Help for Homeowners - Ideas for Cooling Your House
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Coming at you with another in the "Help for Homeowners" series where Sonora, Twain Harte and Mother Lode area homeowners can find advice to help make their homes that much happier. (To read any of the first five posts in this series, click the following links: Showing Your Home, Decorating for Living Large, Gardening with Kids, Neighborhood Garage Sales or Say It With Flowers.) It's going to get hot in the Mother Lode according to the National Weather Service. Sonora, Groveland, Angels Camp and everywhere in between can expect temperatures in the 90s to around 100 degrees by this coming Thursday and Friday. What better time then to talk about ways to beat the heat? Today's blog post highlights ideas for cooling your house that won't empty your wallet...
Dear Homeowner,
There's more than one way to be cool. It's easy to head straight for the air conditioner on sizzling days and steamy nights, but sometimes low-tech, low-cost options can do the trick. Consider these non-mechanical options for beating the heat:
Landscaping
Deciduous trees on your home's south and west sides provide summer shade, but still lose their leaves to allow low winter sun to reach windows.
Block direct rays
Awnings, roof overhangs and exterior shades help reduce interior temperatures by absorbing solar radiation before it hits your windows.
Cook early and late
Household appliances such as washers, driers, ranges and ovens generate heat and humidity inside a house. By using these appliances in the morning and evening when it's cooler, you can help keep operating costs down.
Windows
Double or triple-pane windows slow the transfer of warm air, and some window glazings can actually bounce heat back. Take advantage of summer breezes, too. Bring in air through a small opening on the windy side of the house and pull airflow to a large window or door on the other side.
Insulation
Once you've generated cooler air inside the house, keep it there as long as possible. Insulate attic floors to keep the hot upper air at bay. Find the places where air sneaks in and out of your home and plug them up with caulk or weather-stripping.
For more helpful home advice, call Sugar Pine Realty/GMAC Real Estate at 209-533-4242 or EMAIL US HERE.
Dear Homeowner,
There's more than one way to be cool. It's easy to head straight for the air conditioner on sizzling days and steamy nights, but sometimes low-tech, low-cost options can do the trick. Consider these non-mechanical options for beating the heat:
Landscaping
Deciduous trees on your home's south and west sides provide summer shade, but still lose their leaves to allow low winter sun to reach windows.
Block direct rays
Awnings, roof overhangs and exterior shades help reduce interior temperatures by absorbing solar radiation before it hits your windows.
Cook early and late
Household appliances such as washers, driers, ranges and ovens generate heat and humidity inside a house. By using these appliances in the morning and evening when it's cooler, you can help keep operating costs down.
Windows
Double or triple-pane windows slow the transfer of warm air, and some window glazings can actually bounce heat back. Take advantage of summer breezes, too. Bring in air through a small opening on the windy side of the house and pull airflow to a large window or door on the other side.
Insulation
Once you've generated cooler air inside the house, keep it there as long as possible. Insulate attic floors to keep the hot upper air at bay. Find the places where air sneaks in and out of your home and plug them up with caulk or weather-stripping.
For more helpful home advice, call Sugar Pine Realty/GMAC Real Estate at 209-533-4242 or EMAIL US HERE.
Labels: broker, calaveras county, california, cooling, home, homeowner, hot, mother lode, real estate, realtor, saving energy, sonora, tips, tuolumne county, twain harte, weather
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