 Okay, now that we've got our main floor in good shape, our upstairs is okay. We're going to go downstairs into the basement. It's a wet environment, so I put my rubber boots on for that. I've got my squeegee to move water and some mud. I've got a shovel to shovel up drywall, of course my safety glasses and gloves, and then my mask as well, because it's going to be a wet moldy environment down in the basement. Go. All right, we've taken the squeegee and removed the water from this bedroom in the basement. So we've got a relatively dry floor. We've taken the drywall off the walls, and so now we can start the process of removal of the drywall. A strip shovel like this is useful at five-gallon pails, and once you get that filled, then you can carry on with the stairs. That drywall can be very heavy, but usually in these five-gallon pails, taking either one or two at a time up the stairs, it's a fairly efficient way of removing the drywall from the basement. Now, if you look at the ceiling here, sometimes the tiles will have already fallen down. In this case, we do need to remove these tiles, I've got my hard hat on. You can see a fair amount of moisture. If you don't remove the ceiling tiles, you'll see up here on the beam now what are some of these floor beams. Insulation should be removed as well, because that'll hold the moisture in on the underside of your floor, and again, it'll have mold and rotting problems. So it's important to remove insulation, the ceiling, the walls. We've already removed the carpet here by cutting that up into strips.