Tag: appraisals

  • Monitoring Your Roof During Winter Thaw Cycles in Vermont

    Monitoring Your Roof During Winter Thaw Cycles in Vermont

    A Homeowner’s Guide to Preventing Ice Dams, Leaks, and Unwelcome Surprises

    Winter in Vermont is a season of layers—fresh snowfall, bitter cold, and then, more often than we’d like, the sudden shift into above-freezing temperatures. These short-lived thaws can feel like a welcome breather from deep winter, but they bring challenges that often go unaddressed—specifically, what’s happening on your roof.

    While homeowners usually think of snowstorms as the main threat, it’s the freeze-thaw cycle that quietly stresses roofing materials, encourages ice dams, and opens pathways for water intrusion. Paying attention, especially during the melt, can prevent damage long before it becomes visible.


    Why Thaw Cycles Matter

    The physics are simple, but the consequences can be expensive.

    1. Snow melts from heat rising out of the living space below
    2. Water runs down the roof slope
    3. Temperatures drop again
    4. Meltwater freezes at the eaves, gutters, and overhangs

    This expands into what we know as ice dams—ridges of ice that trap water behind them. When that water has nowhere to go, it pushes upward beneath shingles, seeps into attic insulation, sneaks behind siding, and eventually shows up in the places homeowners dread most: ceilings, walls, and flooring.

    No single thaw event creates major damage on its own. It’s the repetition—day after day of melt and freeze—that stresses the system.


    What Homeowners Should Look For

    A quick walk around your property during a warm spell can be surprisingly revealing. You’re not looking for perfection—just early signals that help you stay ahead:

    1. Uneven Snow Melt
    A uniformly snowy roof is usually a good sign. Patches of bare roof while the rest remains snowy often point toward heat loss.

    2. Icicles—Pretty, but Informative
    Tiny icicles are normal. Large, heavy curtains of ice hanging along the eaves may signal trapped water or inadequate attic ventilation.

    3. Gutters Packed with Ice
    If gutters are full of frozen slush rather than flowing, water backs up behind that blockage.

    4. Wet Stains at Ceilings or Exterior Walls
    Even small, yellowish marks often come from melting that has already begun to intrude.

    Ignore these for too long and the problem grows into sagging drywall, mold, damaged insulation, and structural rot.


    The Attic’s Role—Silent Partner or Silent Problem

    The attic is where three worlds meet—cold exterior, warm interior, and the materials separating them. Problems are most likely when:

    • Insulation is thin, displaced, or patchy
    • Mechanical equipment vents into the attic instead of outdoors
    • Air leaks from bathrooms, kitchens, and living spaces warm the roof deck

    A well-insulated, well-ventilated attic keeps the roof deck closer to outside temperature. That means less melt at the ridge and fewer ice dams at the eaves.


    How Homeowners Can Stay Ahead of Damage

    You don’t need to climb ladders or get on the roof (in fact, please don’t in winter). Small preventative steps go a long way:

    • Observe the roof after storms and during thaws
      A five-minute visual check often tells you all you need to know.
    • Keep gutters and downspouts clear before winter arrives
      Debris becomes frozen dams when temperatures drop.
    • Maintain attic insulation and ventilation
      Proper airflow keeps the roof cold and predictable.
    • Use roof rakes carefully
      Removing snow from lower roof areas reduces ice dam pressure.

    If you’re unsure whether your attic needs attention, a thermal camera (or a home inspector with one) can reveal insulation gaps invisible to the eye.


    When to Bring in a Professional

    Not every ice dam needs intervention, but certain conditions should prompt a call:

    • Persistent leaks or ceiling stains
    • Heavy ice buildup at the roof edges
    • Mold-like staining inside the attic
    • Recurring moisture problems from year to year

    A qualified contractor—or a licensed home inspector during a non-emergency period—can help diagnose the underlying causes before repairs become costly.


    A Closing Thought

    Vermont winters shape our landscapes and lifestyles, and the thaw cycles are part of the rhythm. But the roof above us shoulders that burden every season—quietly, constantly, and with little recognition until something goes wrong.

    By observing your roof thoughtfully during the melt—not with anxiety, but with awareness—you stay ahead of the story instead of stepping in at the final chapter. Winter tests our homes, but informed homeowners meet those tests with confidence rather than surprise.

