It doesn’t freeze here too often, but when it’s going to we’ll go outside and set our faucets to drip to prevent freezing. I just have to remember to do this, and I worry that I’ll forget. Do those faucet covers work? Any other options?

  • Uncle
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    3611 months ago

    here in canada where it freezes 17 months out of the year, 99.9% of the houses have shutoff valve inside the house that supplies the outside tap. id recommend turning on the outside tap, then turn off the valve inside.

    • @cabron_offsets
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      11 months ago

      Valve first. Then open tap. Then drain the line past the valve by unscrewing the bleeder cap.

    • KptnAutismus
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      11 months ago

      this is what i was taught by my dad. seems logical too.

      but do the shutoff valve first.

    • @Mamertine
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      611 months ago

      Northern USA is the same way.

      When I lived in TX, the water supply came into the house above ground. It was really strange concept for me a Minnesotan. The winter I was there, the supply lines froze. You had to defrost them with boiling water, or hair dryers.

      • WashedOver
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        311 months ago

        For me coming from the Westcoast with lots of rain at sea level the lack of drain fields around the houses in the Prairies was a similar moment for me when I was looking at homes for a move many years ago. Their drain spouts just run out into the yard above the ground. It was a what the heck is going on here?

        Their basements are also fully enclosed under ground. On the coast we require a secondary drain field just for the down spouts and the basements are only halfway in the ground so it was very strange to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      The house I’m renting has a valve for the outside tap, except someone decided to plumb all the water for the second bathroom downstream from it.