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Bellingham Home Inspection (King of the House)

By
Home Inspector with King of the House Home Inspection, Inc. Home Inspector Lic #207

When it comes to home inspection, this is pretty basic and you have heard it before: Keep the bushes, shrubs, trees and vines cut back from the siding and trim.

Not only will the vegetation keep the siding wet, or shall we say damp, but also the vegetation can hide problems and it makes a wonderful freeway for carpenter ants and other wood destroying insects.

 

Keeping the vegetation cut a foot back from the house is good for the homeowner and the home.

Thanks for stopping by,

Steven L. Smith

GeoLogo207

Posted by

Steven L. Smith

If you enjoy nostalgia and music of yesteryear, click on Elvis' gold record to visit This Day In History. To explore The Stories Behind The Music blog posts click on the electric guitar. 

 

        

 

 

 

 

Jay Lloyd
Cape Coral Florida - Cape Coral, FL
Allpro Home Inspection

Great advice Steven and it's on just about every one of my inspections. jay

May 26, 2010 04:43 PM
Charles Buell
Charles Buell Inspections Inc. - Seattle, WA
Seattle Home Inspector

The Inspectors who say Ni, A shrubbery?  You want me to bring you a shrubbery?

May 26, 2010 05:55 PM
Jay Markanich
Jay Markanich Real Estate Inspections, LLC - Bristow, VA
Home Inspector - servicing all Northern Virginia

I have very similar verbiage which prints on EVERY report I write.

May 26, 2010 11:56 PM
Sussie Sutton
David Tracy Real Estate - Houston, TX
David Tracy Real Estate for Buyers & Sellers

Oh yes your post is so true! My neighbor cut up a bunch of wood then stacked it up on her concrete porch and right up her brick wall.... but this area has seen a lot of termite activity and I thought to myself that she would soon have a termite problem.... luckily her son came and removed all the wood in a weeks time. I still wondered if they got any termites in the studs during that time.

Coming to you from Texas....

May 29, 2010 06:23 PM