    And when heavy snow gives way to the sound of melting water rushing through gutters, use that moment as your reminder: winter isn’t over—but neither is your ability to protect your home from it.

  • Is Your Home Ready for Guests? Inspection Tips for Vacation Homes and Airbnbs

    Is Your Home Ready for Guests? Inspection Tips for Vacation Homes and Airbnbs

    here’s a distinct satisfaction in opening your home to guests—whether you’re hosting friends for the weekend or managing a short-term rental that fuels your side hustle. But long before the welcome basket is filled with maple candies and the Wi-Fi password is printed in cursive, there’s a more critical question that often goes unasked: Is your home truly ready for guests?

    Not Instagram ready. Not “clean enough.” But safe, functional, and able to deliver the kind of experience that earns glowing reviews and repeat bookings.

    As a professional home inspector—and someone who has seen what’s behind the curtain—I’ve come to appreciate that guest readiness has less to do with throw pillows and everything to do with systems, safety, and foresight.

    Let’s walk through a few essential tips that will help ensure your vacation property or Airbnb isn’t just beautiful, but truly guest-ready.


    1. Prioritize Safety First (And Mean It)

    The quickest way to a one-star review—or worse, a liability issue—is to overlook safety.

    Start with the basics:

    • Smoke and CO Detectors: These should be installed on every level, in hallways near sleeping areas, and tested regularly.
    • Handrails and Staircases: Loose railings, uneven steps, and poor lighting can turn a relaxing getaway into a trip to urgent care.
    • GFCI Protection: Kitchens, bathrooms, and outdoor areas need outlets with ground fault protection. It’s not just a good idea—it’s a standard.

    Pro tip: Test everything yourself as if you were the guest. Would you trust this outlet? This railing? This lock?


    2. Don’t Assume It Works—Verify It

    Vacation properties often sit vacant between visits or seasons. That downtime allows plumbing traps to dry out, batteries to die, and critters to move in.

    Before guests arrive:

    • Run every fixture: Toilets, sinks, showers. Look for leaks or slow drains.
    • Check HVAC systems: Is the A/C blowing cold? Does the heat respond? Any odd smells?
    • Test appliances: From the microwave to the coffee maker, ensure all amenities work as advertised.

    If anything’s borderline, don’t roll the dice. Fix it now, not after the guest messages you at 9 p.m.


    3. Pay Attention to Hidden Hazards

    A home inspection can reveal what’s happening behind the scenes—where mold creeps in, wiring degrades, or moisture collects.

    Some lesser-seen issues that often arise in vacation homes:

    • Rodent activity in attics or crawlspaces
    • Water damage under sinks or around windows
    • Improper venting of dryers, bathrooms, or water heaters
    • Aging decks with hidden rot or loose connections

    These don’t just affect guest experience; they threaten your investment.


    4. Think Like a Traveler

    Your guests aren’t you. They don’t know the quirks, the switches, or the shortcut to reset the hot water heater.

    This is where preparation meets hospitality:

    • Label breakers and switches clearly.
    • Leave a laminated home guide with instructions for thermostats, alarms, or quirks.
    • Ensure exterior lighting works—especially around stairs and entryways.

    Inspect not just for code compliance, but for clarity. Confused guests become frustrated guests.


    5. Consider a Pre-Season Inspection

    If your home is a seasonal rental—especially in Vermont where freeze/thaw cycles can be brutal—it’s wise to schedule a professional home inspection before the season starts.

    Think of it as preventive medicine for your property:

    • Catch deferred maintenance before it costs you.
    • Get ahead of guest complaints.
    • Protect your liability and insurance standing.

    An inspector won’t just spot issues—they’ll give you the documentation and peace of mind to welcome guests confidently.


    Final Thought: Guest-Ready Means More Than Clean Sheets

    You only get one chance to make a first impression. And in the world of short-term rentals, that impression can follow you online forever.

    Whether you manage a lakeside cottage, a mountain cabin, or a studio over the garage, readiness begins with safety and ends with thoughtful detail.

    At Green Mountain Property Inspections, we believe homes should not only look good—they should function well, operate safely, and deliver peace of mind to owners and guests alike.

    Before your next booking, ask yourself: Is this home truly ready for guests?

    If the answer isn’t a resounding yes, we’re here to help.


