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September Splendor: 7 Reasons Why Washing Your Home’s Siding Should Top Your To-Do List This Month

As the days gradually grow shorter and the temperature begins to dip, September ushers in a sense of transition. It’s a month of transformation – where the vibrance of summer melds into the coziness of autumn and carefree days under the sun, settle into a welcome new routine. Amidst the back-to-school bustle and the anticipation of pumpkin-spiced everything, there’s one task that might not be on your September radar but deserves a spot at the top of your to-do list: Washing your home’s siding. September is the ideal time for this important home maintenance task. From weather conditions and seasonal grime to preserving your investment and boosting curb appeal, discover why homeowners should seize the September splendor and give their home’s siding the pampering it deserves. 1. Weather Perfection: The Goldilocks Zone One of the most compelling reasons to wash your home’s siding in September is the weather itself. September often boasts that elusive “Goldilocks zone” of temperatures – not too hot, not too cold. This gentle climate is ideal for giving your home a thorough scrub without having to contend with extreme heat or chilling cold. The moderate temperatures allow the cleaning solutions to work effectively without drying out too quickly or being compromised by frost. 2. Bid Adieu to Summer Grime Summer is a season of outdoor fun – barbecues, pool parties, and endless days of playing in the sun. While these activities create wonderful memories, they can also leave behind layers of grime on your home’s siding. Dust, pollen and dirt can accumulate and mar the beauty of your house. Washing your siding in September is the perfect opportunity to bid farewell to these remnants of summer and welcome the new season with a fresh, clean exterior. 3. Preparing for Fall Festivities As September unfolds, it also ushers in the anticipation of fall festivities. From cozy gatherings to seasonal decorations, your home is about to be the center of attention once again. Washing your siding ensures that your house looks its absolute best during these gatherings. Last but not least, remember to clean your roof and gutters before installing holiday lights to avoid unpleasant accidents.   4. Preserving Your Investment Your home is likely one of your most significant investments, and maintaining its exterior is key to preserving its value. Regularly washing your siding removes contaminants that can degrade the material over time. Mold, mildew, and algae growth can compromise the structural integrity of your siding, leading to costly repairs. By tackling this maintenance task before the long rainy season starts in the Pacific Northwest, you’re taking a proactive step toward safeguarding your investment. 5. Ward Off Winter Woes While September still retains a touch of warmth, it’s a strategic time to prepare your home for the colder months ahead. Winter weather can exacerbate the effects of dirt and grime on your siding. Debris that’s left untreated can become embedded in the material, making it harder to remove later. By cleaning your siding before winter arrives, you’re preventing the buildup of potentially damaging elements and minimizing the risk of long-term stains. 6. Enhance Curb Appeal Curb appeal isn’t just for those thinking of selling their homes. A well-maintained exterior enhances the beauty of your home and boosts its overall curb appeal. Whether you’re admiring your abode from the street or welcoming guests to your doorstep, a freshly washed siding exudes a sense of pride and care. September is the perfect time to enhance your home’s aesthetic allure and make a lasting impression on visitors and passersby alike. 7. The Eco-Friendly Advantage Choosing September for your siding-cleaning endeavors aligns with eco-friendliness. With cooler temperatures, you’re less likely to rely on excessive amounts of water to remove dirt and grime. Additionally, many eco-friendly cleaning solutions work best in moderate temperatures, making September a suitable month to choose greener alternatives for your home maintenance tasks. September is a month of promise and transition, making it a fantastic time to tackle the important task of washing your home’s siding. By preserving your investment, safeguarding against winter woes, enhancing curb appeal, and embracing eco-friendly practices, you’re not just cleaning your home – you’re setting the tone for a season of renewal and transformation. So, take advantage of this time to start a new home maintenance routine that puts your exterior home maintenance on auto-pilot.

September Splendor: 7 Reasons Why Washing Your Home’s Siding Should Top Your To-Do List This Month Read More »

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How to Clean Your House and Deck Without a Pressure Washer

