Foreign.
Speaker BThe House with Eric G.
Speaker BYour go to source for everything home improvement.
Speaker BWhether you're a DIY enthusiast or just looking to make your space shine, Eric G.
Speaker BIs here to guide you through the latest tips, tricks and trends coming up in this week's first hour of the show.
Speaker ANow the next one here is going to be surprising for some people.
Speaker AYou might be shocked.
Speaker AUsing those plug in style or even spray air fresheners can be just like vapor vaping in your own home.
Speaker AI know people that have a bunch of those.
Speaker APlug them into the outlet oil air fresheners out there.
Speaker AIf you look at the liquid in there, you're just vaping.
Speaker AYou're breathing that stuff in.
Speaker AIt's not healthy.
Speaker AYou're better to deal with the issue of the smell, do ventilation capturing, whatever that is.
Speaker BSo grab your toolbox, put on your thinking cap and let's get to work right here on around the House with Eric Garrett.
Speaker AWelcome to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker AIf you want to find out more about us, head over to aroundthehouse online.com this hour is brought to you by our friends at Monument Grills.
Speaker ACheck them out@monumentgrills.com I've got their brand new omniseries grill, the 405 been cooking on a little bit.
Speaker AI love this thing.
Speaker AAs far as a portable grill that runs on propane that is good for a tight space, this is an amazing grill.
Speaker AIt is your average sized barbecue.
Speaker AFour huge burners.
Speaker AIt's got a side searing burner on it.
Speaker AIt's got all the temperature control on the inside.
Speaker ASo it's like running an oven.
Speaker AYou can set that dial and if you want to be cooking at 400 degrees, you cook at 400 degrees.
Speaker AIf you want to cook at 700 degrees and throw a pizza on it, you can do that as well.
Speaker ACheck them out@moneymc grills.com now today we're going to be talking about my top 10 things that cause bad indoor air quality in your home.
Speaker AIf your allergies bugging you, if right now you're like man, this allergy season is bad or why are my allergies so bad?
Speaker AOr why am I stuffy when I wake up in the morning?
Speaker AThis could be the reasons why this is happening.
Speaker AAnd this is something that air quality testing in your house is really simple.
Speaker AIf you want to find out more, all you do is jump on Amazon, spend a hundred bucks or you can spend a little bit more money.
Speaker ABut you get a good indoor air quality meter, it's going to tell you all the different things going on and the important ones as well that we're not going to talk about here, like carbon monoxide.
Speaker AThat is one that you should be testing.
Speaker AThat is probably the most important out of all of these, that carbon monoxide detectors are okay in your house.
Speaker AThey are smart.
Speaker AYou should have one if you've got an attached garage and all electric appliances.
Speaker AI would have a couple in your home just in case all it takes is somebody's car to remote start in the garage, and you could have a big issue there.
Speaker ASo just make sure that you've got those in your house.
Speaker ANow, that's not where you start.
Speaker AWhen you're starting about this, you want to have some other sensors in there as well, because when those go off, you're in danger.
Speaker ABut it's that little stuff that can really cause health hazards as well.
Speaker ASo you don't want to have really any in your house.
Speaker AAnd if you got gas appliances, you just want to make sure that it's working well and your ventilation is working correctly.
Speaker ASo that is the number one here.
Speaker AThat way we can get that dialed in correctly.
Speaker AThat sounds like a good plan to me.
Speaker AAll right, guys.
Speaker ASo the number one here outside of carbon monoxide, and that's.
Speaker AI want to put that one up there, is just everyone should be paying attention to that.
Speaker AAnd those sensors, if you've got old ones, time to replace and make sure you get something with good reviews.
Speaker AThat is a good brand out there.
Speaker AI like the ones that are smart.
Speaker ASo it'll tell you on your phone if you're having an issue and you could actually look at it and monitor it.
Speaker AThat's always a good plan.
Speaker ASo the number one here in the house, it affects about 80% of the homes across the United States, is high humidity.
Speaker AYou want to be running your house from that 30 to 50% as far as humidity in there.
Speaker AAnd you should be monitoring that in a lot of different areas.
Speaker AIf you have a basement, I want to see a couple monitors down there.
Speaker AIf you're upstairs, one closer to the bathroom, one close to the kitchen.
Speaker ABedrooms is a good idea.
Speaker AHave some monitors around so you can see what's going on, because many times in a basement, that's probably going to be the highest humidity area.
Speaker AAnd then of course, near the bathrooms where steam and stuff is created and depending on the airflow in your house.
Speaker ANow where it gets tougher is if you have, like electric baseboard heat and no real way to Centralize moving that air around.