    Looking for a seasonal home inspection or rental-readiness walkthrough? Get in touch with us at Lucian@GreenMountainPropertyInspections.com or 802-310-3897.

  • Honoring Service: Why We Offer Home Inspection Discounts to Active Duty Military, Veterans, and First Responders

    Honoring Service: Why We Offer Home Inspection Discounts to Active Duty Military, Veterans, and First Responders

    There’s something foundational about service—quiet, often thankless work that keeps our communities standing when life gets unpredictable. If you’ve spent time in the military, worn a badge, or raced toward an emergency when others ran away, you already know what it means to carry that kind of responsibility. At Green Mountain Property Inspections, we believe that service deserves to be recognized in meaningful ways—not just in words, but in action.

    That’s why we offer a standing discount on home inspections to active duty military, veterans, police officers, firefighters, EMTs, and paramedics.

    Why We Offer This Discount

    Our team includes people with backgrounds in the fire service, construction, and emergency response. We’ve lived that schedule, felt the weight of that radio call, and stood in the cold long after the job was done. We understand that those who serve don’t do it for the perks—but when you’re building a life outside of the job, even a small gesture can go a long way.

    A home inspection might seem like a minor part of the home buying process. But it’s also one of the few chances a buyer has to pause, gather reliable information, and make informed decisions before taking on one of life’s biggest commitments. For those who spend their careers protecting others, we want that part of the process to feel like someone’s watching your back for a change.

    Who Is Eligible?

    We proudly extend our discount to the following:

    • Active duty military and veterans
    • National Guard and reservists
    • Police officers
    • Firefighters (career and volunteer)
    • Paramedics and EMTs

    A valid form of identification or proof of service is all we ask. No red tape, no hoops.

    How to Apply the Discount

    Booking with us is simple. Just mention your service when scheduling your inspection—whether by phone, email, or through our online form. We’ll apply the discount automatically and take care of the rest.

    If someone in your household qualifies, the discount still applies—even if they won’t be present at the inspection. We honor the whole family’s sacrifice.

    It’s About Trust

    We understand what it’s like to operate in environments where trust is everything. In your world, there’s no room for second guesses. We bring that same mindset to our inspections: thorough, honest, and clear. We call out what matters, explain what doesn’t, and always put your safety and peace of mind first.

    We’re not here to sell fear. We’re here to inform, explain, and empower you to move forward with confidence.

    A Final Word

    This discount isn’t a gimmick. It’s our way of saying thank you—not just for the job you’ve done, but for the way you’ve lived it. We believe people who show up for their communities deserve businesses that show up for them.

    So whether you’re relocating, downsizing, or stepping into your first home, we’d be honored to serve you the way you’ve served us.


    If you’d like to schedule an inspection or have questions about eligibility, reach out here. We’re ready when you are.

  • From Firefighter to Home Inspector: Why Safety Still Comes First This Fourth of July

    From Firefighter to Home Inspector: Why Safety Still Comes First This Fourth of July

    The Fourth of July holds a special place in the American story — and in the lives of homeowners across Vermont. It’s a day defined by freedom, family, and celebration. Grills are fired up, flags are flown, and neighborhoods fill with the scent of charcoal and the sound of laughter. But amid the festivities, it’s also a day when safety matters more than most people realize.

    As someone who’s worn more than one hat in the service of public safety — firefighter, EMT, construction professional, and now licensed home inspector — I’ve seen firsthand how small oversights can lead to big problems. Whether it’s a misplaced firework, an overloaded outlet, or a forgotten smoke detector, preventable hazards don’t take holidays off.

    That’s why at Green Mountain Property Inspections, safety isn’t just a checklist — it’s a mindset. And it’s one I bring with me to every inspection, every report, and every client conversation.


    A Commitment That Started Long Before the Toolkit

    Before I founded Green Mountain Property Inspections, I spent years in the fire service and emergency response. The job taught me more than tactics and teamwork — it shaped the way I see buildings, systems, and safety risks. It taught me to respect what goes unseen.

    That background, combined with years of hands-on construction experience, is what informs the inspections I do today. It’s why I pay attention to the wiring tucked into an attic, the subtle lean in a deck post, or the slightly scorched outlet near a kitchen counter. These aren’t just defects. They’re clues — subtle indicators that a home may not be as safe or efficient as it appears.

