Monday, September 29, 2025

Old Sofa Sunday


Yesterday morning was pretty placid. Lots of reading time, a little houseplant care, some minor household tasks. I spent a couple of hours with an interesting book of letters between Allen Ginsburg and Neal Cassady -- something I found while weeding the library's poetry shelves a couple of weeks ago. I don't know much about the beat poets but I'm intrigued by their interaction and discussions of their creative process. I'm not reading the whole book cover-to-cover, just jumping around and reading random groups of letters here and there.

But a veil of apprehension was hanging over the day, because I knew at some point we had to get the gigantic old brown couch out of the house.

Now, some backstory on this couch, in case you've forgotten. We arranged to move into this flat in July 2014, taking it over from some co-workers who were moving back to the states. They had recently purchased new furniture, and we agreed to keep it. Our previous apartment in Notting Hill came furnished, so we were leaving all that furniture behind and we needed something to sit on, and it would save our co-workers from having to move or dispose of their new stuff. Here's the first picture of the couch to appear on my blog, though it went on to feature in many, many photos, mostly as Olga's favorite snoozing place.

Dawn, the woman who sold us the couch, told us at the time that it had been a nightmare to move into the flat. It was too big for the interior hallway, so the delivery men brought it up the side return, through the garden gate and in through the back door. This apparently took some doing.

It was a perfectly good couch for 11 years, but at the same time, I never loved it. I would never have chosen something so big, or wide, or brown. It didn't make sense to invest in a new one while Olga was alive, but after she died in July we took the plunge, and it arrives Thursday. (Incidentally, Dave has agreed to stay home that day to intercept both the couch and the new rug, so I won't miss any more work and further annoy my boss.)


We waited until the middle of yesterday afternoon to make the move, so I could sit on the couch as long as possible. Rather than use the side return I decided we'd carry it out the back door, across the patio and back through the bedroom, then through the foyer and out to the street. I measured everything and didn't see why it wouldn't work, and it seemed a heck of a lot easier than using the garden gate.

Some of you asked for a video of the process, and I puzzled over how to make that happen. I couldn't very well hold a phone AND move a couch. We have a Go-Pro but no way to mount it to my body, so that wouldn't work. Finally I decided to use our home security cameras, which we can set to be triggered by movement. The result is the video above, which I'm pretty darn proud of, if I do say so myself.

It starts with some accelerated footage of preparations, like moving plants and shifting cushions. Then you'll see two minor mishaps -- we nearly crushed a little orchid by the back door until Dave saved it, and he almost lost his shoe backing into the bedroom from the patio. The hardest part was getting the couch out the back door, because there's a wall there and several big garden plants -- we had to tip it immediately upward to navigate that tight space, and carry it vertically around the corner of the house. But overall, it was a fairly smooth process with no breakage or injury.


And now the couch, sans it legs, is sitting out on the pavement out front, waiting to be collected today by the council -- along with two decrepit garden chairs. (We saved the smaller pillows and one of the cushions on the back of the couch, which I can use to sit up in bed. I'm using it as I write this!)


Until the new couch arrives on Thursday, this is where I'm relaxing in our living room. Pathetic, I know.

I am so relieved to have this done. I'm not kidding when I say I have wondered for the last 11 years how we were ever going to get that couch out of the house!

74 comments:

  1. Codex you make it look easy. May I say that is a well made but fugly couch. Was.

    Spouse would have covered it with a throw.

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  2. All that manouvering does look awkward, but well done!!

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  3. Your video is great! That thing was a real bear to move. You managed well. Good riddance.

    Love,
    Janie

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  4. Wow - I'm truly impressed! It looks really smooth-going, and once Dave got his shoe back on properly, nothing was stopping the two of you. I'd be completely unable to do anything apart from shifting cushions and dismantling the feet, I'm just not good with anything heavier than a regular shopping bag. Even a full washing basket has me panting up the stairs from the basement where my washing machine is.
    Now all that needs to happen is the delivery of the new sofa at the right time - today!!

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    1. What the video doesn't show is that I was still holding up MY end of the couch while Dave fixed his shoe!

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  5. That certainly wasn't a pretty sofa!
    Hope the new sofa arrives and gets in with no hassle.

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    1. Fingers crossed for effortless delivery on Thursday!

