I learned, the hard, cold, and wet way, that I want the roof mounting and access
much easier
and safer! More importantly, I learned that we need some major water-proofing and siding repairs. About 6+ years ago, we noticed some water dripping from the master bedroom ceiling. Quickly I decided something was wrong!!
![Bang Head [banghead]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/banghead.gif)
In the image below, you can see the "dog house" extension I referred to in post #43. At the left end of that extension is a wall that comes just short (12 inches vertically and horizontally) of the valley of two roofs and a downspout for its roof. When we get a strong wind from the north, along with lots of sleet, freezing rain, and a couple of inches of snow, plus some long periods of way below normal temps, that crowded and shaded area gets covered by an ice dam. Naturally, when the frozen stuff starts thawing it piles up behind that dam. Those conditions are rare, in these parts, but if the collection gets high enough the liquid can then follow the siding until it gets behind the under all the roofing layers and finds the bare wall and roof joint, and then ceiling of that bedroom.
I spent a good 45 minutes
very gingerly crawling, sitting, scooting, shoveling, and moving slushy stuff sheets of ice from the valey and the wall/roof intersection. Lost my grasp on the shovel and it demonstrated what would happen to me if
I wasn't careful.
SWMBO was resting in the bed below me and said she would have immediately been out to help me, should I have been the one that slid off... I felt
sooo reassured that I decided not to mention that my nice clean bluejeans had roofing grit and asphalt on the seat! She said she would have known I had fallen because there would be no more noise of my "ice breaking" activities.
![Lol2 [lol2]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/lol.gif)
I'm sure you 'yanks' have better designed roofs and methods of de-icing. The experience re-inforced my concerns about climbing up the roof, however. The image below shows where I plan on mounting the mast/pole for the anemometer, that hasn't changed. The anemometer
kit will be mounted on the very gently sloped roof of the "dog house" where it can face southward. I will also modify an aluminum ladder to 'hook' over the peak of the single-story wing that has the three-car garage and laundry room (right side of the image). Getting to
that ladder is easy with the extension ladder I already have.
Even though the roofs are steep (12/12 pitch) from that 'removable ladder' to the west wall of the 'dog house' is only a single step and I'll be jambed between the roof and the wall. Moving a few feet south in that juncture, I will be able to reach the anemometer kit to replace batteries, if needed. I can even move a few feet further (south) and get on the very gently sloped roof of the 'dog house' if I need to access the anemometer itself. The anemometer comes with 40 feet of cable, the distance is much less than that.
However,
I would appreciate suggestions on securing that rather delicate cable to the run it makes over the
composition shingles (about like 25 grit sand paper!). Obviously, I don't want the wind whipping it back and forth on that rough surface; it wouldn't do the shingles any good either having the grit removed! Perhaps a nice bead of roofing tar?
BTW, "
A" marks the location with the least restricted precipitation area and least shadows year round. Again, this is the back of our house, the north side of that infamous 'south bound mule'.

[removed link to the now castly photobucket.com site]