Speaker AOnce you get above 50% and above 60%, you are now in the area of mold growth.
Speaker AMold growth can lead to dust mites.
Speaker AIt can lead to a ton of other health hazards.
Speaker AAnd so you want to figure out what's going on.
Speaker ANow, if you're keeping under, that means you've got the chance of mold is going to be more localized versus on every surface.
Speaker ASo these are things you want to take a look for and try to prevent.
Speaker ANow, airflow is good, ventilation is good.
Speaker ABut really monitoring that humidity is a key piece of this whole thing.
Speaker ASo if you don't know, you don't know.
Speaker ANow here's how I like to test it.
Speaker AIf you don't want to go out and spend the money on a system that's going to put in sensors around your house, I get it.
Speaker AMoney's tight.
Speaker AAll you can do is jump on Amazon or your local home improvement store and get a outdoor weather sensor with the outdoor sensor and the indoor sensor.
Speaker ASo you could put that indoor sensor in a place like your kitchen or your bedroom, someplace like that.
Speaker AAnd then you can move that outdoor sensor around and measure the humidity in the other rooms and the temperature.
Speaker AIt will tell you what's going on.
Speaker AThat would be a good way to do that.
Speaker ASo that way you have it dialed in, you know where it is.
Speaker AIf you've got a crawl space and you've got a high humidity down there, that air is going to come up into your living space.
Speaker A60, 70% of that air can make it up into that inside of the house from a crawl space.
Speaker ANow the other issue you can have is if you're a slab on grade and you've got moist soil underneath there, and they built the house without vapor barriers and insulation underneath that, guess what?
Speaker AThat moisture can come up through the concrete into the house just like it would a basement.
Speaker ASo that's why I'm monitoring that and keeping it down is good.
Speaker ANow you might need to add a whole house dehumidifier that is going to go ahead and go through.
Speaker AAnd I don't like the little tiny ones.
Speaker AThose are pretty pointless unless you've got a really tiny space.
Speaker AYou want to do a built in unit that's built into your H Vac or in your crawl space where you've got one in there that is plumbed up so it's draining the water out and you're not creating this circular motion of kicking the water right outside and it kicks right back into the basement or crawl space.
Speaker ASo you Want to be careful of those and make sure that pumps out into the right space.
Speaker AThat way you get that moisture completely away from everything and you'll be good to go.
Speaker AThat is one of the biggest things you can do to really help in your indoor air quality.
Speaker ASo watch your humidity.
Speaker ASummertime in the south, you know it, that can be a big deal.
Speaker AArizona, not so much.
Speaker ABut you know something that does exist because you do get the monsoonal stuff.
Speaker AYou do get wet patterns, you do get humid patterns from time to time.
Speaker AAnd depending on where you're at in the state, whether you're in the mountains or out in the desert, it's something you should be careful of.
Speaker ASo 80% of the homes have a humidity issue of some kind that they're either treating or not treating.
Speaker AAnd if you don't have a dehumidifier, you might want to look and make sure you've got that dialed in.
Speaker AThose little ones are kind of junk.
Speaker AThey don't do enough square footage to make a difference.
Speaker AAnd if you put four, five, six or seven of those around your house, it's going to cost you way more money because you're running all those different motors and it's just not working right.
Speaker ASo you want to hook it into a system that's going to work.
Speaker AAnd that's where you want to talk to your H Vac professional and make sure that you've got that dialed in.
Speaker ASo there's number one on the list.
Speaker ANow number two is an important one.
Speaker AThis is where you should be using ventilation.
Speaker AYour bathrooms that have a shower, even a toilet, just a powder room, should all have a high quality bath fan in.
Speaker AAnd I'm not talking that builder grade 40 CFM1, that's the Newtone, little tiny ones that they put into every inexpensive builder grade home across the U.S.
Speaker Ai'm talking like a big Panasonic.
Speaker AI'm talking something that's going to move 100, 110, 120 CFM.
Speaker ASomething that's going to move enough air to make a difference.
Speaker ABecause in your bathroom you have sitting water.
Speaker AIn a toilet you have a shower maybe or a bathtub.
Speaker AYou've got people getting ready with all these VOCs that are in all of the hair care products, all the chemicals that are in the makeup, somebody's using a spray this spray that.
Speaker AYou want to get that stuff outside of the house.
Speaker ASo one, you're controlling humidity with the bath fan.
Speaker ATwo, you're taking those chemicals out, and three, you're just getting that air outside.
Speaker ASo it's not contaminating the rest of the house.
Speaker ASo really what you want to do and code requires this in most areas, you want to have a bath fan that has either a humidity sensor and or what code requires, which is a timer on there because you want to run that fan long enough so it airs out that space at least 20 minutes after you leave it.