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  6. Well done you two! Reminds me of when I have to help putting one of the garden benches away in the shed.....It's not made for harsh weather! Your sofa certainly looks a bit grim out on the street.....def.time for a change. Hope the new one comes when it should.

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    1. We usually leave our garden bench outside but as a result it has deteriorated and is starting to lose slats! (It's about ten years old, though.)

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  7. I think I would have hired a chainsaw and cut it in half, but you got there. Well done.

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    1. Ha! That just seems too noisy and messy, but no doubt Dave would have enjoyed it.

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  8. Well done to Ernie and Bert! Compared with our sofa, yours looks as light as a feather. By the way Steve - I notice that you suffer from skinny leg syndrome. This can be rectified with "Beef Up" - available exclusively from "Superdrug".

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    1. We're more like Bert and Bert. My legs are not skinny! What are you talking about?!

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  9. That video is wonderful. Thanks for managing that. That was a ton of work to get out of the house. Good on both of you for seeing it through — and for not breaking anything (in the house or on you). So satisfying. (I would have stewed all these years, as well.)

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  10. I do so love watching people work, great video, made me very happy 😃

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    1. Maybe we should make more work videos! Gardening? Mowing the lawn?

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  11. Well done! That was most entertaining. What a relief to have moved it out with no mishaps. You will really appreciate your new seating on Thursday as your current arrangement is somewhat Spartan!

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    1. Yeah, it's looking a bit minimalist right now. Like living in a greenhouse!

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  12. I'm glad you got it outside without any major mishaps! While it might not have been the prettiest couch, it sure looks comfortable. I can't wait to see the replacement!

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    1. It was comfortable to lie on, but even I -- at 6'2", with long legs -- found it too wide to sit on comfortably. I had to put a pillow between my back and the backrest!

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  13. Excellent video, well done on that AND on moving the couch successfully to the outside. Now we are all waiting with baited breath to see the new couch.

    We have had a LOT of seating situations like yours when we have moved house and are waiting for a new sofa to arrive. It starts off relatively comfortable then you get 'numb bum' syndrome and start to realise your age!! ;-)

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    1. I had "numb bum" syndrome last night, so I know EXACTLY what you mean!

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  14. Well done - both video and couch. You have more fortitude than the original guys that brought it in. We actually ordered a couch that couldn’t be delivered due to steep stairs with a tricky turn. Back to the truck it went and I had to order another.

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    1. Oh, that's a bummer. Maybe you should have put it through the window with a crane?

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  15. Awesome video! You did an amazing job getting that couch out of the house. I have to admit, I was a bit nervous when you were taking it through the patio door — that little step is easy to miss when you're lugging something that big. Seriously, well done!

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    1. We were saved by the fact that it wasn't TOO heavy. More bulky than heavy.

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  16. That was a pretty neat removal! You could always get jobs as removal men! Sad though, that part of the memory of Olga goes with it!

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    1. It was probably the largest repository of Olga hair in the entire house. But there are plenty of little hairs in the pillows I saved. We can never escape entirely. :)

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  17. The present seating arrangement might in actual fact be good for you, training to get off the floor easily. The Japanese sit on the floor and it helps when you get old to move around more often and not use one of those aids to hang on to.

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    1. I do think bending and kneeling in my library job probably helps keep my legs limber! Not to mention gardening.

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  18. A lot to do to get a couch out of the house, isn't it? But your plan worked!

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  19. I can't wrap my mind around moving it out, then back in and then out again of your house was the easier of options but I'll accept it as gospel since I didn't have to move it!

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    1. You'd have to see the floor plan of our house and garden, but believe me when I say it was the only way to get it out to the street. The side return has a very narrow choke point between our shed and the neighbor's fence, and to get past that we'd have had to lift the couch ABOVE the fence (which comes up to about my shoulder). It would have been a far worse option, and as I said, the interior hallway was simply too narrow.

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  20. Excellent job! Thanks for the video - it turned out great. That sofa reminds me of our futon - great for napping, but not so much for sitting (at least for me, since I'm so short).

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    1. Glad you liked the video! Yeah, this couch was far better for lying down than sitting.