Cleaning your house and deck yourself poses many challenges and risks, especially in the Seattle area. This blog will inform you of these challenges and risks to better determine if this type of home improvement project is for you. If so, you will be better prepared to clean your house and deck safely and effectively.  Why You Should Soft Wash Your House and Deck Instead of Pressure Washing Many of DAPrDAN’s customers are homeowners who contacted us after damaging their property using a pressure washer themselves. Pressure washing, also known as power washing, requires less equipment and is seemingly cheaper than soft washing. Hence many homeowners make the mistake of pressure washing their homes. Sadly, hidden costs became known during and after the job. As we’ve established, pressure washing your home can damage the siding and roof. If you are fortunate enough to avoid property damage, you still have to deal with ineffective results. Pressure washing only removes debris from the surface resulting in growth returning at a faster rate, like a haircut. To safely and effectively clean your house and deck, you need to soft wash.  Soft washing is a gentle method of cleaning your roof and siding at a deeper level. The ingredients in a soft wash remove algae, moss, and other debris at the root to give you a brighter and longer-lasting clean. Many homeowners use Spray and Forget and Spray and Walk Away to clean their house and deck. These are preferable to pressure washing but pose unique challenges for DIY homeowners.  What are the risks with DIY soft washing? As noted in our previous blog, “Is Pressure Washing with Chemicals Bad?”, the correct application of chemicals on your property is perfectly safe. Unfortunately, most homeowners are not trained to apply soft washing ingredients correctly. Misapplying a solution that a trained professional can safely apply can lead to liability for toxic chemicals entering the water system and causing damage. Additionally, you can damage or kill your plants by misapplying a solution that a trained professional can safely apply. For example, another blog, “Is Soft Washing with Bleach Harmful to the Environment?” notes that bleach in soft washing is NOT harmful to the environment when correctly applied. However, without adequately containing bleach or another chemical you use, you risk the solution landing on your plants and impacting them in one or more ways.  Some plants will fight the chemical by dropping their leaves, resulting in a bare plant. If the chemical gets into the soil, it will kill the bacteria in the root system (most cleaning solutions are anti-microbial), which will kill the plant. Because Bellevue, Camano Island, and all other towns in Puget Sound are rich with vegetation, the chemicals used for soft washing will get on your plants. This doesn’t just apply to the DIY homeowner. It’s true even when trained professionals, like DAPrDAN, soft wash your house and deck. However, qualified professionals know they must reintroduce healthy bacteria and nitrates into the soil immediately when soft washing. When you hire DAPrDAN for a house wash, two technicians perform the job, primarily so one can dilute the chemical and reintroduce the healthy bacteria and nitrates into the soil as the other washes the house. More to Consider When Washing Your House and Deck If you accept the risks we’ve noted so far, it’s essential to understand the additional work required for the types of surfaces you will wash. Natural surfaces, like wood, need to be replenished with conditioners after being cleaned. Because metal is oxidizing, it requires more physical effort to clean. Consider applying a waxy finish to give it a better shine when you’re done, which DAPrDAN does for its customers. Paint is also oxidizing (most of the time) and prone to bubbling and chipping. Washing painted surfaces can exacerbate this without understanding the proper pressure to apply and the correct ratio of ingredients in your solution. Additionally, contractor-grade paints fade on the west side of your house. DIY cleaning can cause more fading. If you wash vinyl siding, use NO pressure.  Many homeowners will buy a ladder or pole to wash those hard-to-reach places. Without proper training, this can be dangerous. Before you begin washing your house yourself, consider how safely and comfortably you can be on a ladder while still effectively cleaning your home. Is it worth saving a few dollars? Even if you’re comfortable with that risk or don’t need to be on a ladder (perhaps you’ll use a pole?), can you wash your house as effectively as a trained professional can? Another component of DIY house and deck washing that many homeowners neglect is the level of physical labor required. Even if a homeowner starts their project safely and effectively, they often cannot maintain that level of care throughout the project. Either they’ve grown impatient with the time it’s taking and rush to complete the job, or they’ve grown physically tired and cut corners (or both). If you want to go the DIY route, make sure you’ve prepped mentally for the required time and effort. DAPrDAN’s bias is that you hire us to wash your house and deck. Putting that aside, we still want you to understand the implications of the DIY route. On the surface (pun intended), washing your house and deck looks like a simple point and spray. Now you know it’s more than that, so you know what to expect if you choose DIY.  If you don’t think DIY is worth the risks, time, effort, and likely less effective results, contact DAPrDAN.

How to Clean Your House and Deck Without a Pressure Washer Read More »

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Is Pressure Washing with Chemicals Bad?

