Just started this spring and everything has gone well. Looking ahead to to cold months and have some questions for you Northern guys. We don't often have snow that sticks for long here.
How do you keep your crews busy in these cooler months? I have thought about offering the service to businesses of cleaning off the salt from their sidewalks that gets tracked into their business after a snow. Maybe going in 2 days after a snow and hot water washing it off. Could clean leaves from gutters but don't really like that. Give me ideas.
__________________
All Washed Up 505 Carriage Hill Drive Forest, VA 24551 434-841-9889 David@AllWashed.com
cleaning off the salt from the walks would kind of defeat the purpose for having it done wouldn't it ? The price of having the salt applied is not cheap. I am sure most companies would not want it washed away. You might do better researching liquid ice melt, and offering this to companies instead of using salt.
Roof Cleaning Grand Rapids Michigan 616-914-9064 wrote:
cleaning off the salt from the walks would kind of defeat the purpose for having it done wouldn't it ? The price of having the salt applied is not cheap. I am sure most companies would not want it washed away. You might do better researching liquid ice melt, and offering this to companies instead of using salt.
I will be shutting down for the winter months in Ontario, I will be roofing new custom homes in the winter and most likely I will be getting calls for snow removal on roofs!
After last season's big snows that piled up on roofs there were a few roof collapse's and even more ice damming damage (which made a lot of ceiling repairs/repaints). Maybe you guys who just do cleaning can inplement roof snow removal as NO plowers do it that I've ever seen.
Its on my list of ancillary services to be offered.
-- Edited by Maverick Contracting on Wednesday 12th of October 2011 07:11:00 AM
You don't need to get ALL the snow off, just keep it from building up esp. at jam points like valleys etc. I can see it now, a homeowner bitch'n theres still a few flakes up there
You can use a torch but BE CAREFUL, seems every year theres a story of someone burning down a house with a torch. Usually their own because, well, there idiots
Search for snow torch, had a link to northern tools but was waaay to long.
If using a torch think of things like vinyl siding etc
-- Edited by Maverick Contracting on Wednesday 12th of October 2011 08:29:28 AM
I'm talking to a friend of mine who install heat tape for a living. He's going to give me some ideas for the winter on Friday. I'll get back to you guys after speaking with him. Installing a heat tape as a preventive measure may be a good service to add during the winter to avoid costly ice dam issues.
__________________
Extreme Cleaning Solutions (410) 980-1053
Phil Rogers
Click Here to View Our Website
Click Here for an Instant Quote
Roof Cleaning and Pressure Washing in Anne Arundel County, and Howard County, Maryland
yes there is many products that can be offered such as ice dam heated cables at the gutter line, ice dam "matting", snow "rakes", etc. When I get time I'll dig up all the info I've compiled.
Gary, up here we can sometimes get (as in last year) 2-3 feet of snow pile up on roofs that may stay for months and we have had numerous collapses but even worse is the amount of ice damming damage that happenes when snow melts during the days sun melt and refreezes at night then the next days meltwater gets up underneath the slate/shingles etc and leaks into the house doing significant wall and ceiling damage resulting in mold/plaster damage that is big bucks to fix plus property damage in the form of furniture valuable paintings etc. We deal with a lot of this.
Kentucky is NOTHING like the northeast weather, Hell even Texas and Florida "get" snow but its not the same beast.
-- Edited by Maverick Contracting on Wednesday 12th of October 2011 02:35:44 PM
I'm talking to a friend of mine who install heat tape for a living. He's going to give me some ideas for the winter on Friday. I'll get back to you guys after speaking with him. Installing a heat tape as a preventive measure may be a good service to add during the winter to avoid costly ice dam issues.
Upselling heat tape (heated wire) to your past customers after the cleaning season ends in cold areas (like oct-dec. for example) is a good way to make up for the lack of roof cleaning income followed by snow removal in the snowy months (Jan-March?) in which you can use the opportunity to sell those HO's on spring roof cleaning.
Maybe I should just PM this info for you guys?T.M.I.
I would like to ask those in VA, NC, TN, MD areas where you get snow but it usually melts in a couple days after it falls. What do you do if anything to keep your guys busy during this off time. Many days Dec-Feb it is warm enough to clean homes but it naturally slows. Please share your ideas.
__________________
All Washed Up 505 Carriage Hill Drive Forest, VA 24551 434-841-9889 David@AllWashed.com
commercial snow removal/salting for walkways, sidewalks, etc. since we're not equipped for roads (yet). commercial salting can be done almost every morning/night if it's below freezing for some locations. residential snow removal, christmas lights, interior painting, and thinking about getting into kitchen exhausts, even though the margin is horrific it will create an opportunity for pressure washing, salting, etc.
we've been fortunate in the northeast recently but it's best to be somewhat diversified as these winters don't come around often.
I reread the initial post and think Dave (all washed up) is in a situation whereas its too cold to clean roofs, yet snow is not an issue in that it melts too fast to be a problem. So what can he do to get by? Interior painting yes but the painting bus suks and he needs something fresh to explore. Still thinking of a niche market for you mid-atlantic guys to exploit.
This thread gave me a great idea on those of us who do deal with snow problems a great potential niche market opportunity. Gotta do some brainstorming and research but it might be a gamechanger. will keep you guys updated if it has potential. (and its "eco-green!?")
I'd starve to death before I painted! LOL and customers would rather me starve than paint their house, trust me!
i hear you Phil, it's the worst ... that being said, i did 3 garage clean outs this spring and have 1 lined up next week, includes pressure washing & painting, and the money is pretty good. definitely not something i'd like to do often, but during the winter if it can add 10k to your bottom line it beats doing nothing.