To fix the problem, you first need to find the access point. The is a pipe with a threaded plug (usually T-shaped or a simple cap) that leads directly to your sewer line. Inside: Check the basement, crawlspace, or garage.
Sometimes, a DIY snake isn't enough. If the following scenarios apply, it's time to call a licensed plumber: unclogging main drain
Hatch smiled, slow and rotten. "Because some clogs are meant to stay." To fix the problem, you first need to find the access point
Lena fished out the ledger with a rake. Dried mud flaked off, but the pencil was pristine. It was a second set of books from Whitmore’s General Store—the one that burned down in 1943. The ledger showed payments to "Hatch & Sons Construction" for "kerosene delivery, rear storeroom, night of June 13." The same night the fire had started. The insurance payout had rebuilt half the town—on Whitmore’s ashes. Sometimes, a DIY snake isn't enough