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  21. well done , lads. That burned a lot of calories shifting the monster sofa to the pavement! I have been getting CBD bath bombs for son who is a hurting unit, looks like after that sofa exercise you two could use some! Your sitting room looks like students live there.

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    1. It does look a bit dorm-like at the moment! Except maybe for all the plants.

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  22. Looks like it wasn't as hard to move it as you worried it might be thankfully. Well done.

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  23. Good video! A tricky way to get it out and in and out of the house but it worked! You certainly do have a LOT of plants!

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  24. You really took a lot of adventure out of the process by doing all that measuring and planning. There is nothing like the thrill of discovering it is not going to fit. The oaths. The turning. The rethinking. The whole 'what are you doing?' if it is raining, it adds a whole knew dimension of excitement.

    You were so efficient. Perhaps you might want to consider a new career when you retire. Steve's Furniture Moving.

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    1. Ha! It actually WAS raining, but fortunately only drizzling. We debating waiting until it ended but I felt like that might be too late and we definitely needed the daylight.

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  25. More than one way to skin a cat, as my grandfather used to say. Or at least I think he did.
    I am so impressed. Not only that you managed to figure out the best way to get it out but also that you got a video. Done! And may you never have to move another couch in or out of a home again.

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    1. That's a very grandfathery thing to say, whether he actually said it or not. Fortunately the delivery guys move the new one in, and I think even set it up!

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  26. An exercise efficiently executed! Say that 3 times really fast!
    Looking forward to seeing the replacement and the new rug!

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    1. I will post a photo the moment everything is in place!

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  27. Good job! Moving furniture is tricky in this house too.

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    1. Older houses are just not built for massive modern furnishings.

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  28. Moving bulky furniture is a challenge. Good for you to get the job done. I hope you didn't buy a big bulky chesterfield!

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    1. No! Our newer couch is significantly smaller than the old one.

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  29. That was quite a job but you had a plan and the plan worked! I was reminded of the time I tried to move my sleeper sofa from the garage where it was stored to the house by myself. I had one of those wooden squares with wheels on it to help me. Luckily, a neighbor saw me and came to my rescue.
    That video turned out great.

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    1. Sleeper sofas are a nightmare because they are SO heavy, with that inner metal frame. I had one in college that I could barely maneuver, even with a friend.

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  30. I'm impressed that you did video the process! Quite a big deal. What a relief to have it done now. When I saw the legs I thought hm,they can come off, and right away you read my mind and took them off. I loved the lost shoe sequence!

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    1. I almost cut the shoe out, as well as the orchid, but I thought they gave some humor to the whole project -- so I'm glad you liked it! LOL

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  31. Wow, great job, well done. I would have hacked it to pieces, hired a small chain saw and let my inner lumberjack take over.

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    1. I just think that would have been a chaotic mess, but probably fun. LOL

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  32. Well done! The video was terrific and boy, that was quite a job! I can't even imagine doing that. (I would have just chucked the sofa down the front steps once I got it out of the door. You two are much more careful!). Thanks for sharing that. I hope the new one arrives soon and is an easy entry.

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    1. Chucking it down the steps would probably have harmed the steps! LOL

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  33. You found the perfect logistics for getting that big couch out to the street. Great video too.
    Thursday can't come soon enough. Having your new couch will be lovely.

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    1. Yeah, I am not loving sitting on that hard chair. (Or on the floor.)

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  34. Well done! Both on the couch AND the video!

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  35. Amazing! But you didn't record Dave's and your language whilst doing the move. I'm bloody disappointed! 🤣😄😆😂😎

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    1. Ha! I deliberately overdubbed the audio with catchy music so as not to offend anyone. :)

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  36. Wonderful achievement - you both deserve medals. Can't wait to see you both sprawling on the new one.
    Wendy (Wales)

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    1. Well, I'm not sure we could both sprawl on it at once -- we're pretty big guys!

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  37. Loved the video! We have a couch that came through the opening for the picture window in our livingroom as it was being replaced, and I imagine a chainsaw will be required when finally we get rid of the monstrosity that neither of us have ever not regretted buying, thinking the other one wanted it. I notice your dragon tree doesn't appear to have brown leaves at the bottom, which makes me think this is possible! I have always assumed it's just the way of dragon trees to always have a leaf dry up and need removing. Now I have to do an internet search to see if I can find a remedy.

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