Folks, I hate to say it, but here in the northwest it is that time of year. What time of year you might ask. Well it is that time of year when you need to clean the roof and the gutters. All of the needles and leaves from all of the trees are now in valleys of your roof and down in the gutters. Such debris blocks drainage and, frequently, leads to gutters not functioning at all. The subsequent leaks can rot structure such as the fascia behind gutters. Bearer of bad news that I might be, the time is now -- get the gutters clean so they will function during all these hard rains. If you cannot clean the gutters and the roof yourself, hire someone who can. Thanks for stopping by, Steven L. Smith

Down below George's head, in the body of this article, is a photo of the culmination of lots of work. For three weeks these students have been enveloped by the intense home inspection training program that is offered at Bellingham Technical College. This program is one of only a few courses that are approved by the state to meet the new state requirements for a "fundamentals of home inspection" class. When I say this is the culmination of their work, I mean that these students are taking their final test which consists of more than 200 questions. The test helps them begin to prepare for the next phase in their careers -- passing the state exams and getting fully licensed. The Bellingham Technical College course consists of three weeks of classroom education followed by a week of field training. The Bellingham Technical College program has legs, having been in existence for nearly 15 years. It is, at this time, the only college level home inspection training in the state and the college provides graduates with a certificate showing that they have completed a state college level course. Many students choose Bellingham Technical College, when they are looking for training, due to the longterm credibility and the reputation of the program. Thanks for stopping by, Steven L. Smith


There are people who refer to those of us in the wet northwest as "moss-backs." It is not really such an inaccurate description -- even if it is not so flattering. We get lots of rain and we have many shade trees. You put that together and we end up with moss on roofs and lichen too. The photo below is a roof that is only seven years old. It is good quality material but it needs to have the moss removed. Even if a homeowner cannot safely get on a roof to get the moss off, it is very important to have the job done by someone. Around the Bellingham and Whatcom County area, there are many companies that will go up on a roof and, at a reasonable fee, take care of this job. If anyone local needs the name of a reliable party, give me a call. There is a fellow that I recommend, and whom I hire for some of my rental properties. The job needs to be done every year at most houses, and can often be tied in to gutter cleaning. Thanks for stopping by, Steven L. Smith

In an earlier post I wrote about the way many TV dish installers leave vulnerable spots on the roof. That is a real problem in this wet climate. The post was called So Likely To Leak. These do-it-yourselfers and so-called pros sink fasteners through the surface of the roof and, in so doing, there is an increased potential of leaks. Someone asked, at my previous post, if real installers are guilty of this or just homeowners. Based on what I see, many of the installers are inept -- a bunch of sub-contracted out part-time kids and they cause many of the problems. Another favorite method, that is highly related to the above topic, is the practice of running the wires from the dish through the gutter. Gee, here is a nice trough to stick our wires in. They do not realize that, in so doing, they have blocked the gutter and all sorts of icky debris will collect at the wire. Drainage zero! I know that this creative routing of the wires was the work of a highly trained "professional" dish installer. Thanks for stopping by, Steven L. Smith

We home inspectors often talk about plumbers who take a bite out of beams, floor joists, you name it, down in basements and crawl spaces. They can solder, cut, glue and make drains run downhill, but they can be menaces to the structure they work on. There is a similar menace on many roofs. I see this one a whole lot in this community. That menace is either an overzealous home owner or someone who works for one of these dish TV companies. These folks get up on the roof, about any place they please, and then they screw their dish fasteners onto the roof surface. In so doing, they put holes or penetrations right down into the roof and sheathing. Sometimes these are long bolts -- worse than a simple roofing nail. On at least two inspections, when entering the attic, I found leaks around the fasteners at these dishes. Somebody needs to give dish installers a basic course in not wrecking roofs. It seems like, one of these days, some homeowner is going to get a good dose of attic mold, sue one of the installation companies, and the companies might start better training the installers. As for the homeowners who do their own work of that caliber, the more you do this job of inspecting, the more you realize that there is no hope of redemption for most of them. Thanks for stopping by, Steven L. Smith

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