A Homeowner’s Guide to Dealing with Ice Dams
Posted: February 2, 2026
Ice dams form when snow on a roof melts, runs down to colder eaves, and refreezes into a ridge that blocks drainage. Over repeated melt-freeze cycles, water can back up under shingles and leak into ceilings, walls, insulation, and belongings. Why Ice Dams Happen Most ice dam problems start with uneven roof temperatures. Heat escaping into the attic warms the upper roof surface above 32°F...
Common Insurance Myths Debunked
Posted: January 16, 2026
What Your Friend on Social Media Got Wrong! Everyone has that friend who becomes an instant expert after watching a short video or reading a headline. Insurance myths travel fast, and they can cost real money when a claim happens. Clearing up a few of the most common myths helps you choose better protection and avoid unpleasant surprises. Myth #1: Red Cars Cost More to...
Your New Year’s Insurance Checklist
Posted: January 1, 2026
A new calendar year is a natural reset. Over the past 12 months, you may have moved, bought a car, started a home-based business, gotten married, or welcomed a new baby. Those milestones change more than your social media feed; they also change the protection you need. A quick insurance checkup in January can help keep your household on track and your budget under control....
How to Prepare for a Winter Road Trip
Posted: December 16, 2025
Plan Your Route Like a Pro: Weather, Detours, and “Plan B” Check official state DOT and highway apps for live road conditions, closures, and chain controls before you leave and at each fuel stop. Pair those with a forecast tool that shows hour-by-hour precipitation and wind along your route so you can shift departure by a few hours if a front is moving through. Build...
A Guide to Winterizing Your Home
Posted: December 2, 2025
Drafts, Doors, and Dollars To winterize your home, start with the biggest leaks, such as attic hatches, exterior doors, baseboards, and windows. Add adhesive weatherstripping to door jambs and sweeps to the bottom edge; use silicone caulk around window and door casings, plumbing penetrations, and where siding meets the foundation. Do a simple smoke-pencil test: on a windy day, turn on kitchen/bath fans, then move...



