Foreign.
Speaker BReady to turn your house into the home you've always dreamed of without the headaches or huge bills.
Speaker BYou're tuned to around the House, the nation's number one home improvement radio show and podcast with expert advice that's helped millions tackle everything from remodels to repairs.
Speaker BHosts Eric G. And John Dudley have got you covered with the best advice and information about your home.
Speaker BNow let's get this hour started.
Speaker AWelcome to the around the House show, the trusted source for everything home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G. Thanks for joining me today.
Speaker AJohn Dudley, good to see you again, brother.
Speaker CHappy New Year, brother.
Speaker CGood to see you.
Speaker AHappy New Year.
Speaker CI'm just going to keep saying happy New Year for the next few episodes because I'm really happy.
Speaker CIt's a new year, really.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI'm done with the last two, actually.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd I'm feeling really good about this one.
Speaker CSo happy freaking New Year.
Speaker AHappy New Year.
Speaker AI am very happy to throw 2025 behind me because that was a hot dumpster fire.
Speaker ASo I'm happy to get that behind me.
Speaker CFor so many of us.
Speaker CSo many.
Speaker CAlmost everybody I know just had just a crazy, yuck year.
Speaker AYeah, it was a dumpster fire.
Speaker AAnd I thought 2020 with, you know, everything going on with all the COVID stuff was bad, but this was just a hot dumpster fire that just came out of nowhere.
Speaker ABut a lot of people had it.
Speaker ASo to all you guys out there, happy New Year.
Speaker CHappy New Year.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AToday.
Speaker AYou know, now that we're in January and I thought we'd talk about some winter home prep.
Speaker AIf you haven't done it yet, it's a good time to.
Speaker AWe're getting the heat of things out there or the chill of things, depending where you're at out there.
Speaker AAnd the cool thing is our audience, we've got people in Alaska, we got people in Michigan.
Speaker AWe got people in Southern California.
Speaker AWe got people in Texas, Florida.
Speaker ASo everybody, winter means something completely different.
Speaker ASo we're going to try to address all of those things for everybody equally today because my son in North Dakota does things way different than our friends in South Florida.
Speaker CBig difference between longer board shorts and three pairs of Carhartt.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABig difference.
Speaker ABig difference.
Speaker AAnd one of the things that I like to do talk about here is just some of the things that you need to maintain, like, great example, people with gutters and downspouts out there.
Speaker AYou know, I was at my buddy Scotty's place this last week in Southern California, and he had palm tree fronds all just in his gutters and everything else.
Speaker AI'm like, see, up here we get all the things like leaves and all the different pine needles and that junk.
Speaker AThey're a nightmare.
Speaker AThey don't work well with the gutter guards the people put up there.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd they just get to be from the fir trees.
Speaker AThose things just get absolutely brutal.
Speaker ABut you got to keep those things down for one reason, you want them to drain well.
Speaker ABut two, if you ever have any kind of a fire, and I'm not talking just a wildfire, but I'm talking about maybe your neighbor burning the house down or somebody getting crazy, the fireworks or something dumb happening.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt's nice to not have that kindling in a box right at your eaves.
Speaker CYeah, for sure.
Speaker CFireworks.
Speaker CA great example.
Speaker CLike, oops, that bottle rocket came down right on a giant pile of pine needles, which will smolder and smolder for hours before it actually lights your house on fire.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AAnd I'm sure you have stories about that like I do.
Speaker CYeah, I was younger when things like that would happen.
Speaker ABut absolutely no, I was a little kid.
Speaker AThere were many times that we were shooting off bottle rockets and the pipe would fall over and all of a sudden the garage door for the neighbor's house, 2 inches up above the ground, somehow it goes in there.
Speaker AAnd I wasn't even aiming for it.
Speaker AIf I was aiming for it, I couldn't have hit it.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker CThen we got older and wiser and actually made bazookas so you could shoot the floral balls down the street.
Speaker APotato guns all get to bigger and bigger.
Speaker AHere's one thing that people forget to do.
Speaker AAnd if your gutters are draining into the downspouts, the downspout should go into a drainage system that gets that at least 20ft away from the, you know, a foundation.
Speaker A12ft is a minimum, but 20ft is where you want it because that water will creep back in the crawl space.
Speaker ABut that underground dry well, or whether it goes out to your street or however it's designed in your area, that should be cleaned out about every five years.
Speaker AThis is where you want to really get in there.
Speaker AMaybe have a plumbing company that can come and hydro jet that out, but really get that cleaned out because all that stuff when it rains hard gets shoved down the downspouts into your below grade storm drain system.
Speaker AAnd that gets nasty.
Speaker AI had a house one time that I used as a rental, probably because I was moving, and it just went into a rental for a little while between houses and oh, my gosh.
Speaker AThat went down into the storm drain system.
Speaker AThe storm drain went down and came through the side of the curb into the streets.
Speaker ASince they had the storm drain there.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AThat had tree roots in it.
Speaker AI actually ended up hooking up a rope to the back of my truck and pulled out about 20ft of tree roots that were in that corrugated pipe that was in there.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker AAnd I just pulled it all out of there.