Speaker ASo if you take a shower, get ready, you want to make sure that fan runs for 20 minutes after the fact.
Speaker ASo we'll talk more about that when we come back just after these important messages.
Speaker ADon't change that dial.
Speaker AWe're just getting started here on around the House.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouse online.com don't change that dial.
Speaker BAround the House will be right back after these important messages.
Speaker AI be allowed to be so hot, so many people without.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThis hour is brought to you by our friends at Monty McGrills.
Speaker ACheck them out at montymcgrills.com now we've been talking about my top 10 things that cause bad indoor air quality in your home.
Speaker ANow these are important ones.
Speaker AWe were just talking about high humidity and then not using ventilation.
Speaker AWe were talking about bath fans and how important that is.
Speaker AThe bigger one almost is kitchen fans.
Speaker AYour kitchen vent hood should or downdraft unit should be venting completely to the exterior and not ever have one of those recycling ones or what I call forehead duster fans.
Speaker AWhat are those?
Speaker ANow if you walk into your inexpensive home improvement store like your Home Depot or Lowe's many times, you'll see that bro Newtone one that calls it a air quotes recycling fan.
Speaker AThey're about as efficient as recycling toilets.
Speaker AYou're not filtering anything out of it.
Speaker AThey got a little charcoal filter.
Speaker AIt's not doing anything.
Speaker AIt is putting all of that bad air right back into the house and mixing it up inside.
Speaker AThat is a horrible thing for indoor air quality.
Speaker AThat is a useless unit.
Speaker ASo that needs to be taken out and really replaced with something that vents outside.
Speaker ANow in my area now this goes state to state, county by county, township, whatever your local jurisdiction is for building codes in most areas now they have adopted building codes that are more current which require that kitchen vent hood to vent all the way outside.
Speaker AProbably for 20 years in my state here in Oregon, they have required that.
Speaker AAnd it doesn't matter if I go into a condo unit that's a residential condo unit and they never had one.
Speaker AWe have to Figure out a way to put one in.
Speaker AAnd I appreciate that it's smart because you're getting all those bad gases, chemicals, all the stuff that comes from cooking outside.
Speaker ANow here in humidity as well.
Speaker ANow, I think this should be building code across the U.S.
Speaker Athe areas in states or whatever that don't have this as building code, I plead that you update this to make sure that we have safer, healthier homes outside for inside, for people, and get that stuff outside, because we want that to get out of the home so we have cleaner indoor air.
Speaker ANow, here's the thing.
Speaker AIt doesn't matter if you're cooking on a gas stove, a gas cooktop or electric one, or an induction one.
Speaker AThat cooking still gives off all the same chemicals, humidity, VOCs, all the different stuff that you're cooking still comes off.
Speaker ANow, with gas, you have a few extras because you've got combustion in there, which is a little more humidity sometimes.
Speaker AAnd of course, you've got some carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, all that stuff that needs to get out of the house.
Speaker ABut I do not believe if you have a correctly working gas appliance in your home, that adds much of an added danger to anything.
Speaker ABut you do need to have proper ventilation for that.
Speaker ANow, is induction cooking more efficient?
Speaker AYes, it is.
Speaker ACould I boil a pot of water on an induction cooktop faster than gas one?
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AEvery time but times.
Speaker AAnd they're getting cheaper.
Speaker ABut many times that induction cooktop or cooking surface is way more expensive in the upfront costs.
Speaker AAnd if you don't have the pans that have iron in them, you need to get those.
Speaker ANow, how those work is the induction cooking.
Speaker AYou'll see them in restaurants and things like that.
Speaker AIn some areas that are forcing you not to use natural gas, they're going to be more popular, even in restaurants.
Speaker ABut here's what you're seeing.
Speaker ASo these actually take the iron particles in the pan.
Speaker ASo it has to have something that has a magnet attached to it.
Speaker AIt accelerates those and it heats the pan up, not the cooktop itself.
Speaker ASo there's no flame.
Speaker AThat's not like a coil element that gets hot.
Speaker ASo it does that.
Speaker ASo the whole pan becomes a cooking surface.
Speaker AYes, it's a more efficient way to cook, no question.
Speaker ABut for the people that want to use gas out there, I have no problem with that.
Speaker ASo there's where you want to be.
Speaker ANow, you still want to get that air outside.
Speaker ASo really making sure you do that and making sure that you run that fan 10 or 15 minutes after you're Done cooking is smart as well.
Speaker ANow, here's the problem with vent fans.
Speaker AWe have those that are the microwave, over the range microwave hoods.