    That detail-oriented mindset is what I’ve built my business on. Whether I’m working with a first-time homebuyer, a seasoned investor, or a homeowner looking for peace of mind, my job is to surface the information that matters most. Especially when it comes to safety.


    Fourth of July: Where Fun and Fire Risk Collide

    July 4th is the biggest day of the year for fireworks — and unfortunately, for fire-related accidents. Grills, sparklers, electrical cords strung across lawns — they all carry potential hazards if overlooked.

    As you prepare to celebrate, here are a few quick safety tips I’d encourage any homeowner to consider:

    • Check your outlets – Outdoor receptacles should be GFCI-protected and weather-resistant. If you’re running extension cords for lighting or sound systems, avoid overloading circuits.
    • Mind your grill – Keep propane or charcoal grills at least 10 feet from siding, deck railings, or low-hanging branches. Clean out grease traps regularly to reduce fire risk.
    • Watch the fireworks – Even small sparklers burn at nearly 2,000°F. Keep a bucket of water nearby, supervise kids closely, and never re-light duds.
    • Inspect your deck – Before hosting guests, take a look at your deck’s support posts, railings, and stairs. Loose boards or unstable footings can turn a celebration into an ER visit.
    • Test your detectors – Make sure smoke and CO alarms are operational. They’re the last line of defense when something goes wrong.

    Most of these tips take five minutes or less. But they can be the difference between a safe, memorable holiday and a preventable emergency.


    Homeownership and Independence: A Shared Responsibility

    There’s a deeper connection between the Fourth of July and home inspections than you might expect. Independence isn’t just a political concept — it’s something we protect every day as homeowners. We strive for autonomy, for security, for the right to build a life without uncertainty.

    That starts with the home itself.

    A thorough inspection gives you knowledge. And knowledge gives you choices — whether you’re negotiating a purchase, planning renovations, or simply understanding your home’s long-term needs. It’s about making informed decisions, not reactive ones.

    And just like good governance, good homeownership depends on accountability. That’s the standard I hold myself to every time I walk into a crawlspace or open a service panel.


    Wrapping Up: Safety First, Celebration Always

    At Green Mountain Property Inspections, my mission is to help you enjoy your home — not worry about it. Whether you’re lighting sparklers with your kids, hosting a backyard barbecue, or simply relaxing on your porch with a view of Vermont’s fireworks, you deserve the peace of mind that comes from knowing your home is safe.

    So this Independence Day, enjoy everything the season brings. Just take a moment to remember: safety isn’t a barrier to fun. It’s what makes fun possible.

    Happy Fourth. Stay safe, and enjoy your home.

  • What to Expect During a Home Inspection: A Step-by-Step Guide

    What to Expect During a Home Inspection: A Step-by-Step Guide

    Understanding the Real Role of Inspection in the Survival of Your Investment

    At first glance, the home inspection seems like a formality—another line item in the long list of boxes to check before closing. But that interpretation misunderstands what the inspection actually is: a critical filter in a system prone to failure.

    In a market driven by emotion, marketing, and negotiation, the home inspection remains one of the last opportunities to engage with reality—to observe the physical structure in its current evolutionary state and determine whether it’s viable for long-term habitation.

    This guide isn’t about soothing your anxiety. It’s about sharpening your awareness.


    Step 1: Why the Inspection Exists at All

    Let’s start with a basic truth: every home degrades over time. Systems fail, materials decay, and short-sighted renovations introduce unseen vulnerabilities.

    Yet buyers are expected to make massive financial commitments based on walkthroughs and listing photos. That’s a recipe for misalignment between perception and consequence.

    The home inspection exists to introduce a constraint of truth—a friction point where marketing yields to material conditions. It’s not just about finding defects; it’s about surfacing signals from a complex system.


    Step 2: The Inspection Day — What Actually Happens

    When an inspector arrives, they are entering an ecosystem: a dynamic structure where multiple interdependent systems—electrical, structural, thermal, and hydrological—interact in both predictable and emergent ways.

    The inspector observes, probes, and documents. But unlike a diagnostic in medicine, this inspection is constrained. We don’t cut into walls or unearth buried pipes. Instead, we interpret surface signals—indicators of deeper health or risk.