Speaker AAnd because I started to get the snake on it, I'm like, why is this not going anywhere?
Speaker AThen I got the snake caught, pulled it out, and went, oh, wow.
Speaker AOkay, here we go.
Speaker CAnd it was free.
Speaker CI went.
Speaker AI'm hooking the truck up.
Speaker AHere we go.
Speaker AGrab my.
Speaker AGrab my F150 that I had at the time and drug it out of there and got it cleaned out.
Speaker ABut it filled up my whole yard recycle bin just from the junk that was out of it.
Speaker AAnd then the house drained.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ASo that's part of it right there.
Speaker AJust getting that stuff cleaned up.
Speaker AAnd many times when people have basements that have water issues in them, many times it's from those gutters and downspouts draining right next to the house.
Speaker AAnd we had a big problem with that in Portland here.
Speaker AAnd they designed.
Speaker AIn my area here, where I'm at, Johnny, they designed the whole storm drain sewer system to be one and only.
Speaker AIn the middle of the 20s, 30s, or whenever they designed that system, when it rained, it went into the street, grabbed it, it put it in the sewer system.
Speaker ASo everything connected well.
Speaker AThe sewer system would overflow, and they get big rains here.
Speaker ASo they.
Speaker AIn the 60s, 70s, I believe, they made everybody disconnect and gave them a nice little tax rebate to disconnect their storm drains coming out of their gutters into the sewer system.
Speaker ATo say they did that.
Speaker AThey just dumped them next to the house.
Speaker AThere's thousands of homes that now have foundation damage in Portland just due to people disconnecting them incorrectly.
Speaker CYeah, that's.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI don't know if there was ever issues like that in Tacoma, but I can tell you, I saw so many.
Speaker CEvery house in Tacoma had a basement, and always there was water issues, and always it was water draining right next to the house.
Speaker CPeople try to throw some gravel down in a splash block and like, dude, that ain't gonna fix it.
Speaker CAnd we saw a lot of those basements have to put in those.
Speaker CYou know, they'd go in and channel out around the interior of your basement and put those inside curtain drains and.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CPump it out.
Speaker CYou'd literally have a sump pump in your basement.
Speaker CKeeping the water out of there.
Speaker CBecause wasn't set up right in the first place on the outside of the house.
Speaker AMan.
Speaker AI had one where I had foundation damage and it was from somebody that was trying to do the right thing and store their rainwater.
Speaker AWhat they did is those pallets.
Speaker AThey look like about the size of a pallet but they're those square tanks that have the metal around them for.
Speaker AThey're almost like a pallet sized tank.
Speaker AThey're a square block.
Speaker ABut you can put chemicals or anything.
Speaker AAnd it's like a four by four square with.
Speaker AAnd they've got a metal mesh over the outside.
Speaker ASomebody stacked some of those up to store rainwater.
Speaker ABut then when they did it, they put it right up against the house.
Speaker AThat pushed the foundation wall in.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AWas collapsing into the basement because.
Speaker ASo they put thousands of pounds right next to the foundation, which it wasn't designed to be.
Speaker AAnd it just pushes the wall in.
Speaker CGood idea.
Speaker CBut run a pipe out to it 20 foot from the house.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AJust get it away.
Speaker AGet it away.
Speaker AAnd that's one of the.
Speaker AYou just got to plan ahead and think ahead with these things.
Speaker AAnd storing rainwater can be cool.
Speaker AYou just got to make sure that you think about.
Speaker AYou get an inch of rain that traditional downspout will fill up that 50 gallon thing tank that you have out there.
Speaker AYour barrel that you design with so many times that'll fill up really quickly.
Speaker AAnd so just be real careful out there.
Speaker AMake sure you got it so it can go after that and you'll be good to go.
Speaker AThe other thing too is I think it's really important this time of year as well is to really check your roof and chimney as well.
Speaker AMake sure that the.
Speaker AThose flashings are good.
Speaker AIf there's snow on the roof or frost up there, don't go up and check that out.
Speaker ADo it on a nice sunny day where you can get up there safely.
Speaker AOr just hire a professional to come up there and take a peek at it.
Speaker AYou know, have the roofer that put the roof on three years ago come up and do a yearly inspection.
Speaker AYeah, it's really smart.
Speaker ABecause if you got a problem, you can fix it.
Speaker CBecause we're stupid enough to walk on ice.
Speaker CWe don't want you to be.
Speaker AYeah, we're that guy.
Speaker AWhich isn't good.
Speaker AAnd that's why we end up on the.
Speaker AOn the craziest home video.
Speaker AOr you see us limping around with crutches because we Did.
Speaker CWhy we end up in the chiropractor for the rest of our life?
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AThey take my money each month.
Speaker AI can guarantee that.
Speaker AJohnny.
Speaker AWe come back, let's run out to break real quick.
Speaker AWe come back.
Speaker AI want to talk about some preventing pipe freezes and some money saving tips as well.
Speaker AIn the wintertime, whether you're down south or up north, we can get you either way.
Speaker AAround the House.
Speaker AWe'll be right back after these important messages.
Speaker ADon't change that dial.
Speaker BAround the House show is just getting started.
Speaker BWe would love to hear from you.
