Tag Archives: winter

Winter – Home Chore Check List

Ready to hunker down for winter? Not so fast. Now’s the time to tackle a few chores that will help your house and yard ride out the cold season ahead. Here are a few to check off your to-do list.

Clean the gutters

Gutters and downspouts direct rainwater away from your house. That keeps water from pooling around the foundation and leaking into the basement, or freezing in the gutters at the roof line and causing damaging ice dams.

But those gutters and downspouts can’t do their job if they’re clogged with leaves and other debris.

After the trees have finished shedding their leaves, get up on a ladder and clean that stuff out. Plug the top of the downspout with a rag first to keep debris from going down the spout, and wear heavy gloves to protect your hands.

Reader’s Digest Association’s “1001 Do-It-Yourself Hints & Tips” recommends removing the debris with a plastic sand shovel or garden trowel, or you can fashion a scoop from a plastic milk jug. Dump the debris into a bucket instead of pushing it over the lip of the gutter to avoid dirtying the siding, the book suggests.

When the gutter is clean, run some water into it from a garden hose. Clear a clogged downspout with a plumber’s snake or a blast from the hose, working from the bottom up so you don’t compact the clog.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-home-fall-chores-20121117,0,947494.story

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Button Up Your Home This Winter

Before long we’ll be complaining about the cooler weather and the high cost of energy bills.

But you can change the script this year by winterizing your home. It need not be a massive undertaking. Small steps can often add up to significant savings and prevent problems in the future.

In Midland, Mich., for example, the Dow Chemical Co. teamed up with local contractors on the Revitalize Home. The 1960s ranch-style house got air-sealing and insulation upgrades last winter, and is expected to show a 30 percent energy savings this winter. And that’s without major improvements such as window replacements or HVAC upgrades.

Keep the cold air out, and winter won’t seem so bitter.

“The average home has half a mile in gaps and cracks,” says Kaethe Schuster, remodeling market manager for Dow Building Solutions. “That’s equivalent to a 4-by-4 window left open. So I don’t think people are aware of the impact (of drafts). Twenty-five to 40 percent of energy loss is because of those gaps.”

There are a variety of effective measures to winterize a home, some extensive and best left to the pros, but many others of the do-it-yourself variety. Run down the list and save yourself money — and keep warm and cozy in the bargain.

Read More at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-cons-1011-winterize-home-20121011,0,3829662.story

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How to Warm Your Home

1. Prune those sun-suckers

Shady plants are great in summer, especially on the north and western sides of your property. But at this time of the year you want to get as much sun into your house as you can. Now is the time to prune plants blocking out your sunlight, if possible.

2. Let the sun in

When the sun is shining, remember to open curtains and blinds during the day, especially on the northern side of your home, but also the east (in the morning) and the west (in the afternoon).

However, you might consider leaving south-facing blinds and curtains closed on days when it is colder outside than in as the sun won’t hit those windows.

It’s very common to see homes shut up all day long with the curtains drawn. But before you head off to work or out for the day, opening the blinds and curtains on windows that get the sun can mean coming home to a much warmer property.

Read more at: http://smh.domain.com.au/blogs/talking-property/how-to-warm-your-home-20120515-1ynv1.html

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