    The inspection typically unfolds like this:

    • Exterior systems: grading, drainage, siding, windows, roof, and foundation. These are the boundary defenses—the home’s interaction with its environment.
    • Interior systems: plumbing, electrical, HVAC, structure, insulation. These form the infrastructure of comfort and survivability.
    • Vulnerable zones: attics, basements, and crawlspaces. Often neglected, these areas reveal the truth most clearly.

    Step 3: What the Report Actually Represents

    The inspection report is not a list of problems. It’s a map of constraints and choices. Some issues are immediate hazards. Others are slow-burn liabilities that will compound over time.

    A good inspector won’t just tell you what’s wrong. They’ll contextualize each issue—is it systemic or isolated? Functional or cosmetic? Indicative of a pattern or merely a fluke?

    This is the real value: not a red light or green light, but a better-informed decision matrix.


    Step 4: How to Think Like an Owner, Not a Shopper

    Many buyers approach the inspection looking for reassurance. But the mature response is something else entirely: embrace what the inspection reveals as your early relationship with the home’s entropy.

    You’re not just buying a house. You’re entering into a stewardship role with a decaying structure that will demand vigilance, maintenance, and eventually replacement.

    Viewed through this lens, the inspection is an act of orientation—a calibration of expectations. It won’t eliminate risk, but it can make your risks legible.


    Step 5: Final Thoughts — Reclaiming Agency in a System Designed for Passivity

    Real estate transactions often push buyers toward passivity: “Trust the process,” they’re told. But that only works if the process is trustworthy.

    The home inspection is one of the few places where you can slow the momentum, ask hard questions, and uncover inconvenient truths. It’s not a hurdle—it’s a rare opportunity for agency.

    If you’re buying a home, don’t use the inspection to feel better. Use it to be smarter.


    If you’re buying in Vermont and want an inspector who treats your investment with the seriousness it deserves,Green Mountain Property Inspections is here to help.

    We don’t do checklists. We do clarity.

  • The Hidden Economy in Your Walls: 10 Simple Ways to Cut Energy Waste at Home

    The Hidden Economy in Your Walls: 10 Simple Ways to Cut Energy Waste at Home

    Welcome (back) to The Inspector’s Notebook—where practical insight meets long-term thinking. Whether you’re a longtime homeowner, a first-time buyer, or just someone who wants to better understand the place you live, this blog is here to help you see your home through a sharper lens. Our goal? Help you live smarter, safer, and more sustainably—without the noise.


    What if I told you your home is quietly bleeding money? Not through theft or disaster—but through inefficiency.

    Every flick of a light switch, every moment your furnace hums to life, and every unnoticed draft is part of a quiet equation most people never see. Fortunately, solving this equation doesn’t require massive lifestyle change—just awareness and small, strategic action.

    Here are ten easy, proven ways to save money and energy in your home—backed by building science and wrapped in common sense.


    1. Don’t Heat the Whole Neighborhood

    Air leaks are silent budget thieves. Gaps around windows, doors, and attic hatches allow your heated or cooled air to escape. Seal them with weatherstripping or caulk. The best energy savings aren’t glamorous—they’re hidden in the details.


    2. Let Your Thermostat Think for You

    Programmable or smart thermostats reduce heating and cooling costs by adjusting to your schedule—even when you forget. Just a few degrees of difference can translate into real savings over time, without sacrificing comfort.


    3. Rethink Water Heating

    Tankless water heaters only heat what you use, when you use it. No more paying to keep 40 gallons warm while you’re at work. They cost more upfront, but pay for themselves in efficiency—especially in homes that use moderate to high amounts of hot water.


    4. Change Your Bulbs, Change Your Bill

    Incandescent bulbs are like tiny space heaters that also happen to give off light. LEDs, on the other hand, sip electricity while lasting 25 times longer. Replacing just a few high-use bulbs can lead to noticeable monthly savings.


    5. Use Fans with Purpose

    Ceiling fans don’t cool the air—they move it. In the summer, this helps you feel cooler at a higher thermostat setting. In the winter, reversing the blade direction circulates warm air downward. It’s physics working for you, not against you.


    6. Insulate Like You Mean It

    Most heat loss occurs through the attic and walls. If your insulation is sparse, compressed, or missing entirely in spots, your heating system has to work harder. More work means more fuel. More fuel means more money—out of your pocket.


    7. Fix the Small Leaks

    A dripping hot water faucet doesn’t just waste water—it wastes the energy used to heat that water. Low-flow fixtures and timely repairs reduce the loss at both ends of the equation.