Speaker BJust visit our website@aroundthehouseonline.com make sure and subscribe to our YouTube page that has hundreds of videos to help you with your next project.
Speaker BAround the House.
Speaker BWe'll be right back.
Speaker AKids these days, you'll never understand.
Speaker CWhat.
Speaker AIt'S like to play an instrument.
Speaker AWhat's up?
Speaker CThis is Sticks it in Ya and.
Speaker ASatchel from Steel Panther.
Speaker AAnd you are listening to around the House with Eric G. Yeah, we love.
Speaker CEric G. And you should too.
Speaker A1987.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, your trusted source for everything about your home.
Speaker AI'm Eric G. And John Dudleyman.
Speaker AI love talking about these kind of preventive things we could do like we are today, about those tips for winter prevention around your house.
Speaker ABecause there are so many things where you can spend 20 minutes to a half hour and prevent hundreds to thousands to tens of thousands of dollars of damage that you're fighting later on.
Speaker AAnd I love it when you can spend a minute or two and fix things before they get bad.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, it's, it's so important that I'm the guy that always puts that stuff off.
Speaker CI'm like, no, It'll only take 15 minutes.
Speaker CSo I'll do it later instead of doing it 15 minutes.
Speaker CThat's the cobbler's shoes, man.
Speaker CThat's the cobbler's shoes is what that's.
Speaker AFor you and me.
Speaker AIt's the cobbler's shoes.
Speaker AAnd then you throw in our ADHD of where we're squirrel and we're jumping on something else too.
Speaker AIt goes that way between you and.
Speaker CI, but no, yeah, the stuff's so important.
Speaker CAnd literally.
Speaker CAnd I used to be forced when I was married, Michelle be like, all right, this Sunday we're doing all the winter stuff and you just, you take a Sunday, put something that smells good in the oven and you brew a bunch of coffee and just crank some music and get it all done.
Speaker CBecause like you say, it's all pretty Mild stuff.
Speaker CAnd it's stuff you didn't notice during the summer, but you're gonna start noticing the minute the weather starts getting rougher and you get.
Speaker CYou guys are getting seven inches of rain.
Speaker CAnd like, oh, I didn't think about the gutters.
Speaker CI didn't think about the chimney flashing.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AOne of my biggest prod things that I've had to do here, just as we get into this is my girlfriend's.
Speaker AAmazing.
Speaker AWe painted one of the bathrooms here that her son had that kind of destroyed builder grade paint in there.
Speaker ASo they put flat paint in the bathroom.
Speaker ASo as soon as that kid started taking showers, he's an adult now.
Speaker AHe's moved out.
Speaker AThe paint didn't hold up in there very well, so we went in there and painted that room.
Speaker AMy biggest challenge was handing over a paintbrush to somebody else that I knew.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut I got it.
Speaker ANo, she wants to jump in.
Speaker AI'm like, oh, you're really good at this.
Speaker AOkay, cool.
Speaker AI have help.
Speaker AAnd that was really nice because usually I'd hand the brush off and it was like, no offense to the 8th graders out there, but it looked more like a finger painting project than it did finish paint.
Speaker AIt's been a period of growth of me of letting her into the project, which no problem.
Speaker AI got no problem with that.
Speaker ABut she's capable and that is helpful.
Speaker CBut it's hard to get a brush out of my hand because that's honestly my favorite part of construction is like cutting in windows.
Speaker CCutting into, like, seriously, out of 30 years of experience, you put a decent fat paintbrush in my hand and let me cut stuff in all day.
Speaker CI'm tickled.
Speaker CIt's like meditation.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI love it.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AWe have our fans and audience out there that are going, you kid me.
Speaker AI can't stand painting.
Speaker AAnd I get it.
Speaker AIt's probably like drywall to you and I or insulation to you and I.
Speaker ABut for me, it's Zen.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CI love it.
Speaker ASo speaking of that, these are the times, too, that it's great to tackle those kind of interior projects in the wintertime when the weather's bad.
Speaker AWhether you're 50 degrees in California and you're cold because you don't like 50 degrees or we're 50 degrees in the wintertime.
Speaker AFeels like summer to us up north.
Speaker AThere's some stuff that you can tackle inside to do it.
Speaker AAnd one of the things that I think is a real good time to do right now is check those smoke detectors, carbon monoxide Monoxide detectors and just prep up your emergency kit.
Speaker AMake sure that the.
Speaker AIs your first aid kit up to date or was that bought during the Clinton administration?
Speaker AYou need to maybe update some of those things.
Speaker CBatteries, flashlights.
Speaker CHow are you going to cook if you got an electric stove, that stuff ready?
Speaker CYou're going to lose power a few times in the winter, especially if you live in the Northwest and you don't know.
Speaker CSometimes it's an hour, sometimes it's three days.
Speaker CBe prepared for that, man.
Speaker AIt's funny just how you're going to.
Speaker CHeat the house if you got old baseboard heaters.
Speaker CYeah, think about that stuff, man.
Speaker ADude, I moved from my old house and they had a lot of protected trees, so they couldn't trim the trees around the power lines like you would normally think.
Speaker ASo with that, we lost power once a year for five days, man.
