White flowers blooming in spring

Spring Cleaning: Why You Should Clean Your Gutters Every Spring

You’ll need to accomplish a number of seasonal tasks as winter gives way to spring in order to maintain your property appropriately. A few spring cleaning tasks include dusting and cleaning around appliances and difficult-to-reach places inside the house, caulking any minor cracks or holes made in walls, doors, or windows, and sweeping and washing your garage floor after a nasty and long winter.

While each of these tasks is crucial, you must always be sure to include gutter cleaning in your yearly spring cleaning schedule.

Here are a few main justifications for why cleaning your gutters is important.

Avoid Ruining Your Rain Gutters

Your gutters fill up with a lot of debris over the fall and winter. Insects, animals, sticks, leaves, garbage, ice, and wetness are all present. When permitted to remain in your gutters for an extended period of time, each of these things has the potential to harm them.

All of these things that accumulate will block the rain gutters on your home if gutter cleaning is neglected. Numerous problems are brought on by clogged gutters. Clogs firstly prohibit your gutters from carrying out their main function, which is to direct the water and precipitation that runs from your roof into your gutters. Additionally, rust can develop if obstructions in your gutters prevent water from draining properly and safely away from your house. Your gutters may eventually get broken as a result of rust.

A short and simple spring cleaning is a terrific method to keep your rain gutters from getting damaged so you don’t have to replace any of them or possibly even the whole system.

Damaged gutters lead to a damaged house.

It’s a costly and sad situation when your gutters need to be replaced or repaired due to damage. It may, however, be lot worse. Your home may also sustain harm from clogged gutters in addition to them. As was discussed in the section above, if your rain gutters don’t correctly direct water away from your property, it either accumulates in the gutters or stays on your roof. That water may enter your home’s structure in either of these cases.

The most typical entry point for water into your house is through weak seals and fractures. Water damage, mold growth, and mildew can quickly follow the entry of water. Your home’s foundation is in danger if the damage to your gutters occurs later in the channeling process. Water that accumulates close to the exterior of your house has the potential to leak into the basement of your house and harm the foundation.

Bugs & Critters

Insects and other creatures love to linger around in a clogged, filthy rain gutter. Once you have animals hanging around in your gutters, it won’t take long for these cunning little annoyances to find a way inside your house. Any homeowner who has had to deal with a bug or critter problem in their home will attest to how annoying it can be.

You may make your gutters less inviting for animals and insects to hang out in and use them as a scouting post for entryways into your home by cleaning them out each spring.

Guard the paint on your house.

Water that is backed up in your gutters often begins to trickle down or leak over the sides of your house. This is dangerous for your foundation and roof, but the dampness may also harm the paint that makes you stand out. Over time, trickling water that has built up causes harm to your paintwork since the paint begins to flake off from the abuse of moisture.

If your gutters are dirty, the water will wear down and harm the paint of your house, necessitating a long ladder climb to touch up the damaged areas with new paint.

Keep Ice Dams at Bay

In Minnesota, where winters are consistently long and bitterly cold, ice dams are a very real and unpleasant problem that homeowners need to be aware of. How do ice dams work? Infrequently cleaned gutters become clogged, which means they will hold water. When winter arrives, that water freezes. A massive chunk of ice known as an ice dam will eventually form from that frozen water over the course of the long winter.

Your roof and gutter system’s capacity to direct water away from your home is severely hampered by ice dams. The likelihood that water trapped beneath, atop, or next to the ice dam will seep into your home and cause havoc increases significantly as a result.

Spring Cleaning Your Gutters with Gutter Maids

Your gutter system, as well as your house, is vulnerable to a number of bothersome problems without routine rain gutter cleaning. Call us to learn how to keep your home secure this spring. In order for you to relax and enjoy the weather this spring and summer, we’d want to thoroughly examine and clean your roof and rain gutters. To speak with the gutter company with a 5-star rating, call now.