    8. Unplug the Energy Vampires

    Devices plugged in but not in use still draw power. It’s called “phantom load.” Power strips with kill switches make it easy to cut the cord when you’re not actively using electronics.


    9. Get Strategic with Landscaping

    Deciduous trees can shade your home in summer and let in sunlight during the winter. Plant them on the west and south sides of your home and you’ll use less energy to control the temperature indoors—all through the natural rhythms of the seasons.


    10. Get a Home Energy Audit

    Want the blueprint? A professional energy audit will show you exactly where your home is underperforming and how to fix it. It’s not guesswork—it’s science applied to your walls, windows, ducts, and systems.


    The Bottom Line

    Your home is a machine. And like any machine, it works best when its parts are aligned, clean, and not working harder than they need to. Saving energy isn’t just good for your wallet—it’s a quiet form of resilience. A way to protect yourself from volatility. A step toward independence.

    Efficiency isn’t just about using less—it’s about living smarter.


    If you’d like help understanding where your home could be saving more, Green Mountain Property Inspections offers energy-aware home inspections and can connect you with trusted professionals. It all starts with seeing your home for what it is—and what it could be.

  • Radon: The Invisible Risk Lurking in Your Home—and What You Can Do About It

    Radon: The Invisible Risk Lurking in Your Home—and What You Can Do About It

    Welcome back to The Inspector’s Notebook, where we unpack the invisible details that make a house a home—or a hazard. Our goal is simple: to bring peace of mind through clarity. Whether you’re a homeowner, buyer, or just someone who values a healthy living space, today’s post is about something you won’t see in your attic, crawlspace, or basement. But you should know it’s there.

    Let’s talk about radon.


    What Is Radon—and Why Should You Care?

    Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas. It forms when uranium in soil, rock, or water breaks down and seeps into the air you breathe—often through cracks in your foundation or basement slab. Odorless, tasteless, and invisible, radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the United States, responsible for over 21,000 deaths each year according to the EPA.

    This isn’t just a hypothetical danger. It’s a proven health risk. And here’s the kicker: you won’t know it’s there unless you test.


    “But I Already Own My Home…”

    Perfect—this message is especially for you.

    Radon isn’t just a concern during a real estate transaction. In fact, homes of all ages, sizes, and construction types can have high radon levels—regardless of whether they passed a test years ago. Geological shifts, settling foundations, and changes in HVAC usage can all impact radon levels over time.

    So whether you’ve lived in your home for one year or twenty, testing is a small step that could make a big difference. Think of it as a health screening for your house.


    Why Professional Testing Matters

    At Green Mountain Property Inspections, we’re proud to now offer radon testing using state-of-the-art electronic monitoring equipment. Unlike outdated charcoal canisters or DIY kits, our professional-grade monitors provide:

    • Accurate hourly readings
    • Tamper detection
    • Faster turnaround
    • Peace of mind backed by data

    We follow strict protocols to ensure reliable results and provide clear, actionable reporting—no guesswork, no jargon.


    Who Should Test for Radon?

    • Homeowners who have never tested their property—or haven’t tested in the past five years.
    • Home buyers making one of the most important decisions of their lives.
    • Real estate agents who want to offer their clients full confidence.
    • Families with young children, elderly residents, or anyone with respiratory conditions—because these groups are more vulnerable to radon exposure.

    Take the First Step Toward a Healthier Home

    Testing for radon is simple, fast, and affordable. And now that Green Mountain Property Inspections offers advanced radon testing, it’s also easier than ever.

    Reach out today to schedule your test. Because what you don’t see can hurt you—and knowing is the first step to fixing.


    Green Mountain Property Inspections
    ✔ Licensed & InterNACHI Certified
    ✔ Now Offering Radon Testing
    ✔ Serving Vermont with Integrity and Insight

    📞 802-310-3897
    🌐 http://www.greenmountainpropertyinspections.com
    📧 Lucian@greenmountainpropertyinspections.com

    Science doesn’t ask for your attention—it waits in the background. So does radon.
    Take action. Test today.