Speaker AAnd you had to plan for that.
Speaker AYou had to plan for.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker AIt's a new place.
Speaker AAll the stuff's underground.
Speaker AAnd she hasn't lost power here more than.
Speaker AFor more than like 10 or 15 minutes or hour max.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANice to watch that in seven years.
Speaker ABig difference.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAll the food in your fridge can go bad.
Speaker CLike, it's.
Speaker CYeah, you got to be prepped for that.
Speaker CHave a decent sized ice chest.
Speaker CBecause here's what happens, right?
Speaker CEverybody goes, nah, won't happen now.
Speaker CI don't think about that.
Speaker CDon't prep for that.
Speaker CIt's just like when you have the three hot days in Seattle and every Home Depot sells out of fans in one day.
Speaker CLet's go get a fan just like 17,000 other people.
Speaker CSo speaking of power going out, power, water, Internet, all those types of things in storms, I got to tell you, I'm super surprised.
Speaker CFor as janky as everything is down here in Colombia.
Speaker CYeah, we never lose.
Speaker CFirst of all, rarely do things go out.
Speaker CIf the power goes out, it's usually three minutes and it's back on Internet.
Speaker CSame thing once in a while because there's.
Speaker CIt's jungly and it's wet and it's.
Speaker CWe get more like monsoon rains and they only last an hour and a half.
Speaker CBut the canals fill up and everything just gets wacky and sometimes it'll blow stuff out.
Speaker CBut the most you'll lose water for is usually a day, usually within an hour.
Speaker CEverything's back on.
Speaker CLike, it's impressive considering that the infrastructure is not top notch, man.
Speaker CBut they're on it down here.
Speaker CI love it.
Speaker CIt's great.
Speaker AThat's cool.
Speaker AYeah, I had a storm Here one time where we had ice storm and the power was so bad it actually took out a natural gas pump station.
Speaker AAnd so there was a part of town where their natural gas turned off because the battery backup or their whatever it was monitoring that shut down.
Speaker AAnd so they actually ran out of natural gas on the line.
Speaker AIt just went to nothing.
Speaker AAnd I was like, holy smokes, never seen that happen before.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker ANatural gas just disappear.
Speaker AAnd they had a whole few neighborhoods that super rare, I guess.
Speaker ABut I've never seen natural gas not be there during a storm.
Speaker CThen you're going, man, wish we had those baseboard heaters.
Speaker AYeah, I spent 20 grand on a backup backup power generator that runs on natural gas.
Speaker AAnd why isn't that thing firing off?
Speaker AOh man, it just shows that anything can happen with that.
Speaker ASo really it's all about being prepared, man.
Speaker AAs we talked about just having some water, having some stuff ready.
Speaker ABecause it doesn't matter if you're on the west coast and you could have a, a firestorm to a, to an earthquake or you're a big snowstorm and blizzard in the north and south.
Speaker AYou get those hurricanes and storms coming through as well or tornadoes.
Speaker AIt's good just to have that stuff.
Speaker ASo you got it.
Speaker AMaybe you'll never use it, but some of those freeze dried foods and stuff are good for 30 years.
Speaker APut them away and enjoy them.
Speaker CAt least a camp stove and the can of dinting more.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker ASome of that stuff's not too bad.
Speaker AI like the mountain house stuff.
Speaker AThey make it here locally for us.
Speaker AThey sold across the United States.
Speaker AYou get an REI and those kind of camping places.
Speaker ABut the food's good.
Speaker AYou can have their Thai Thai noodles and they taste like coming out of a decent restaurant.
Speaker ASo you can't complain.
Speaker CMy bar is pretty low, man, I won't tell you.
Speaker CI won't tell you how many times we just ate cold soup right out of a can on tour.
Speaker AOh yeah, that's what it's about.
Speaker CYou'd open that thing up, put it.
Speaker AUp there in front of them.
Speaker ADidn't even put it up on front on the engine while you're driving.
Speaker CNo, no, we just.
Speaker CNope.
Speaker CCold right out of the can.
Speaker AThere we go, there we go.
Speaker AHey Johnny, we're running out of time.
Speaker ALet's go out to break.
Speaker AWhen we come back, I want to talk about some energy saving tips.
Speaker ALet's talk about that just as soon as around the House returns.
Speaker AAnd hey, if you're new to the show, make sure you check out our website@aroundthehouseonline.com we'll be right back.
Speaker BAround the House show is just getting started.
Speaker BIf you want to be in the virtual audience of an upcoming show, send us a message.
Speaker BWe would love to hear from you.
Speaker BJust visit our website@aroundthehouse online.com make sure and subscribe to our YouTube page that has hundreds of videos to help you with your next project.
Speaker BAround the house.
Speaker BWe'll be right back.
Speaker BNow here is that band these two used to play in.
Speaker BWelcome back to the around the House Show.
Speaker BBefore we get started, let's make sure you know how to find us.
Speaker BTo ask a question to Eric and John, send us a message at around the house online.com now let's get back to the show.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, your trusted source for home improvement information.
Speaker AThanks for joining us today.
Speaker AI'm Eric G. John Dudley.