Customers often wonder if we pressure wash with chemicals. Before we address that, let’s clarify the use of the term “pressure washing.” This term is often used mistakenly when customers mean “soft washing” or “house washing.” We use different cleaning systems for specific parts of your property to ensure the job is done right and without any damage to your home. You don’t want us to pressure wash your roof or siding like we would your driveway (see our blog on The Power of Soft Washing to learn more). With that technical clarification aside, let’s move on to the topic this blog will clarify.  When our customers ask, “Do you use chemicals,” what they’re really asking is, “Are your practices eco-friendly?” After all, just about everything is a chemical. It’s not about whether or not we use chemicals. It’s about which chemicals we use and if they are harmful to our customers, their property, or the environment. What is a chemical, and does that apply to house washing? The word “chemical” conjures the image from the original ‘Batman’ movie with Michael Keaton and Jack Nicholson when the Joker fell into a vat of chemicals. It was slimy and obviously toxic. But not all chemicals are. If you jump into a pool of pure water, you’re jumping into a chemical.  Technically, a chemical is any substance consisting of matter. Hydrogen and oxygen make up water (H2O); most toothpaste contains zinc oxide (ZnO). Both are chemicals, safe, and eco-friendly. Furthermore, chemicals are often necessary to improve the safety and cleanliness of a given environment. For example, chlorine dioxide (CIO2) is used to disinfect drinking water (article here). And, as we noted in our blog on soft washing with bleach, the context and use of a chemical dictate whether or not it’s safe. While bleach is an effective chemical for stopping the spread of Covid-19, it should not be ingested or injected (article here). Hopefully, you didn’t need this information, but you may be eligible for a Darwin award if you did.  Our snarkiness aside, it’s not about whether or not your exterior cleaning services contractor uses chemicals. It’s about which chemicals they use and how.  Does your contractor use eco-friendly soft washing chemicals? DAPrDAN’s mission is to serve you. If chemicals were inherently harmful to you, your property, or the environment, we would not use them. Also, we’d be out of business since we wouldn’t be able to clean your home without them. Therefore, when our customers ask if we use chemicals, we inform them that every solution we treat their property with is both a chemical and biodegradable, which means it will decompose by natural biological processes. So, when you’re shopping for eco-friendly pressure washing, ask the contractor if the chemicals they use are biodegradable (and confirm they won’t actually pressure wash your roof or siding, as we stated in the introduction). If they don’t use biodegradable chemicals or aren’t sure, run in the opposite direction. Contractors new to the business are known to inadvertently create homemade mustard gas by mixing chlorine bleach with phosphate-based dishwasher detergent. Your exterior cleaning services contractor should know which chemicals they use because they mindfully chose them with you, your home, and the environment in mind. And, if they did mindfully choose non-biodegradable chemicals, well…we don’t know what to say to that. It’s just not good for anyone. Prior to eco-friendly chemicals for soft washing, houses were washed with high pressure and water. While this seems environmentally friendly, its consequences were not. Because the high pressure tore off the home’s paint, primer and new paint were used to replace it. Both these chemicals are not eco-friendly. Everything DAPrDAN does, including the chemicals we use and the methods we apply them, is on purpose with your well-being in mind. This is why we are certified by Softwash Systems, which is vital for many reasons, including the fact that we use their biodegradable cleaning solutions. Softwash Systems went to great lengths early in their tenure to create a biodegradable cleaning solution. (i.e., eco-friendly). They’ve always been committed to eco-friendly practices. In their own words, they are not “a new GREEN company.” Hopefully, when you read what they write on their Chemicals page, you will disconnect the association between the word “chemical” and the Joker’s vat in ‘Batman’ and replace that association with a clean home in a lush, vibrant neighborhood. Or even better, maybe you can think of DAPrDAN instead (*wink wink*).  Can you clean your property without chemicals? Whether soft washing your roof or pressure washing your driveway, chemicals are necessary to treat your property with the appropriate care to get the job done right. This is the case because everything is a chemical, as we’ve already established, and because effective cleaning solutions applied by qualified technicians will remove dirt, debris, and organic growth while preventing it from growing back. Fortunately, you now know that this is not a bad thing. Now that we’ve alleviated your anxiety about chemicals, we must state the obligatory and obvious, though true: if your property needs any exterior cleaning services, DAPrDAN is your trusted partner with your best interests in mind serving Seattle and surrounding cities, including Burien, Medina, and Deer Harbor.  Get an instant quote today.

Is Pressure Washing with Chemicals Bad? Read More »

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Is soft washing with bleach harmful to the environment?

Well-intended homeowners often do themselves a disservice when hiring to have their roof or siding cleaned by not fully understanding bleach, its role in soft washing, and its actual impact on the environment. Arriving at a well-informed perspective of bleach requires digging into specific details and the whole context in which a homeowner or professional might soft wash with bleach. By the end of this blog, you’ll have the information you need to decide what is best for you and your home.

Is soft washing with bleach harmful to the environment? Read More »

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