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Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook
Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook
Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook
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Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook

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This handbook has been especially prepared for you, either a new homeowner or one who recognizes that the home needs work. In this handbook are the tools necessary for its (your home) upkeep and my sincere hope to aid you with increasing its worth. Your home is like a fine bottle of wine. First, it must be bottled correctly to have value. Your home is that bottle of wine. A bottle of wine ages to perfection when the winegrower tends to his or her wine filled bottles. The winegrower watches each bottle and turns it at precise intervals. The surroundings must be just so, if it is to mature and increase its value. Your home must also be cared for on a continuing basis if it is to be enriched and increase in value. Only you and your family can act like the winegrower. You and your family are the winegrowers, bottlers and caretakers of your home. Your attention to all parts of the home on a continuing basis will assure that the quality and value of your home will increase. You can build a heritage for your family that you, the parents, can be proud of and that your children will remember all their lives. But, how can you accomplish this when you enter into your first ever, new home whether it is a newly built home or a previously owned home that you just bought or a home that you neglected to keep up the value. This handbook provides answers to most questions that you may have regarding maintenance and upkeep of your home. The information in this handbook, if applied, will also increase the value of your home.



As with wine, its storage is important to its aging well. In Unit 1, Safe Guarding Important Papers, you will find a list of important and very important papers relating to the original purchase of your home and supporting papers, deeds, mortgage papers, catalogs, warrantees and others pertaining to your home and the things in it. You are offered several techniques for their storage as well as ideas about when to get rid of certain ones.



Wine bottles are usually kept in a climate controlled place where the temperature and humidity are good for its life. In Unit 2, Utilities, you are given facts and ideas about your concern with electric, water, gas and heating uses. The Unit has a section on each type of utility that can make a definite positive change to the costs you face with utility bills. Employing some or all of these ideas can make a difference in your living conditions.



A house neglected looses value, even if you do not intend to sell and move into a different house. This compares to a wine cellar that is neglected. A wine cellar properly maintained ensures the quality of the wine over time. If neglected the wine sours and is lost. In Unit 3, the Exterior and Property of your house and Unit 4 the Interior of your house complete the Handbook. By using the Checklists and Periodic Charts for maintenance, you not only maintain the value of the home, but in many cases increase its value. Important information is provided on each area or part of the house in three parts:



A. A layman's description tells important but not too technical data and information about the part of the house being considered. B. A checklist of items that usually go wrong with that particular part of the house is provided. It has sufficient columns to make several separate inspections over time. C. A description of the work needed to be done is provided following the completion of the checklist.



After each section an FYI list of other facts is provided pertaining to the area being considered for repair or replacement.



At the end of Unit 3 and Unit 4 there are Periodic Tables that list each item (part of house), what to look for monthly, each spring, each fall and after a severe storm.

FYI here is a list of the items Parts of the house covered:



LanguageEnglish
PublisherXlibris US
Release dateMar 7, 2008
ISBN9781469104737
Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook
Author

Byron W. Maguire

Author Biography: My interest and experiences with home building and maintenance of homes began at age 17. Throughout my life I have always been close to building. Most recently, I was the Executive Director and Construction Superintendent for a home and community building non-profit agency; building over 29 new homes and helping rebuild those that could be saved after Hurricane Katrina slammed into the gulf coast. I have done almost every type of building and repair—some commercial and mostly residential—during some part of my life. I have a BS and MS in science. I have written and published books on building and I love building.

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    Homeowner's Self-Help Handbook - Byron W. Maguire

    Homeowner’s

    Self-Help Handbook

    Byron W. Maguire

    Copyright © 2008 by Byron W. Maguire.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in

    any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,

    recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission

    in writing from the copyright owner.

    This book was printed in the United States of America.

    To order additional copies of this book, contact:

    Xlibris Corporation

    1-888-795-4274

    www.Xlibris.com

    Orders@Xlibris.com

    45348

    Contents

    Homeowner’s Self-Help Handbook

    Invitation to Homeowner

    You Are A Homeowner

    UNIT 1

    IMPORTANT PAPERS

    UNIT 2

    MANAGING YOUR UTILITY EXPENSES

    UNIT 3

    TAKING CARE OF THE EXTERIOR OF YOUR HOUSE AND PROPERTY

    UNIT 4

    TAKING CARE OF THE INTERIOR OF YOUR HOUSE

    Homeowner’s Self-Help Handbook

    The Homeowners Self-Help Handbook has been prepared as a working handbook to help you solve many problems that the new homeowner will need to face. It also provides many ideas that you may find useful maintaining your new home. Its style and organization is such that any part can be used singularly or in concert with other parts as the needs arise. There are numerous charts that you will use to inspect specific parts of the house, gardens and lawns. These charts are next to inspection ideas and maintenance ideas for making fixes.

    Invitation to Homeowner

    This handbook has been especially prepared for you, either a new homeowner or one who recognizes that the house needs work. In this handbook are the tools necessary for its (your home) upkeep and my sincere hope to aid you with increasing its worth.

    Your home is like a fine bottle of wine. First, it must be bottled correctly to have value. Your home is that bottle of wine. A bottle of wine ages to perfection when the winegrower tends to his or her wine filled bottles. The winegrower watches each bottle and turns it at precise intervals. The surroundings must be just so, if it is to mature and increase its value. Your home must also be cared for on a continuing basis if it is to enrich it and increase in value.

    Only you and your family can act like the winegrower. You and your family are the winegrowers, bottlers and caretakers of your home. Your attention to all parts of the home on a continuing basis will assure that the quality and value of your home will increase.

    You can build a heritage for your family that you, the parents, can be proud of and that your children will remember all their lives.

    But, how can you accomplish this when you enter into your first ever, new home whether it is a newly built home or a previously owned home that you just bought or a home that you neglected to keep up the value. This handbook provides answers to most questions that you may have regarding maintenance and upkeep of your home. The information in this handbook, if applied, will also increase the value of your home.

    You Are A Homeowner

    It is the little things that make the home beautiful.

    It is the little things that also cause the home to deteriorate.

    It is the little things that can be afforded easily.

    It is the little things that can create a stressful impact on the budget.

    The little things that make a home beautiful include so many different items that the list could fill this page. Some of the most visible ones are walls, doors and woodwork free of marks, appliances and fans free of dust and dust balls, floors that shine free of scuff marks and stains, blinds and curtains free of collected dust and hung properly, fixtures and appliances in excellent repair and such things. Each of these few items can be maintained with little money. You just need to put items like these on a daily, weekly or other schedule. A can of wall paint and another can for woodwork and a brush plus some common cleaning supplies make and keep the home beautiful.

    The little things that cause a home to deteriorate quickly are the same ones that make it beautiful. Only this time you fail to establish a routine that corrects the little things before they become the many little things. Failure to wash up walls and woodwork marks periodically causes the room and home to take on an unkempt appearance. Failure to touch up scratches in painted surfaces adds to the deteriorated look. Fixtures that do not work properly or are damaged and left that way contributes visually to the derteiorated home. Using this handbook will help you establish periodic schedules to avoid this from happening.

    Little things that need to be maintained can cost so very little. Some examples are a quart of wall paint at about $11; woodwork paint costs about the same. A brush costs $8. A dust mop for walls and fans can be made from an old terry towel wrapped around a mop handle; cost $0. A bath wash for blinds with a cup of bleach and warm water cost about $0.30.

    Little things left to accumulate can result in major costs. Painting the entire room costs about $40. For about $26 you can

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