Speaker AI want to talk this hour about energy saving tips on this segment at least because, man, this is when either your AC bill in the south or your heater bill in the north gets absolutely insane.
Speaker AIt seems in this time of year you're dealing with humidity down south or some warm days or even some cooler days where you got the heat pump on.
Speaker AAnd then January and February seem to be like the worst part of winter, at least for us, where we get the coldest.
Speaker AIt used to be like November, December, but now it's moved into kind of January, February.
Speaker AAnd so we get the dark days of winter there.
Speaker ABut you know, running that thermostat sometimes correctly can really save you some money.
Speaker AAnd sometimes the smart thing isn't just basically turning the heat off for the day while you're at work and coming home and turning it back on again because it takes a boatload of energy to get your house 10 degrees different.
Speaker CBack up to it.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou think about how cold those quartz or stone countertops are or the tile floor, it takes a long time for that heat sink to get out of there.
Speaker ASo sometimes just setting the thermostat to 68 and then lowering it maybe 7 to 10 degrees when you're away or asleep.
Speaker AAnd those programmable thermostats, the smart ones, are really nice because they can do those things automatically for you.
Speaker AYeah, those are, you know, they are one thing though, and I say this because I work with a lot of different utility companies out there.
Speaker AMake sure you know what you're signing up for when your utility company is giving away that free smart thermostat, that smart thermostat that they give away many times.
Speaker AYou're also giving them control of that thermostat during peak times.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo let's say your power company says, hey, I'm going to give you this brand new nest thermostat.
Speaker AWe'll just throw a brand out there.
Speaker CLike governors on them or something.
Speaker ANo, they've got control that you can allow them to use and you let them.
Speaker AAnd they'll go, oh, my gosh, we are running out of energy.
Speaker AIt's a peak time.
Speaker AWe're gonna Change your thermostat 10 degrees to lower the pole on the network out there.
Speaker AAnd now they're changing that peak load time, changing the thermostat for you.
Speaker ASo read the fine print many times.
Speaker AIf you get that thermostat and then click off that control thing, they might come back to you going, hey, are you going to buy that $100 thermostat because we just gave it to you so we could have control.
Speaker CYeah, I think I'll buy my own.
Speaker CAnd I'll tell you, based on my experience of $600 a month bills in Arizona in the summer, I know we're talking about winter here, but I don't want anybody controlling my AC in the middle of summer.
Speaker CPeople die down there in that heat.
Speaker CAnd it's no joke, man.
Speaker CAnd we get the rolling blackouts down there, and that's why.
Speaker CBut yeah, no, I'll buy my own thermostat.
Speaker CI don't want nobody controlling my comfort.
Speaker AJust as long as people know.
Speaker AAs long as people know, hey, these guys might be able to do it to keep the power on versus having to turn it off.
Speaker AYou just got to be good with it.
Speaker AIf you're not, go buy your own thermostat.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd not that I don't want to do my own part.
Speaker CLike, I don't want to run it all.
Speaker AThe thermostat.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIf my grandma's staying at my house for three days and I got to make sure she's warm.
Speaker CDude, don't.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AJust so you know, I'm not dogging them for it.
Speaker AThey're trying to control their stuff on it, but it's just one of those things that I look at and go, hey, read the fine print on that.
Speaker AUnderstand it before you do it.
Speaker AYou know, they're trying to manage that whole network of car chargers to AC units out there.
Speaker AOr that's a tall order.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd that's a tall order.
Speaker CIt makes sense that because they can see what's really happening.
Speaker CMeanwhile, you're Cranking your heat.
Speaker CAnd they're like, guys, everybody's cranking heat.
Speaker CWe got to back off a notch.
Speaker CLike I, I sympathize with them.
Speaker CI'm not saying it's bad, but the.
Speaker AOther thing too is, you know, enjoy the solar heat when you can get it.
Speaker AIf you've got a sunny day, open up those windows.
Speaker AAt least you can let some of that heat come in.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker ANow you're gonna get less of that if you've got a newer house because they're gonna have all the cool little UV and reflection stuff in there to keep that solar heat from coming in, you know, so you gotta be careful.
Speaker AIf you've got high tech windows, you're not gonna get as much heat as if you just have those 70s double pane aluminum ones.
Speaker AThose will let all the heat in you want.
Speaker CBut yeah, windows are a big thing too.
Speaker CAnd again, like I, I'm many years removed from the northwest and my last years were spent in Arizona when I was in the States.
Speaker CAnd at night, when it's the summertime again, talking about summertime, but we're talking about energy efficiency.
Speaker CAnd as soon as sun goes down, man, you rip open every window and you leave them open all night and you get up before the sun comes up and you shut them all again.
Speaker CAnd you just saved a lot of money because you keep that coolness from the night in the house so it doesn't get so hot during the day.
Speaker CBecause again, like you said, you come home, you crank up the AC because the house is on fire and it takes a ton of energy to get it to get back down.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, it's big.
Speaker AAnd in Arizona you had that luxury of having dry air.
Speaker ASo, you know, if you're in the south or anywhere else where humidity is an issue, you open the windows up at night and go, cool.
Speaker AI'm gonna cool it down.