Speaker AI hate those.
Speaker AThey're dangerous and they don't vent.
Speaker AHow are they dangerous?
Speaker ABecause you're leaning over a cooking surface.
Speaker ASo it's one of my biggest pet peeves as a kitchen and bath designer.
Speaker AIn a small kitchen, sometimes it's your only option.
Speaker AI get it.
Speaker ABut there is no capture to them because they don't have a place for stuff.
Speaker ALike you open a pan lid and it poofs off all the stuff under the lid.
Speaker AIt rolls out and goes into the room.
Speaker ASo it doesn't work as well.
Speaker ASo those are things that you really need to pay attention to.
Speaker AIs that capture?
Speaker ASo they don't work well as hoods.
Speaker AThey don't move a lot of air.
Speaker ANow, hoods can move too much air.
Speaker AWhen you get over about 250cfm, depending on code in your area, you now have to have a makeup area that comes in.
Speaker AThat makeup air has to come in and replace that.
Speaker ASo that's where you bring in your H Vac professional.
Speaker AThey'll put in a damper, they'll probably put it into the intake of your H vac system with a filter, and they will bring in fresh air and introduce it into the home to replace that.
Speaker ANow, there's different ways to do it, but that is definitely not a DIY project.
Speaker AThat is something that they want to do the calculations and make sure they put that makeup error.
Speaker ABut that is something important, especially when you get up into the thousand twelve hundred cfm, that gets to be a really big problem with that.
Speaker ASo something to consider.
Speaker ASo that really addresses our fans.
Speaker AAnd laundry, I think is an important one as well to have that laundry in there to do that.
Speaker ABecause you've got moisture, you've got chemicals, you've got wet clothes.
Speaker AHaving something that kicks on at least to control humidity, to get that out of there is smart.
Speaker AWhen you get into an uncontrolled humidity situation and no AC or no dehumidifier, that can be an issue where the fan just runs and runs and then you have to go turn it off or figure out a way to do that.
Speaker ASo be careful with that.
Speaker AManage that correctly.
Speaker AThe next one is lack of air filtration.
Speaker AHow is the air filter in your home?
Speaker ANow, the biggest offenders, the people that have like the cadet heaters and the any of the radiant floor heats or ceiling heat or baseboard heat.
Speaker AAnybody without some kind of air moving device with A filter on it.
Speaker AYou're going to have low indoor air quality with particulate matter unless you're running a HEPA filter or something else in the house.
Speaker ASo that is another one of those that I think if you're remodeling a rental unit or an apartment, I think they should be putting this in as just a matter of having healthier air and healthier homes.
Speaker ANow the filtration is important.
Speaker AWhether you're running that HEPA filter unit that's sitting in your room or if you've got a good air filter for your furnace, changing it, keeping it going well and making sure it is dialed in is your answer for keeping that what they call PM 2.5 down low.
Speaker ANow with my system, when I put in my carrier Infinity system, we put in a D GAPPA air filter.
Speaker ANow that air filter really goes in and cleans up the air.
Speaker AIt uses a, a kind of a carbon ribbon in the filter there and it negatively charges that.
Speaker AAnd there's some almost like a bug zapper in there that really kills and captures anything when it hits it and it hits that drops it down into the air filter.
Speaker ASo it really cleans and captures.
Speaker ASo it takes care of dust, it takes care of viruses, it takes care of all those different things and it really leaves for a much cleaner air in the house.
Speaker ANow I also put in a one of the space age type basically air units as well that really cleans the air, but it almost cleans the air too good.
Speaker AAnd I say that because what happens is it'll sit there and kill any yeast because it's killing things on the countertops because the little particulate matter that's kind of like hydrogen peroxide comes down and you can't bake with that on.
Speaker AThe yeast won't rise.
Speaker ASo it's almost too efficient.
Speaker ANow when you come back, we're going to dive into some other ones.
Speaker AWe'll do that just as soon as around the House returns.
Speaker ADon't go anywhere.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouse online.com don't change that dial around the House.
Speaker BWe'll be right back after these important messages.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker ATo find out more about us, head over to aroundthehouse online.com thank you to all you that are listening on the radio, on the Talk Media Network or the podcast and the podcast player or streaming us on the different streaming channels it carries around the House show around the world I appreciate all of you.
Speaker AThis hour is brought to you by our friends at Monty McGrills.
Speaker AIf you're looking for that brand new barbecue, I just got another one here that's going over to my girlfriend's place and this Omni series, it's the 405.
Speaker AIt is a great barbecue.
Speaker AI love cooking on this.
