Winter wears on … and what not to do about it

1 MIN READ

This winter has not been kind to roofs. Beginning with Hurricane Sandy, followed shortly after by Storm Nemo, and multiple severe storms across the midwest, the southern plains and west, this winter has left a string of damaged roofs throughout the country … and, apparently, it isn’t letting up.

While high winds and ice dams are the main culprits of winter roof damage, sliding snow and ice wreak havoc on roof edges, gutters, and even passers-by. The solution, of course, is snow guards (or other retention systems) and insulation, not ice melting systems. The gutter is not the source of an ice dam, and hot wires are not a solution.

Good advice to pass along.

About the Author

Clayton DeKorne

Clay DeKorne is the Chief Editor of the JLC Group, which includes The Journal of Light Construction, Remodeling, Tools of the Trade and Professional Deck Builder. He was the founding editor of Tools of the Trade (1993) and Coastal Contractor (2004), and the founding educational director for JLC Live (1995). Before venturing into writing and education for the building industry, he was a renovation contractor and carpenter in Burlington, Vt.

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