Speaker ABut you're also bringing in 80 relative humidity at the same time.
Speaker CYeah, no, it's not so cool in Thailand.
Speaker ASo you got to be careful.
Speaker AYou had that luxury there.
Speaker ABut I tell you what, here I like, I like bringing it down.
Speaker AI like a cold room when I sleep.
Speaker ASo it's nice if I can get.
Speaker CIt better for your health, it's better for your mind.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CYeah, everybody piles blankets on, wants to be all warm.
Speaker CBut I'm a hot sleeper to begin with.
Speaker CBut yeah, no, it's science, right?
Speaker CIt's better to sleep cold.
Speaker CSo tolerate it, save some energy.
Speaker AAnd yeah, if you've got a newer water heater, I say this, you can do some water heater tweaks, but a lot of the new water heaters are so energy efficient, it doesn't really matter as much.
Speaker AIf you change it from 120 to 130, it's really not that big a deal.
Speaker ASo if you've got an older water heater, yeah, you could save a little bit there.
Speaker ABut really you're going to save more by putting in that heat pump water heater like we talked earlier about than you are by changing at 5 or 10 degrees.
Speaker AIt's just not going to be that big a deal right there with rising energy costs out there because it sure as heck isn't getting cheaper out there.
Speaker AThese are all things you should probably pay attention to just a little bit more.
Speaker ANow the other thing, and we should.
Speaker CAll take more cold showers.
Speaker CScience again, it's better for you.
Speaker AYeah, I know.
Speaker AI'm not into the cold plunge thing, man.
Speaker AI got too much metal in my body that it hurts.
Speaker CYeah, you get used to it.
Speaker CEven it's just 30 seconds at the end is good for you.
Speaker CBut I tell you what, back to Colombia, I don't know, dude, maybe half the country like this is, they don't have hot showers.
Speaker CThey're like, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnyway, you guys also have that.
Speaker CThey just take cold showers.
Speaker CI'm like, yeah, no, I heat like I've stayed on the farms and I'm like, I'll heat some water up in a pan and use a washcloth.
Speaker CBut.
Speaker CBut I do always rinse with cold.
Speaker CLike I, I've gotten pretty good at it, but nice.
Speaker CI don't want my whole shower to be that way.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker AAnd then on top of it down there, you guys have the lamp cord going into the shower to heat the water heater that's hooked onto the.
Speaker AHooked on.
Speaker CDude, it's crazy.
Speaker CThe shower head.
Speaker CYeah, the shower head has a cord that you put into a receptacle that's right above the shower head.
Speaker CAnd so all that humidity, all that.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd the trick with those shower heads, again, I'm digressing.
Speaker CBut those shower heads, the less water you feed them, the hotter they get because they don't really get hot.
Speaker CYou just get tippet.
Speaker CSo if you turn it way down so you don't have much water pressure, but at least you got hot water.
Speaker CI've fried two of those things and watched smoke come out of the receptacle because you're not feeding it enough water.
Speaker AYou're just trying to get it so it's hot.
Speaker CYeah, I Just want hot.
Speaker CBecause I love hot showers and then cold rinses.
Speaker CBut yeah, I burned two of those things.
Speaker COne in the wall, one on the head.
Speaker AOuch.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI don't want to be standing in the shower watching.
Speaker AWatching you let the smoke out of something like that.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker CDid you just see in this orange glow from the receptacle while water splashing up there, you're like, I think I'm about done.
Speaker AQuestion I have for you before we go to break, Johnny, did you turn the water off first or did you just unplug it with the water going?
Speaker CNo, I just turned the water off.
Speaker CAnd I leave the bathroom, I'm like.
Speaker AI'm out of here.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI was going to say if you grab that power cord with the hot shower, that's like throwing the toaster in the bathtub.
Speaker AThat's not recommended.
Speaker CI am an electrical.
Speaker CRespectable, whatever.
Speaker CI respect electricity.
Speaker CI'm not stupid.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AWhen we come back, guys, I got some pitfalls that we're going to help you avoid as well.
Speaker AFor that last segment, we'll do that just as soon is around the House returns.
Speaker ADon't change that dialogue.
Speaker BIf you are listening on the radio and are just joining us, don't worry.
Speaker BYou can catch the podcast on your favorite podcast player.
Speaker BWe would love to hear from you.
Speaker BJust visit our website@aroundthehouse online.com make sure and subscribe to our YouTube page that has hundreds of videos to help you with your next project, around the House.
Speaker BWe'll be right back.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, your trusted source for everything about your home.
Speaker AI'm Eric G. Man, you guys, I wish we have to do one of these things live, Johnny, so people can see our rants in between the commercial breaks.
Speaker AWe just went down a rabbit hole of unsafe things that we saw out there.
Speaker AAnd I was talking about El Salvador when I was down there working in the jungle with some of the guys and some of the sketchy situations that were daily things that we had down there that you would see that here in the United States.
Speaker AWe go, whoa, not even close.
Speaker CYeah, no, you're right.
Speaker CLive it would be.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CAnd I hate to say it, but the audience is actually missing a lot of the fun.
Speaker CAnd it may not pertain to anything.