Speaker AAnd we're gonna have a segment coming up in an around the House Northwest episode in June because this is where we're gonna wrap up our season here.
Speaker AAnd we've got some big stuff ahead for the show.
Speaker AStay tuned.
Speaker AAnd if you want to find out more information about the TV show, head over to around the house online.com we've been talking about my top 10 things that cause bad indoor air quality in your home.
Speaker AThis is how you deal with that stuff to make sure that your air is solid.
Speaker ANow, number one, we talked about, well, actually number zero on here, it's 10 plus one, of course, radon.
Speaker AMaking sure you've got the testing there and that's dialed in.
Speaker ABut really high humidity, not using ventilation and poor air filtration is what we were talking about in the first half of the show here of this hour.
Speaker ANow, the next one here is going to be surprising for some people.
Speaker AYou might be shocked.
Speaker AUsing those plug in style or even spray air fresheners can be just like vaping in your own home.
Speaker AI know people that have a bunch of those.
Speaker APlug them into the outlet oil air fresheners out there.
Speaker AIf you look at the liquid in there, you're just vaping it.
Speaker AYou're breathing that stuff in.
Speaker AIt's not healthy.
Speaker AYou're better to deal with the issue of the smell, do ventilation, capturing whatever that is, controlling whatever it is, whether it's a dog or anything else, a little more cleaning probably will do you better than to put that stuff into the air and into your lungs.
Speaker ATake a look at the air freshener.
Speaker AI don't want that stuff or the chemicals in it.
Speaker ASo be really careful with the air fresheners you're using.
Speaker AThat can be a big one.
Speaker ANow, the next one is interesting and this is something my friend Caroline Blazowski, America's healthy home expert, taught me.
Speaker AThose disinfecting wipes that come in the metal round, there's a couple different there's the blue ones, there's yellow ones, there's different colors of them.
Speaker ABut really those round canisters of disinfecting wipes those put up, those wipes put out so many VOCs and chemicals.
Speaker AShe could do an air quality test and look her up and you can find out if you want to have one of these air quality tests done.
Speaker AShe can basically tell you how many of those you have in your house by looking at the air quality test.
Speaker AThose things are always off casting tons of chemicals inside your house if you're going to use them.
Speaker AI get it for disinfecting, but I would store those out in the shed, not under the sink.
Speaker AThat's one of those things that those disinfecting wipes are really an air quality issue.
Speaker AThere are so many chemicals in those things that you're just introducing your home and a lot of your cleaners have these chemicals.
Speaker ASo an interesting test.
Speaker ATake your air quality monitor, wipe down a surface next to him, but the air quality monitor there, see what happens.
Speaker AThat way you can see what's going on.
Speaker AYou'd be surprised where the VOC go, what happens there.
Speaker AAnd just like when you buy a new couch or have new carpet installed, you put that air quality monitor there and you're going to go, wow, okay, that's huge.
Speaker AYou'll be shocked.
Speaker ADo a little of your own research and see what chemicals you're using and make sure that you're getting them correct.
Speaker ASo watch out for those household cleaning products.
Speaker AYou think you're doing something better and it smells nice and clean, you might be causing more of an issue by using that.
Speaker ANow, the next one here is big building materials and furniture.
Speaker ALot of formaldehydes out there.
Speaker AFormaldehyde is also naturally occurring.
Speaker AAn apple has a lot of formaldehyde in it.
Speaker ASo that's a big issue.
Speaker ATake control of what you're putting in your house.
Speaker AWhen you go to that fast fashion website out of China and you order a couch and it shows up, be careful what's coming in.
Speaker AThe wood, the fabrics.
Speaker AYou could have a nightmare.
Speaker AI was testing in my house and I found these super cheap pillows that my ex had bought.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker AThese things were kicking off tons of VOCs, tons of formaldehyde.
Speaker BBrutal.
Speaker AIt was affecting the entire room with two pillows.
Speaker ASo be careful with what you're doing out there.
Speaker AThat stuff can be.
Speaker AThat's where that air quality monitor can really make a big difference to walk around.
Speaker AYou'll be shocked.
Speaker AYou'll be absolutely shocked.
Speaker ASo watch those building materials, flooring.
Speaker AWe had that big thing with Lumber Liquidators years ago where they had the stuff that was falsely stamped with the carb saying that the California Air Resource Board had approved them for not having any added urea.
Speaker AFormaldehyde.
Speaker AAnd they met the standard and they didn't.
Speaker ASo that's where the issues are.
Speaker AThose glues are something you got to be very careful with because they're cheap, they work well, and they off gas a ton of formaldehyde.
Speaker ASo be careful there.
Speaker ANow, here's the next one here that Caroline got me on too.
