Maintenance Tips for a Cozy Winter

Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow! They say good things come in threes, so here are three ideas to help you get your home ready for a cozy holiday.

Control interior temps

  • Ceiling fans—Set fans to spin clockwise in winter to create an updraft and circulate warm air around the room.
  • Windows and doors—Caulk gaps around loose window panes, add foam weather stripping to window frames and doors.
  • Programmable thermostat—Set the temperature to drop at bedtime and come up before you wake, and save money all winter.

Maintain your furnace

  • Furnace humidifier—Add moisture to your air; moist air holds heat better than dry air, so you stay warmer without bumping the thermostat.
  • Tune-up and maintenance—Schedule a service call and put an annual maintenance reminder on your calendar.
  • Filter—Write the date on an edge of your new filter and replace every few months, more often in dusty conditions.

Prepare your yard

  • Patios—Clear patios and walkways to avoid trip-and-slip hazards for guests, store or cover outdoor furniture to keep it looking good for next year.
  • Trees—Prune branches closest to the house to prevent damage to gutters, roofs and siding.
  • Roofs—Install roof heating cables to prevent dangerous ice dam build-up over doors and walkways.

If you have any other questions or tips, I’d love to hear from you! Please reach out to Beth below:

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Original copy courtesy of WK Real Estate, November 21 2024.


Reminder: Winter Home Maintenance

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With a lot of the country dealing with bitter cold & figid temperatures, it’s a good reminder to make sure your home is ready for winter.  We have had a few personal experiences that made us realize we hadn’t planned ahead for some of these items: drafty windows in below zero temps, leaves in the gutters that didn’t allow snow to appropriately melt, and not keeping a close enough eye on trees in heavy snowfall.  We learned our lesson with that one and had the worst case scenario happen to us last year with a tree falling onto our house in a big snowstorm.  Luckily, damage was only minimal and to our defense, it was a tree on Boulder County property – not one of ours!  I do come from the standpoint that you learn from your mistakes, but it would probably be best to try to avoid major issues in the first place because burst pipes or chimney fires are not something to joke around about.

Houzz & Huffington Post both have checklists that are worth a read: Your Winter Home Maintenance Checklist and Winter Home Maintenance Checklist.  To me, it’s worth paying attention to things that you think may affect your home and addressing those as soon as possible.

Happy winter, folks!