Speaker CIt may pertain to what we're actually trying to get.
Speaker CInformation we're trying to get out, but nothing else.
Speaker CYou'd enjoy the stories, so I think we should start including some of that.
Speaker AWe're gonna start doing that.
Speaker AWe'll start doing that one so we can include it in the show here coming up.
Speaker CI'll tell you to everybody listening out there, send us an email if you want to hear us just tell more wacky stories and not be so precise about refrigerator compressors.
Speaker CObviously we're going to get you the good info out there and get you the details you need to take care of your house and do things right and do things smart.
Speaker CBut who doesn't like a story about bamboo ladders in Thailand connecting 6, 000 wires at a time in bare feet?
Speaker CThat stuff's interesting.
Speaker CSo let us know if you want to hear about it.
Speaker CSend us an email, say, yeah, more of that.
Speaker ASo hit us there, Johnny.
Speaker ALet's get back on track here.
Speaker AOne of the things that we see happen a lot right now when it comes to our homes is that especially in the wintertime in the heating areas that, that the furnace H vac strain, all of a sudden it's 30 degrees outside.
Speaker AThen it goes to minus 10 or something like that.
Speaker AAnd you're really putting that strain on your system.
Speaker AAnd it's no different.
Speaker AIt was like when we were in the summertime here a few years ago back in 2017, I think it was.
Speaker AWe were 90 degrees and all of a sudden we went up to 117 in Portland.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt's just all of a sudden things.
Speaker AIt's like an old car.
Speaker AWe use that last hour as a reference, but really it's like an old car and you're just pushing it hard.
Speaker AChance of a busting is good.
Speaker ASo you really want to make sure and keep those things maintained.
Speaker AAnd whether you've got the air conditioning on down south of the heater up north, it's one of those things.
Speaker ABut even Denver friends around there just a few weeks ago I was looking, I'm like, wow, it's 72 degrees still in Denver.
Speaker AWhich is not a December thing you're used to looking at.
Speaker CAbsolutely not.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI couldn't believe that when you told me that.
Speaker CAnd then, then my little brother sent me a bunch of photos of Park City, Utah, where there was grass showing.
Speaker AYeah, they're mowing the lawn in December.
Speaker CDo it these ski places with no snow.
Speaker CI'm like, oh man.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CSo, yeah, things are shifting a little bit.
Speaker AThey are another one out there that just.
Speaker ASo in case this really applies to everybody in the US because at least the continental US we all can get that sneaky freeze that comes up on it.
Speaker AWhether you're in Florida or California or any place else you in Texas.
Speaker AThat happens a lot.
Speaker AAnd just make sure that the pipes are insulated.
Speaker AThe biggest thing that I want you to do is if you get that freeze that comes in and you don't have a well insulated house, you know, open up those cabinet doors underneath the sink, go in there, open those up, make sure you got good airflow on.
Speaker AMake sure that you've got those hose bibs, take the hoses off the outside, disconnect them because those will freeze up even a frost free one.
Speaker AIf you've got water in it that'll blow those out.
Speaker AAnd just make sure that you got things insulated and got airflow things keeping it warm because otherwise you're just going to be fighting it.
Speaker AAnd that way you don't freeze it up.
Speaker AThe problem we see like in Texas is they ran a lot of California some too.
Speaker AThey ran the water lines in the ceiling of the ranch houses.
Speaker ASo if you don't have a lot of insulation up in there, guess what, it's frozen.
Speaker AAnd you're just hoping that you've got enough heat loss to keep it going.
Speaker ABut really spend some time on that.
Speaker AFrozen burst pipes can be a big issue.
Speaker ALet the water run, waste it if you have to.
Speaker AMight be expensive, but it's a heck of a lot less expensive than paying the plumber to come out with six or eight burst pipes that you have.
Speaker AYeah, a little bit goes a long ways right there.
Speaker AAnd keep the house a little bit warmer too.
Speaker AThat will help.
Speaker AYeah, that heat loss is going to come out through it.
Speaker AAnd then the other thing is too is if you get deep snow, you're up in the mountains or even if you're not, you get that extra two feet of snow, those metal carports to any of those things outside, those your lawn, patio pieces, all of those things can get really destroyed by that snow load.
Speaker ASo make sure that you're watching that.
Speaker AAnd if you get too much snow up on the roof, that can be an issue.
Speaker AIn areas where they get they're used to 2 inches of snow and they get 10 or 20 inches of snow or even more that can add a big snow load on it.
Speaker ASo make sure if you have to get one of those snow rakes and take it off there and watch it and you'll be good.
Speaker AThe other one I want to talk about, and this is probably our biggest one in the winter.
Speaker ATime to watch out for.
Speaker AMan.
Speaker AHumidity in your home can cause so many problems.
Speaker AYeah, if you're getting above 60% relative humidity in your house, and you should be watching it.
Speaker AIf you have a basement, you should have a humidity, basically a gauge down there and one upstairs just to make sure that you've got it going and you've got it under control.
Speaker ABecause once you get above 60, you've got dust mites, you're getting the opportunity for mold to grow.
