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In 1994 after spending 10 years in the restaurant
business I decided to try my hand at a new venture. I had been looking
through the newspapers for opportunities when I came across a Carwash
& Laundromat going up for auction.
I did my homework, went to the auction
and became the proud owner of a 4+1 Carwash and a 3000 sq. ft Laundromat.
I paid $205,000.00 and got financing from the SBA at a wonderful fixed
rate of 7%. I was going to get rich the easy way. In addition to the
purchase of the business, I was able to secure (steal) four 1000 in
ground propane tanks from the propane company that owned them because
they did not file any UCC's. Boy were they ever pissed off.
I probably
would not have done that, but when I called them for propane prices
(before I bought the Wash) they told me they owned the tanks and they
would charge me what ever they felt was in their best interest. That
did not sit well with me and I did what I had to do to insure low fuel
costs. Well, to get on with the story, I think that I was so happy to
get out of the restaurant business that I somehow never considered the
fact that it was December (I live in New Hampshire and it is well below
freezing by that time of the year) and that the foreclosed Wash had
been shut down for 3 months.
I just went walking in the day after closing,
turned on the pumps and couldn't figure out why nothing was working.
I think back to that now and it is really quite funny. But let me tell
you it was not at the time. I had gone into this completely undercapitalized.
I only had 5000.00 in my bank account and that was borrowed. I simply
could not afford to bring someone in to fix all of the problems with
the Wash, and there were a lot of problems.
The first thing that I had
to fix was the main waterline coming into the Carwash. It had been run
in a troth above the Laundromat and Carwash and had frozen and split.
After that, I unthawed all of the bays and the Automatic. Of course
the next day they were all frozen again because I had no idea of what
I was doing and had no idea of how to set the weep system up. I learned
the hard way that water and metal and skin in freezing temperatures
do not mix well. After I finally figured out how everything worked and
had everything completely unthawed, I opened for business.
Thing were
really going quite well until a couple of days later when I noticed
that all of my bays were flooded with a semi frozen mush. I mean, how
was I supposed to know that just because the Wash had been closed down
for so long that the pits would be frozen a foot thick above the water
outlets. I can't possibly even begin to explain what a nightmare that
was. I was out in those pits day after day, in below 0-degree weather,
with a sump pump and a pick ax. I'd suck out as much water as I could,
and let me tell you slushy water does not suck up well, and then chop
a hole though the ice about a foot in diameter.
Every time I'd hit the
ice it was like frozen shotgun pellets hitting me it the face. I couldn't
wear goggles because they would be covered in ice after the fist couple
of hits to the ice. At any rate, I was able to chop a hole in the ice
just big enough so that I could get through that days customers. The
next day the hole would be frozen over and I would go at it again. And,
if that all seems bad, it didn't get any better. Remember those propane
tanks that I stole?
Well, the company that I ended up contracting with
for propane gave me a great price, then filled up all of the tanks but
only turned one of them on. So of course, on the coldest night of the
year, (the temperature dropped to -45 degrees Fahrenheit) I ran out
of propane. The entire wash froze up again, except this time so did
everything in the equipment room. I had fittings broken everywhere.
All of the pumps and holding tanks were frozen. The Hydrominers were
frozen. On top of that I was still dealing with frozen pits and floor
heat that couldn't keep up. I guess what goes around comes around.
I
was able to get the Propane Company to agree to pay for all of the parts
if I did all of the work. It is truly amazing what one is able to get
done when under pressure. I had the wash up and running in less that
3 days and had learned how to fix every piece of equipment in the place.
Thank God the Laundromat did not freeze. That winter I think that I
came about as close to a nervous breakdown as I would ever want to come.
Do I look back on that first year with regret? Absolutely not! I learned
a lot. This year I will be going into my seventh winter and rarely ever
have a freeze up. Business is good. I am now fully attended and have
a manager and 7 employees. I have ripped out my old Automatic and replaced
it with a Laserwash 4000. I added a Video Store and a Tanning Salon
to my Laundromat and designed a "Cashless Payment System" that I have
brought to market.
The Carwash business has been good to me and I will
be forever grateful for the lessons that I have learned, and the education
and opportunities that I have gained while pursuing it.
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