Speaker AAnd I was shocked.
Speaker AStoring those chemicals in the garage that's attached to the home.
Speaker AThink about this.
Speaker AYou walked used to walk out into my garage, look on the shelf and I'd have brake clean.
Speaker AI'd have two different kinds of that.
Speaker AI have all this different stuff sitting there.
Speaker APaint strippers, paint thinners, roundup.
Speaker AGo down the list.
Speaker AAll these chemicals in there that were on my shelf.
Speaker AThe problem is your detached garage.
Speaker AAnd especially like mine, where the H vac system is located into it can easily grab the air out of there.
Speaker ASo then you're introducing that in.
Speaker ASo you're better off taking all those chemicals.
Speaker AMine is actually a located mine in some metal cabinets out in my carport that's outside.
Speaker AAnd then made sure everything was sealed up between that and now it's out in the air out there where it's not going to be off gassing in my garage.
Speaker ASo that is a super important one to make sure that you've got that dialed in.
Speaker ASo get all those chemicals out in a garden shed, something like that.
Speaker AIf you need an excuse to build a garden shed, there's a great one.
Speaker APut it out there where you can store all that stuff and just keep it away from the house.
Speaker ASo it's not bringing those things inside to your home.
Speaker AThat's a huge one right there.
Speaker AThat'll make a big difference on air quality and what you could do.
Speaker ATake that air quality monitor, go over there and take a look at it and see what's coming out of there.
Speaker ASometimes it's leaking out of cans you didn't think it would be coming out of, but it is.
Speaker ASo pay attention to that.
Speaker ANow, the next one here is a big one.
Speaker AAnd we're going to talk about this for a little bit.
Speaker AAnd we talked a little bit about it when we were talking about humidity.
Speaker ABut that crawl space or basement, if you have a crawl space, which is that little space that's underneath the house, that's got dirt, maybe dirt with plastic if it was done right.
Speaker AAnd you've got foundation vents around the house.
Speaker AIf you've got that, you go to crawl space.
Speaker AThat air down there is going to seep up into your home.
Speaker ANow if you have that old 90s 2000s cream colored carpet and you're like, wow, my vacuum is missing around the edges of the walls or even underneath the door.
Speaker AThis gets interesting.
Speaker AWhat is, you'll see that little dirty stain on the carpet.
Speaker AWhat is that?
Speaker AThat's a filtration.
Speaker AThat is the dirty air that is coming through and pushing that into the carpet fibers and it's getting like a air filter.
Speaker ASo those are air leaks around the base underneath the wall.
Speaker ASo that carpet is like a filter medium.
Speaker AAnd so that's how you can tell where that air is coming through and how dirty it is.
Speaker ASo what I recommend is getting underneath there.
Speaker AIf you've got a crawl space, I would go through there and really put down some heavy duty crawl space grade thick plastic, overlap it, seal it, tape it, get it sealed up as best you can and have some good foundation vents that'll air it out.
Speaker ANow here's the thing.
Speaker AIf you encapsulate that and seal it up completely, that does work.
Speaker AHowever, you now need to install either dehumidifier in that space or condition and heat and cool that space.
Speaker AWhich means you're gonna have to come in and resize your H vac system most likely.
Speaker ASo it's easier in most cases to go ahead and put in a any kind of a built in style like one Santa Fe makes or whoever you're using air filtration unit for inside your home.
Speaker AThat way you're good to go.
Speaker AThat would go in that crawl space, that's going to keep that humidity down and it's going to keep the air fresh down there.
Speaker AAnd then you can keep that sealed up.
Speaker AThat's a great way to do it.
Speaker AWhen you see companies come in and do it, they do a great job.
Speaker ABut it's going to be fairly expensive because you've got labor of people crawling around down there and those dehumidifier units are pretty darn expensive these days.
Speaker AThen we come back.
Speaker AWe're going to wrap up my top 10 things that cause bad indoor air quality just as soon as around the House returns.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouseonline.com don't change that.
Speaker BDial around the House.
Speaker BWe'll be right back after these important messages.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show.
Speaker AThe next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI am Eric G.
Speaker ATo find out more about us here at the show or if you want to send me a message, head over to aroundthehouse online dot com.
Speaker AIf there's a subject that you want to hear in an upcoming episode that we haven't covered.
Speaker AMake sure you check it out over there.
Speaker ASend me a message.
Speaker AI'd love to talk about something for you.
Speaker AAnd that would be at around the house online.com and this hour is brought to you by our friends at Monument Grills.
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Speaker AMonument grills.com We've been talking about my top 10 things that cause bad indoor air quality issues in your home.
