Maintenance
Tips for Spring
It's spring, which means flowers, rain, baseball,
gardening, bbq's, desperate attempts to get in shape before swimsuit season,
skipping work to be outside before it gets unbearably hot...
Spring also means it's time
for home maintenance after a winter of neglect. Don't feel too bad about
it--you're not the only one to hibernate from maintenance during the winter.
Following are some simple tips to keep your home operating in tip-top
condition.
Inside
- Try out your air conditioning system. If you
wait until the first hot day to check your AC and it doesn't work, you will have
a long, hot wait before the repair people can get to it. They'll be overworked
and cranky by the time they get to your home; you'll be cranky because you're so
darn hot.
- Remember to inspect/replace your HVAC filter
monthly.
- Check and clean the clothes dryer vent and
stove hood.
- If you have a coil-back refrigerator--you
probably do--vacuum the coils at least twice each year. Your refrigerator will
run much more efficiently with clean coils.
- Clean everything, top to bottom! Use non-toxic
soaps for better indoor air quality.
- Now get outside and enjoy the weather!
Outside- Up High
- Inspect the roof for damaged, loose or
blistered shingles. Have damaged shingles replaced if they're on less than 20%
of the roof. Reroof if damaged shingles cover more than 20% of the roof.
- Examine flashing around chimneys, vents, and
roof edges.
- Remove debris from gutters and downspouts and
patch any holes. Make sure the downspouts direct water at least 5 feet away from
your foundation walls.
- Examine fascia or soffit boards. Replace if
they are soft or rotting because they may allow rain into your attic. If you
live in a hurricane-prone region, extend the fascia so it terminates below the
underside of the soffit.
- Trim branches and shrubs that are touching
your home which can provide a pathway for bugs or excess moisture to enter your
home.
- Remove dead branches that may fall on your
home. Snap!
Outside- Low Down
- Clean up fallen limbs, branches and other
debris around the home to discourage the proliferation of wood-eating insects.
Termites = bad.
- Clean out basement window wells.
- Inspect/replace caulk on windows, doors, and
other penetrations, such as dryer vents and cable wire holes. Inspect the
condition of the caulking where two different materials meet, for example where
wood siding joins the foundation's wall or at inside corners. Improper caulking
provides an avenue for moisture to get inside your walls and cause mold.
- Check the condition of the exterior surfaces.
Touch up any areas that need paint before they deteriorate further. Inspect
bricks and concrete blocks for cracked mortar or loose joints.
- Inspect grading around the house to be sure
water drains away from the foundation on all sides. If water pools near the
house, you could be in for a very wet basement and difficult spring removing
water and even mold from the basement.
- Make sure that your lawn sprinkler heads do
not spray the walls of the house. Water = bad.
- Check your inside and outside foundation walls
and piers for termite tubes and damaged wood.
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