  • How Green Mnt. Property Inspections Can Help You Protect Your Biggest Investment — And Why We’re Different

    How Green Mnt. Property Inspections Can Help You Protect Your Biggest Investment — And Why We’re Different

    Welcome to The Inspector’s Notebook
    If this is your first time here, welcome — we’re glad you found us. The Inspector’s Notebook is a space where clarity meets insight. We break down the unseen systems, overlooked risks, and quiet details that can make or break your home investment. Whether you’re a first-time buyer, a seasoned investor, or a real estate professional, this blog offers field-tested advice, grounded in years of real-world experience, for navigating the complexities of property ownership. Our goal is simple: to bring peace of mind through clarity.


    How We Help You Protect Your Biggest Investment

    Let’s be honest — buying a home is one of the most emotionally charged financial decisions you’ll ever make. Beneath the freshly painted walls and the gleam of stainless appliances is an infrastructure that either supports your dream… or slowly erodes it.

    That’s where we come in. At Green Mnt. Property Inspections, we don’t just “look around.” We interrogate the systems that hold your home together. We inspect with the mindset of an advocate — someone who understands building science, sees what others miss, and helps you see it too, without the noise.

    From foundations and framing to wiring, ventilation, and drainage, we assess each component in context. Our reports are built not just to flag issues, but to help you make smart, confident decisions about your next move — whether that means requesting repairs, renegotiating, or simply walking away.


    What Makes Green Mnt. Different?

    In a saturated field, it’s not enough to be certified or to carry tools — it’s about how we think. And more importantly, how we serve.

    • We separate defects from data. Every report distinguishes between “nice to know” and “need to act.” No scare tactics. No filler. Just practical, actionable insight.
    • We prioritize clarity over complexity. If you can’t understand your inspection report, it’s not serving you. We write with one goal: make the invisible visible — and simple.
    • We show up like you matter. Because you do. We take the time to answer your questions, walk you through the process, and make sure you feel supported before, during, and after the inspection.
    • We come from a background in building trades, fire safety, and emergency services. That means we’re not just trained to spot issues — we understand risk in a way most inspectors don’t.
    • We follow InterNACHI’s highest standards. This isn’t just a job to us. It’s a responsibility. And we treat it that way.

    Final Thought: Clarity Is the Real Value

    Most homebuyers don’t regret what they knew — they regret what they didn’t. At Green Mnt. Property Inspections, we believe the best investment protection is information — clear, calm, and delivered by someone who works for you.

    Thanks for reading The Inspector’s Notebook. If you found this useful, stick around — we post regular updates on home safety, inspection tips, and ways to stay ahead of costly surprises.

    Your home should give you peace of mind — not uncertainty. Let’s keep it that way.


    Want to schedule an inspection or ask a question?
    Visit greenmountainpropertyinspections.com or reach out directly. We’re here to help — with integrity, precision, and a Vermont work ethic you can count on.

  • A Day in the Life of a Home Inspector: Behind the Scenes of Vermont’s Unsung Guardians

    A Day in the Life of a Home Inspector: Behind the Scenes of Vermont’s Unsung Guardians

    It’s 6:30 a.m. in Northern Vermont. The mist is still rising off the pastures, and the coffee in my thermos is just hitting the sweet spot between too hot to sip and not worth sipping. This is the quiet moment before the work begins—a time to take stock of the day ahead, sharpen my mindset, and remind myself why I do what I do.

    Home inspection is part science, part storytelling. It’s not about passing or failing a house. It’s about interpreting the clues a structure leaves behind and giving people the knowledge to make confident decisions. Each inspection is an unfolding narrative—one told in roof lines, foundation walls, rust stains, flickering lights, and occasionally, the unmistakable evidence of a determined mouse.

    8:00 a.m. – The First Inspection

    My first stop today is a 1920s colonial on the edge of St. Albans. It’s charming, no doubt, but charm doesn’t carry joist loads or insulate attics. I park, gear up, and greet the buyer—a young couple moving up from Montpelier. They’re excited, and rightly so. This is a big step.

    As I step into the home, I start my process: exterior first. Roofing, siding, grading, drainage. Then the mechanical systems. Furnace, electrical panel, plumbing distribution, insulation—everything tells a story. Some stories whisper, others shout. Today, the boiler is whispering. It’s oversized and short cycling. That’s a note to make: not a defect, but a performance concern worth watching.

    11:15 a.m. – Document, Photograph, Educate

    Throughout the inspection, I’m taking notes—yes, for the report, but also for the people. It’s one thing to identify an issue. It’s another to explain it in a way that makes sense to a first-time buyer without sending them into a panic spiral.

