Daughter (he never uses my name),
Don’t forget to wrap your outside pipes and faucets tonight. It’d also be a good idea to leave water dripping or your kitchen cabinet doors open a bit. You don’t want to deal with a busted pipe.
XOXO,
Dad
Every single year. But you know what? It helped. Because every single year it sent me into a tailspin of bundling up, gathering supplies and heading out into the frozen Houston tundra to prepare the outside of the house for winter. (We’re not used to cold weather, remember?) Side note: It’s so warm here that it is not worth keeping the house winterized all winter long. We’ll have a week of cold weather and then a week in the 70’s when you probably need to reach those water faucets to water tropical plants. 11 years later I’ve figured out a pretty simple and quick way to wrap our outside faucets using supplies that we already have on hand. This is a great way to wrap faucets in a mild or warm climate. If you’re truly in the frozen tundra, you need more! Today if you need help figuring out how to winterize your outside faucets, don’t worry – I’ve got your back Jack. You only need a few supplies to wrap your outside faucets. For every faucet you’ll need an old shirt or towel from the rag pile, large ziplock bag or plastic shopping bag and wide tape such as duct tape or packing tape. I have used painters tape in a pinch or tied it with string. That’s it. I used an old holey shirt that I pulled out of the soon to be rag pile. I folded the shirt in half lengthwise which made the width of hang over the faucet by about two inches. It isn’t rocket science, you just need it to hang down over the outside edge whiles still covering the part of the pipe that goes into the wall. The neater you can be in wrapping the shirt, the easier it will be to finish off with a bag and tape. Next you just keep wrapping the shirt or towel around the pipe. Make sure that you tuck the bottom edge piece (the one hanging down over the faucet) inside the shirt as your wrap it up. Try to do one more wrap where youcan cover the outside edge of the faucet with another layer of fabricOnce you have that wrapped well, slide the plastic bag over the fabric and push the edge of it all the way to wall. Using the tape do one messy wrap around the bag just to hold it in place. After you have the tape holding it in place, go back and wrap it entirely with tape. If you’re low on tape than just wrap it enough to hold it in place and don’t worry about looks. Taa-Daa! An easy no cost way to protect your outdoor faucets in a freeze! Now it’s time to go inside and prepare your refrigerator for the possibility of losing power. Just because you lose power doesn’t mean you need to lose all of your food. Check out this post on How to Prepare Your Fridge / Freezer for a Power Outage. Now that your faucets are protected, make this cute Let it Snow mug using this tutorial and free cut file.The post How to Cover Faucets for Winter appeared first on Clumsy Crafter .