Article Summary:
Winterize your home using these easy and inexpensive activities you can do yourself to help your family enjoy a safe, warm and cozy winter.
There are many easy, inexpensive winterizing activities you need to do around your home fairly early in the season - Things that can save you time, frustration, money and even your life! Unless you live in the tropics, the time to consider the annual ritual of winterizing your home is now - before it's too late and:
- A tree limb is blown down in a blizzard and shatters your picture window.
- A mailman injures his wrist when he falls on your slippery sidewalk - or even worse, seeing your wife or kids desperately trying to get up off the ground and yelling for your help.
- A cold snap freezes the water in your basement laundry room's pipes, making them burst.
- A friend comes over for a holiday get together, and gets an unpleasant surprise. As she enters the house, accumulated ice over the entryway falls on her head, giving her a concussion.
- You open your heating bills and have a cardiac arrest - because they're so high.
Here are some easy and inexpensive home winterizing activities you can do yourself to help your family enjoy a safe, warm and cozy winter.
Even if you live in more "temperate" weather zones, you should take time to look around your home to see what needs attention. Some useful winterizing ideas include:
- Schedule your furnace inspection
- Change your air conditioning filters
- Clean your heating vents
- Test your smoke alarm
- Change your smoke alarm batteries.
Winterizing your home is generally not optional, although there can be aspects of it you can skip if saving hundreds to thousands of dollars isn't an issue for you and your family.
Richard Roll, President of the American Homeowners Association, has helped hundreds of thousands of families and homeowners eliminate the high costs and hassles out of buying, owning and maintaining their homes. To learn how to avoid many common (and costly) pitfalls and save hundreds to thousands of dollars each year, check out the American Homeowners Association's Top Tips at: www.ahahome.com.
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