A burst pipe in January in the Roaring Fork Valley is not just an inconvenience. It is potentially a significant restoration project. Water damage at altitude in winter can take weeks to remediate properly when temperatures do not cooperate.
Most of the plumbing failures we see in the first cold snap of the season were preventable. Here are the warning signs to look for before winter locks in.
Gradual pressure loss across multiple fixtures, not just one, often indicates mineral buildup in supply lines, a partially closed or failing main shutoff, or a pressure regulator beginning to fail. In our area, hard water from mountain mineral deposits is common and accelerates scale buildup. Get this diagnosed before winter. A pressure regulator failure in January is a service call you would rather not be making in the cold.
A single slow drain is usually a localized clog. Multiple slow drains in different parts of the house signal a problem further down the drain line: partial blockage, root intrusion, or a venting issue. Winter can make these problems worse as ground movement from freeze-thaw cycles shifts pipes.
Walk your crawlspace or utility areas and look at pipe insulation. Foam sleeve insulation that has separated, cracked, or been damaged by rodents is not protecting your pipes. In a Roaring Fork Valley home where crawlspace temperatures can drop to 0 degrees on a cold night, uninsulated supply lines in exterior spaces are a genuine freeze risk. Pay particular attention to pipes near exterior walls, lines running through unheated garages, and runs through unconditioned crawlspaces.
Water heaters in mountain climates work harder than the same unit at lower elevation. Incoming water temperature is colder, the unit runs longer cycles, and altitude affects combustion efficiency on gas units. Most residential water heaters are rated for 8 to 12 years. A failing anode rod, sediment buildup, or a corroded tank becomes a much bigger problem mid-winter. If your unit is over 10 years old, a flush and inspection before the season starts is a reasonable investment.
This sounds basic, but it is the most impactful item on this list. In a plumbing emergency, every minute matters. Every adult in your household should know where the main shutoff is, how to turn it, and whether it operates smoothly. A shutoff valve that has not been turned in 15 years may not close fully when you need it. Test it before winter. If it is stiff or will not seat fully, have it replaced.
Hoses left connected to outdoor bibs prevent the frost-free mechanism from draining properly. This is a leading cause of frozen and burst pipes in the first hard freeze of the season. Disconnect and store hoses before nighttime temperatures consistently drop below 28 degrees Fahrenheit. In the valley, that is typically mid-October.
If you have an irrigation system, it needs to be blown out and properly winterized before freeze-up. A missed zone or improperly drained section can crack heads and fittings underground, with repairs only discovered in spring. We handle irrigation winterization as part of our plumbing service scope.
We handle plumbing, HVAC, and roofing, so a single service call with PSM can assess all of your pre-season concerns without coordinating between multiple contractors. Rush service during business hours is available if you are dealing with something urgent.
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