    For example, a GFCI that doesn’t trip isn’t a reason to walk away from a house. It’s a $20 fix. But I don’t gloss over it. I explain the function, the risk, and how to resolve it. My job isn’t just to inspect. It’s to inform without alarm, to highlight without hyperbole.

    1:00 p.m. – Drive, Lunch, and Decompress

    Between inspections, I reset. Grab lunch, respond to emails, and update my software. Sometimes I review images or moisture readings. Sometimes I call a client to walk them through their report from the day before. The work doesn’t stop when the tools go back in the bag.

    3:30 p.m. – Wrap-Up and Report Writing

    By the time I return home, I’m tracking more than dirt on my boots. I’m carrying hours of data, photos, observations, and narratives. Now comes the writing—my favorite part.

    The inspection report isn’t just documentation. It’s a map for the client. I build it defect by defect, with clean structure: a clear title, an honest narrative, and a specific recommendation. No fluff. No scare tactics. Just facts, findings, and a path forward.

    The Quiet Satisfaction

    Some days it’s cold. Some days it’s pouring. Some days I crawl through cobwebbed crawlspaces that feel like something out of a Stephen King novel. But every day, I get to help someone understand their investment, protect their future, and sleep a little better that night.

    That’s why I do it.

    Because at the heart of every inspection is a family, a dream, and a roof they hope will hold. And I take that seriously.


    Interested in what a professional inspection might reveal about your home or the one you’re about to buy?
    Visit www.greenmountainpropertyinspections.com for scheduling, FAQs, and insights from the field.

    Your property. My priority.

  • 🚩 Red Flags That Could Kill a Home Sale

    When buyers walk through a home, they’re envisioning where the couch might go, which room gets the best light, and whether the kitchen backsplash clashes with their air fryer.

    But as a licensed home inspector, my focus is a little different.
    I’m looking for the red flags—the ones that don’t show up in the listing photos or open house walkthroughs. The kind that, once discovered, can delay closing… or kill the deal entirely.

    Whether you’re selling, buying, or representing clients in either role, here are three of the most common deal-breakers I find during inspections—and why they matter.


    1. Structural Damage: The Foundation of the Problem

    Cracked foundations, sagging floors, and bowing basement walls aren’t just cosmetic concerns—they signal instability. And once buyers hear words like “settlement,” “piering,” or “structural engineer,” they often get cold feet (or ask for major concessions).

    What to look for:

    • Horizontal cracks in foundation walls
    • Uneven floors or door frames that no longer square
    • Water intrusion near support beams

    Why it matters:
    Structural issues usually come with high price tags—and higher buyer anxiety.


    2. Roofing Problems: When It’s More Than Just Shingles

    The roof is one of the most expensive systems to repair or replace, and a poor roof can lead to hidden water damage, mold, and insulation breakdown. If a buyer learns mid-deal that the roof has five years (or less) of life left, they may renegotiate—or walk.

    What to look for:

    • Curling or missing shingles
    • Visible sagging
    • Leaks in attic or ceiling stains

    Why it matters:
    It’s not just the cost—it’s the uncertainty. No buyer wants to inherit a ticking time bomb over their heads.


    3. Active Plumbing Leaks: Small Drips, Big Problems

    A slow leak under the kitchen sink may seem minor. But if there’s evidence of ongoing water damage—like rotted cabinetry, mold growth, or warped floors—it raises questions about maintenance and what else might be lurking beneath the surface.

    What to look for:

    • Water stains on ceilings or walls
    • Musty smells in bathrooms, basements, or under sinks
    • Active dripping from pipes or fixtures

    Why it matters:
    Leaks signal neglect—and water damage can be deceptively expensive to remediate.


    Final Thoughts: Protect the Deal by Getting Ahead

    These red flags don’t have to end a sale—but they can if they’re discovered late. The earlier they’re addressed, the more control everyone has over how to respond.

    That’s why I always recommend pre-listing inspections for sellers and thorough buyer inspections before closing. These small investments often prevent major delays, last-minute negotiations, or deals falling apart altogether.

    After all, selling or buying a home is stressful enough. You shouldn’t have to gamble on what’s hidden behind the drywall.

    📩 Ready to uncover what’s really going on with your property?
    Schedule your inspection today, and walk into closing with confidence.