Speaker AAnd to recap, we had radon high humidity, not using ventilation like bath fans, laundry fans or kitchen fans.
Speaker A3 Poor air filtration not filtering your air correctly.
Speaker AAnd again on that one there, just make sure you don't put too big a filter in.
Speaker AIf you put too big a filter in your H Vac system, that can freeze the system up in the summertime.
Speaker ASo always check that H Vac professional to make sure you've got that dialed in.
Speaker AAnd then using those air fresheners inside your home, those are bad offenders at putting out chemicals that you don't want.
Speaker AIt might smell fresh, but that's fresh chemicals that you've got you need to be very careful with.
Speaker ANow the next one here is household cleaning products to be careful with.
Speaker ANumber six building materials and furniture.
Speaker AWatch out for those formaldehydes and VOCs and that storing chemicals in your attached garage.
Speaker AAll those yard care, car, automotive, whatever chemicals can be really bad.
Speaker AAnd then we are just talking about a dirty crawl space or basement.
Speaker ANow the next one here is interesting and I can be an offender at this one.
Speaker ACandles and smoking open flame candles.
Speaker ABeautiful.
Speaker ADefinitely puts up.
Speaker AYou're burning wax, you're burning the wick, you're burning stuff up.
Speaker ANot the best for indoor air quality, is it?
Speaker AAwesome?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADo I like the battery ones?
Speaker ANot really.
Speaker ABut those candles can be really cool and be the great mood setter for relaxation.
Speaker ASo use them with care.
Speaker AMake sure you've got a good air filtration so that air filtration will take care of things in your home if you're using them.
Speaker ABut just use them wisely.
Speaker ANow smoking or vaping we don't have to talk about that too much.
Speaker AIf someone's doing that in the house.
Speaker AYeah, you're adding a bunch of stuff inside the house that you don't want.
Speaker ASo make sure that somebody's going outside for that.
Speaker ADon't introduce that into your home because that's going to hurt the air quality for everyone, including your pets.
Speaker ASo think about them.
Speaker ANow, one little side note, with pets, and that's another thing, when we go back to air filtration as well, pets give off a ton and a ton of dander.
Speaker APet hair, depending on the pet dogs, cats, whatever, just be very careful.
Speaker AYou will have to do more cleaning.
Speaker AYou will want to make sure, I think with Pats, having carpets a really bad idea because that hair just gets caught down in there and the dander.
Speaker AThis carpet is really the worst in your house for keeping things not clean.
Speaker AIt sucks down all of the.
Speaker AIt just hides all the hair and dander, dust mites, all that stuff.
Speaker AAnd it really just is a medium for holding dirt.
Speaker ASo, like my house here, I'm putting up for sale.
Speaker AI put all hard floor surfaces in.
Speaker AAny rugs were just area rugs and I went with that.
Speaker AAnd it really kept the air so much cleaner in there because it wasn't capturing all those things that were falling out of the air.
Speaker ASo just be careful with your pets out there.
Speaker AI love dogs.
Speaker AI love, love them to death.
Speaker ACats, not so much because I'm allergic, but just be careful that.
Speaker ANow the next one here is an important one and it's something that many of us do all the time and it's bringing in outdoor contaminants.
Speaker AWhat can that mean?
Speaker AIt's a beautiful summer day and you open up all the windows because it's 5 degrees cooler out there and you get that summer breeze.
Speaker AMaybe it's a coastal breeze, maybe it's fresh air coming out of the mountains.
Speaker AMaybe it's just springtime.
Speaker ABut the problem is, many times, and especially if you haven't cleaned your window screens, those can be a filter medium as well.
Speaker AAnd sometimes a nice little breeze will blow that right through there and into your home.
Speaker ASo sometimes the air quality is worse outside than it is inside.
Speaker AAnd you open up that windows, doors with the screens and all of a sudden you've worsened your indoor air quality.
Speaker APollen, exhaust from the roadway next to you or the freeway, any of those things.
Speaker AMaybe it's the mold and all the allergens coming out of the pond or the swamp near you, whatever it is, dust from the desert, all that Stuff can be an issue, so be careful of that.
Speaker ANow the next one is a big one and it's something that I'm doing a better job of.
Speaker ANow, shoes.
Speaker AYou walk in a city, especially like me in Portland.
Speaker AHere you walk downtown.
Speaker AThat is a biohazard sidewalk.
Speaker AThen you come home.
Speaker ADo you take the shoes off outside and carry them in and put them in a place?
Speaker ADo you clean those shoes up at all?
Speaker AWhat's growing on those things?
Speaker AAre you walking through your carpets of the house?
Speaker AWhat are you doing?
