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Gutter Cleaning Tips
Gutter Cleaning Tips

Here s another great tip from BobVila.com. While it s a job many of us would love to ignore, gutter cleaning is an important twice-a-year ritual all homeowners need to adopt. When clogged gutters overflow, they can cause ice dams on the roof that force water inside your house. They can also get so heavy that they ll pull the gutters loose and rot the trim and siding. Even if your gutter doesn t fill to overflowing each season, leaving any decaying debris in there is an invitation to carpenter ants and mosquitoes. If you have a lot of trees around your house, you might want to clean your gutters even more frequently. There are lots of ways to do the cleaning. You can find inventions like tongs on an extension pole, shop vacuums with gutter nozzles or even a remote-controlled gutter-running robot. But most methods eventually involve getting on a ladder. If you have gutters above the first story or aren t comfortable on a ladder, you re better off hiring a pro. To clean your gutters yourself, wear gloves, a dust mask and safety goggles. Make sure your ladder is well-footed at all times and use a ladder stabilizer, or stand-off, to keep from denting and damaging your gutters. Scoop the debris into a garbage bag with a garden trowel, then rinse toward the downspout with a high-pressure nozzle on your hose and scrub it clean. Try to avoid spattering the siding in the process. Next, clear the downspouts with a hose or auger. Installing leaf strainers at the drain tops will cut down on the large clogs. When it rains, check for leaks and mark them with a china marker so you can patch holes or correct pitch problems when it s dry. There s debate about whether gutter caps or screens are worth the investment of up to $7 a running foot. Because nothing keeps all debris out, you still have to have your gutter cleaned every couple of years at least, and screens and caps make it much more difficult and expensive to do it. Find out more at BobVila.com: the ultimate home improvement web site! 2008 BobVila.com

Pliers Types
Pliers Types

Pliers are a relatively modern invention, and it is hard to imagine what people did without this versatile tool. There are a dozen or more kinds of pliers, and your toolbox should contain at least the big three: slip joint pliers, lock joint pliers, diagonal pliers. Also handy are rib joint, water pump, needle nose, long nose, locking, and lineman's pliers. When it comes to pliers, more is better.

Review of the Home Office Electronics
Review of the Home Office Electronics

Bob meets with Tim Woods in the 3rd floor office. Tim shows us the Panasonic PBX phone system which is ideal for a home business with conference call, paging, and intercom capabilities from anywhere in the house. The Web-based cam is another useful feature that allows the homeowner to monitor a room through a Web site accessible from anywhere in the world. Tim also explains that the homeowner's laptop has a wireless networking card from Cisco Systems, allowing wireless in-home internet access. The laptop also has a 64MB Secure Digital (SD) card reader that downloads music onto a card, which can then be played in the homeowner's car. Finally, Tim shows Bob the Panasonic Iris scanner. The Iris scanner interfaces with the homeowner's computer system allowing secure access to computer files.

History of Brooklyn, New York
History of Brooklyn, New York

To open the 14th season of Bob Vila's Home Again, Bob greets his viewers from the Brooklyn, N.Y., waterfront. Standing in front of the world famous Brooklyn Bridge, which was completed in 1883, Bob gives a brief history of the bridge's construction, and its subsequent impact on the surrounding neighborhoods along the water's edge. After World War II the neighborhood went into decline as warehouses and factories sat empty. In the early Eighties, pioneer urban developers started the conversion from vacant commercial space to upscale residential. This area, known as DUMBO, Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass, is the location of this year's first project. We meet the newest member of the Home Again cast, Chris Vila, who will be joining the show as the project manager. The building the father-and-son team have chosen to rehab is in total disrepair. Once a pepper mill, it has been abandoned and empty for several decades.

Working on the Mahogany Deck and Kitchen Appliances
Working on the Mahogany Deck and Kitchen Appliances

Bob Ryley does some work on the mahogany deck and kitchen appliances, lighting and cabinets are examined.

Spout-Nosed Wheelbarrow for the Easy Pouring of Concrete
Spout-Nosed Wheelbarrow for the Easy Pouring of Concrete

Al Williamson of AlTim, Inc., shows Bob the new spout-nosed wheebarrow they have designed to make concrete and liquid pours easier and more efficient. Liquid concrete for footings is poured into round sonotubes. A traditional wheelbarrow pours out of a wide mouth, wasting as much as two-thirds of the material as it slops out the sides. This innovative new design pours like a pitcher, leaving no waste, no spills. It is constructed of high-density polyethelyne to resist cracking in cold temperatures. The wheelbarrows have a solid cast frame, sturdy six-inch tires, and ash handles. They are in production now and should be available in home and building centers soon.

Installing Cedar Shingles
Installing Cedar Shingles

Bob Vila and carpenter Ron Jackson install Atlantic white cedar shingles and sidewall flashing. Ron points out the flashing runs under the asphalt shingle. Ron also shows Bob a shortcut to cutting shingles at the perfect angle to the opposing roofline.

The Home's Exposed Framing System
The Home's Exposed Framing System

Bob discusses the home's framing with Ryley. Since much of the framing will be exposed special care is taken with the construction. Ryley demostrates a few of the techniques and raises a large section of the cabin.

Land Conservation and Scientific Farming at Billings Farm
Land Conservation and Scientific Farming at Billings Farm

Bob visits the Billings Farm, home of Frederick Billings, one of the fathers of the land conservation movement in the United States, and takes a tour of the farm and museum with Bob Benz. Along with land management expert George Aitkens, Billings initiated the practice of scientific farming. One significant contribution was the importation of Jersey cows to improve the quality of the herd and thus the quality of the product - butter. While many farmers were leaving Vermont for greener pastures to the west, Billings set out to demonstrate that with improved herds, the same effort would provide greater profit. The tour also includes visits to the farm office, the dairy and through the family's private living quarters.

Discussing the Poured-in Insulated Concrete Form System
Discussing the Poured-in Insulated Concrete Form System

Bob meets with Larz Anderson from Owens Corning to discuss the Lite-Form Insulating System used in the garage's foundation. A poured-in-place concrete wall system, the forms are pre-assmebled and tied together on site, making them very easy to work with and great for last minute changes.

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