How to Ready Your Home for Winter

Winterizing your home is easier than you think. While it takes more than a roll of duct tape to get the job done, getting a role isn’t a bad place to start. Afterward, print the following list out, or scribble up a similar one of your own. When you’re finished with that, it’s time to get started.

Store outdoor furniture and tools

Simply throwing a tarp over your outdoor deck furniture, lawnmower, and other warm weather items won’t keep these expensive items immune from the damages of cold weather. Freezing temperatures can crack plastic, the weight of snow and ice can break glass, and sensitive internal components can be irreversibly damaged after months of exposure to extreme weather. Put these items in your garage, or in a self storage unit.

Stock up while you can

Stores only have so much floor space they can devote to snow shovels and bags of salt. When a snowstorm looms, you don’t want to be stuck without these essentials. Make sure you have what you need to dig yourself out of snow and sleet before the bad weather kicks in. This includes canned goods and potable water as well, in case the power should go out for a significant length of time.

Seal ducts, doors, and windows

This is where that handy roll of duct tape gets used. Estimates figure that the average home sees between one-tenth and one-third of its heat escape through unsealed ducts. Combine that with how much cold air can make its way through improperly shut windows and door cracks, and it’s easy to see how the energy bill can get so high in winter. Run through the house and seal those ducts, doors, and windows, using duct tape, heat-retaining plastic sheeting, and other means of insulation and encasement.

Switch ceiling fan direction

This is a little known piece of advice that goes a long way when it comes to winterizing your home. During the summer your ceiling fans should be moving in a counter-clockwise motion, which helps to push cold air down and bring hot air up, due to the angle of the blades. Reverse this, and you will cause cold air to be channeled upward while warmer air is distributed below.

It doesn’t take a big investment to prep your home for winter – nothing more than the cost of essentials and the $2.00 roll of duct tape. Spend an afternoon getting geared for the cold season, and thank yourself for it when winter finally arrives.