5 Exterior & 5 Interior Maintenance Tips For Spring
Springtime means different things to different people; new beginnings, renewal, warmer temperatures, longer days. As a homeowner it also signals the time for assessment of the toll the winter months may have taken on your home. This article identifies 5 areas to check on the exterior and 5 to check on the interior of your home as part of your spring maintenance.
With the more comfortable weather, what a better place to start could there be than with the home’s exterior?
Exterior
1. Start with the roof. For your own safety, climbing onto the roof should be avoided. If you have a sturdy ladder, are so inclined and are capable of climbing it safely, you might look at the roof from the eaves. The safest approach however is to view the roof from the ground using binoculars if available.
a. You’ll want to look at the roof covering (shingles). Are they all still in place? Is there any evidence of loose or missing fasteners? A shingle that is raised may be indicative of a raised fastener. Together this may be a place for moisture intrusion. These repairs made early can avoid greater damage and expense later.
2. While you have the ladder out, take a look at the gutters and downspouts and be sure they are free of debris. Clogged gutters and downspouts can lead to water run-off from the roof backing up under the roof covering. Definitely not good.
3. Take a walk around the outside of your home and look to see that shrubs are cut back away from the siding or brick. If there are vines attached to the siding they should be removed. Vegetation in contact with the siding can promote moisture intrusion and damage.
4. Look at the intersection of the siding, windows and doors, are there any gaps that may need to be re-caulked? Also examine areas where dissimilar materials meet for adequate sealing or caulking. Is the trim in need of repainting? It may be time to get out the brush and rollers. Paint not only affects the visual appeal of your home, it also protects the surface of the material from moisture induced damage.
5. Look at the walkways and the driveway. Is there any heaving or large cracks that pose a trip hazard?
Interior
Spring is a time when we can give the interior of our home a nice deep cleaning, sweeping away as it were, the dust of winter. Many use spring cleaning as an opportunity to sort and eliminate unused items. Some of these can be donated for use by others, then there is what’s left which can either be recycled or discarded. The simple fact is that a clean uncluttered space is also a safer more healthful space. Beyond the organizing and cleaning there are some maintenance items on the interior of the home to give attention.
1. Clean/replace the air-conditioner filter. A simple to perform maintenance task that will help the system to function more efficiently.
2. Clean the screens on the windows and doors. Okay so technically these are on the outside but as the windows are cleaned (both inside and outside) there is a good opportunity to check for smooth operation and to look for evidence of moisture intrusion.
3. Replace the batteries in all smoke and carbon monoxide detectors. A detector that isn’t working is not a detector at all. Many follow the practice of changing the batteries in these every 6-months, timing the change of batteries to coincide with the transition to and from daylight saving time.
4. Examine the caulking at sinks, tubs and showers for deterioration. Also, look for signs of leaking under the sinks.
5. Clean (or have cleaned) the dryer vent. By some accounts, clothes dryers are responsible for over 15,000 house fires each year.
In many ways spring is for nature, a time of new beginnings and renewal. For the homeowner it is likewise a time for renewal. Starting the spring season with home maintenance checks is a way to refresh the home from the winter’s impact.