Speaker ABut even your kitchen cabinets, if you've got maple kitchen cabinets, all of a sudden those are swelling up, and you're losing the finishes off of those, and the hardwood floors are moving.
Speaker AYou can really cause significant damage.
Speaker AIt's hard to repair when you get it back under control.
Speaker CThere's a lot of wood in houses and a lot of other materials that, with that amount of moisture, are gonna start moving, and that's what you don't want.
Speaker CYeah, no, that's a really good point that a lot of people don't think about until they notice the cabinet swelling or the door not opening.
Speaker CThey're like, what the heck's going on?
Speaker CYeah, that's what it is.
Speaker CAny kind of gauge you can have that tells you, oh, this.
Speaker COkay, we got to do something about that.
Speaker CWhether it's dehumidifier, run a fan or whatever.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, it's back up for a second.
Speaker CI was just gonna say, you're talking about snow loads and.
Speaker CAnd freezing pipes.
Speaker CAnd I think if we've learned anything, speaking of no snow at the ski areas, it's to expect the unexpected nowadays, because things really are changing.
Speaker CPortland getting 117.
Speaker CUnheard of.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSeven inches of rain in one day.
Speaker CThat's pretty fierce.
Speaker CLike, things are shifting, and we're getting different intensities of weather than we ever have.
Speaker CSo it's.
Speaker CIt's more important than ever, is my point to be respectful and be prepared for the unexpected because, man, things are weird.
Speaker AGreat example.
Speaker AUp off of Mount St. Helens that had that big eruption on May 1980 in Washington state.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AWhen that blew up, sheesh.
Speaker AHow many years ago?
Speaker ASo it was 80.
Speaker ALong time ago.
Speaker A40 plus years ago.
Speaker AWhen that thing blew up, it put down where the Spirit lake was.
Speaker AIt put in what they say, 60 or 100ft of silt in what was that?
Speaker ARiverbed.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ASo when they had the big rains a few weeks ago up there, now all of a sudden, that silt has a water stream running through it.
Speaker AAnd we know what happens with loose silt.
Speaker AWhen you get water running through it, it just cuts through it like butter and a knife.
Speaker AHot knife cutting through butter.
Speaker ASo that goes through there.
Speaker ASo they've had all these silt issues now downstream.
Speaker ABecause when they get those big rains, if you've got 60 or 80ft to cut through and all that material's coming down, all of a sudden, that drinking water, whatever's pulling out of that river is not drinking water anymore.
Speaker CThat's messy, dude.
Speaker AAnd that's how many decades later.
Speaker ASo you just gotta be careful with that stuff.
Speaker AYou just absolutely have to be a little careful with that.
Speaker AThe other one, too, I just want to make sure, as you understand, is outside of that is just pay attention to those carbon monoxide risks from starting the car up to warm it up with the garage door being shut.
Speaker AI know so many people that go in their garage, start the car up, hit the garage door, open it up.
Speaker AShould be the other way around.
Speaker AYou should be opening the garage door up, starting it up and going.
Speaker ABecause nobody wants to be hot boxing that carbon monoxide inside the house.
Speaker ABecause it's just gonna get in there.
Speaker AThat garage, as much as they try, is not her medically sealed.
Speaker AAnd that air ends up going in there.
Speaker AEspecially when your H vac system stuff is out there.
Speaker AIf you're gonna warm it up, pull it outside to warm it up.
Speaker AJust don't do it in the garage, shall we say?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AThat can be a big issue.
Speaker AAnd it's a bad habit that I see out there.
Speaker AAnd the other thing is too.
Speaker AAnd on all the newer homes out there, before we go to break this time of year, pay attention to your humidity.
Speaker AI don't know how many times, Johnny, we see the nice glass garage doors.
Speaker ANothing wrong with them.
Speaker AI'll be out going for a walk.
Speaker APeople will pull in their two BMW SUVs in that garage that is fully insulated and drywalled because it's part of the house now.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AThey shut the garage door, and I can see the rain coming down on the inside of the glass.
Speaker AOld glass.
Speaker AAnd what happens.
Speaker AIt's like that glass of lemonade in the summertime that's cold.
Speaker AIt's just running down on the inside.
Speaker CSo, yeah.
Speaker AAnd it's garage.
Speaker AYour Christmas stuff stored out there, your kids toys, whatever.
Speaker AAnd now that's got mold growing all over it.
Speaker ASo really watch the humidity in the garage as well.
Speaker ABecause when you bring those wet cars in, if you don't have a way to treat, that could be a moldy mess.
Speaker AIn today's newer homes with finished garages, be aware, let alone table saws and things like that are out there as well.
Speaker AThey love to catch rust.
Speaker CYeah, but that's okay, then you just get to buy a new one.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker AOn that note, Johnny, we are out of time for this hour of the show.
Speaker AThanks everybody for tuning in.
Speaker AWe'd love to hear from you.
Speaker AIf you want to to be part of a live event, make sure and send us a message over to aroundthehouse online dot com.
Speaker ADon't worry, we don't sell information.
Speaker AIt's just going to us.
Speaker AWe can let you know if we're going to do that here soon, which we're going to.
Speaker ASo I'm Eric G for John Dudley.
Speaker AYou've been listening to around the House.