Speaker AIs that getting even worse?
Speaker ASo think about what you're dragging inside by wearing your shoes and boots inside the house.
Speaker AIs it good to have an area where you walk in that's a hard surface that you can keep clean?
Speaker ATake those off and store them away there.
Speaker AHow much sanitizing do you do of the soles of your shoes and how far do you carry them in the house?
Speaker ASomething to think about.
Speaker AThe same with your clothes.
Speaker AI'm a huge offender at this.
Speaker AI'll be outside working on the lawn.
Speaker AI'll be one of those things where you're walking around the house, you're coming in, you're coming out, cooling off, you're bringing all of those allergens and even chemicals inside your house.
Speaker ASo maybe you're better off coming in, throwing a set of clothes in the laundry room, swapping those out before you go hit the shower, get yourself cleaned up, get those clothes out of the house.
Speaker AThere we're into the laundry.
Speaker ASo it's going to get it taken care of.
Speaker ATurn on the vent fan, get it cleaned up that way.
Speaker ASo you're not bringing in all those dusts, allergens, chemicals, viruses, whatever that's out there into your home.
Speaker ASo be careful with all those.
Speaker AThose are all things that can be an issue.
Speaker AOther things that we have honorable mentions out there for indoor air quality.
Speaker AAgain, just making sure that you're using the right cleaners in your home, the right chemicals, that you've got good air filtration.
Speaker AThese are some of the keys there.
Speaker ANow finishes.
Speaker AWhen you're painting, pay attention or staining.
Speaker AWhat's off casting.
Speaker AI like cabinetry when they're put in.
Speaker AWe talked about it last week.
Speaker AEven cabinetry, that is a baked on finish, that's not going to sit there for months.
Speaker AIt still has to cure, but anytime something's curing, it's off gassing.
Speaker ASo always be careful with what paints.
Speaker AWe have a paint here locally that's recycled.
Speaker ANot going to use the name because I don't want to spare them anymore.
Speaker ABut that stuff, if you paint it, oh my gosh.
Speaker AThey have got a paint cocktail there that smells horribly and I don't know what they've got in it, but it's.
Speaker AThey recycle paint, which I love.
Speaker AIt's great.
Speaker AI won't use it.
Speaker AYou paint it on something until that cures it.
Speaker ASmells like 42 different chemicals.
Speaker AIt is the worst, nastiest smelling paint I've ever had.
Speaker ANow, I'm not that sensitive to chemicals like that, but holy smokes.
Speaker AStay away from the recycled paint.
Speaker AIn my opinion.
Speaker AIf it's outside, that's one thing, but inside that stuff is brutal.
Speaker AI'm gonna do some testing on it to see how it looks, how it works.
Speaker ABut I've had more viewers, more listeners, more people call me up that have used that stuff trying to be green and have really had chemical issues inside their home with it.
Speaker ASo I'm very curious to see what's going on there.
Speaker AIt is a big deal.
Speaker ASo be careful with recycled things.
Speaker AAnd the same thing goes for materials.
Speaker AIf you go get that old barnwood, where did it come out of?
Speaker APeople build.
Speaker AI'm gonna build a bat out of pallets or whatever.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWas that hauling around cancer causing chemicals?
Speaker AWhat was used that I've told about this story to designer friends and of course on this show before, but up in Tacoma, Washington area called Nally Valley.
Speaker AIt's called Nally Valley because that's where they started making Nally pickles.
Speaker AThey had these redwood vats that literally made pickles for 100 years.
Speaker AWe went, oh, this is beautiful.
Speaker AWe're going to build something out of it.
Speaker ACustomer bought the material.
Speaker AClient did.
Speaker AOh my gosh.
Speaker AThere was no way we were ever going to get that pickle smell.
Speaker AAnd I don't like pickles, so it was even worse for me.
Speaker AThere was no way you were going to make that pickle smell go away anytime soon without ruining the look of the wood.
Speaker AIt was brutal.
Speaker ASo be careful with recycled repurposed.
Speaker AThat can be pretty crazy.
Speaker AAll right, friends, that wraps up our first hour of the around the House show.
Speaker AIf you're listening on the podcast player, our two is up right around the corner.
Speaker AThanks for tuning in to around the House.
Speaker BMake sure you check out our video content on YouTube.
Speaker BJust type in roundthe house Ericg and make sure you subscribe and ring that bell for notifications when new videos are released.
Speaker BThank you for tuning in to the around the House show.
Speaker BIf you are on the radio, make sure you check out the podcast for additional content during the week on your favorite podcast player or at aroundthehouseonline.com we will see you next time.
Speaker ASam.