basement. I considered it a TOTAL loss. It is quite a miracle that it had not burned down.