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March 29, 2025 • 54 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:14):
Good morning, welcome in. Now the Home Improvement Show of
the Midlands back on the radio on one O three
point five FM and five sixty AMWVOC is so good
to have you with us. Sign Gary David. We've got
a busy hour this hour, getting it fixed or getting
it fixed up, that's what we're all about here on
The Home Improvement Show of the Midlands. And coming up
we're talking to Summer from Beaver Roofing and Gutters. Jeremy Holiday,

(00:37):
mister Electric will be here and Trey Powell's back. Yes,
it's that time of year again. Mosquito Joe. They've been
on treating my lawn since so gosh last month, first
part of last month. I guess I'll go through well
close to the end of the year because that's how
long the mosquito season lasts here in the Midlands. And uh, well,
we haven't any issues yet. Trey will be by to

(00:58):
fill us in. We aren't having another issue though going
on right now. It's well, it's that yellow stuff, it's
that pollen. Hey, there's Russell Marcesy from Finishing Touch Team.
Hey Ruskin morning sir, Hey Gary, good morning, glad to
be here. So I have to I have to admit
to everybody my my boneheaded mistake. The other day. I
was even talking about this on the air Friday. Last
Friday morning. I was so pumped up because your folks

(01:21):
were coming out and painting our poolhouse, all right, And
I said, yeah, come out this weekend. When I got
up Saturday morning and I looked at your text again,
you had said, yeah, I thought about it over the
weekend and let's do this. You didn't say you were
coming out this weekend, like, oh, I'm an idiot. But

(01:42):
there was a very good reason for that, there is,
and it was what I just mentioned that part.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
That's correct. Yeah, the Poulin's horrible right now. You know,
I wouldn't say it's the heaviest that you know, we've
seen in the past year, get worse more thing like,
that's right, that's right. But yeah, right now is the
absolute worst time in the war in South Carolina to
paint an exterior all this pollen floating around it.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Is not good. You know.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
First of all, the biggest, biggest reason why you don't
want to do this, Gary is because if all that
pollen is floating around in the air and you're painting
something on the exterior and you have wet paint sitting
on your siding or wood trim or whatever it is,
all that pollen is sticking right to it. Okay, how
many times have you seen where you can see the
sunlight kind of shining through and you can.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
See all that pollen in the air right floating all around. Right?

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Yes, So what it does is it sticks to the paint,
and it's a sticky pollen.

Speaker 1 (02:38):
Sticky is what it is.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
All right, So it sticks to just about anything, especially
wet paint, and it doesn't allow your paint to adhere correctly.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
Is the issue. I don't know why I did even
think about this, because we've had discussions about when you
do the cabinets. Oh yeah, for the very same reason
you take them back to your place. That's right, in
a sterile like environment. Yes, the dust of the debris,
because if you don't, that winds up. It does on
the on the paint, it does, and it is there forever.
That's correct. Again, that's correct. Yeah, I'm gonna just guess here, Russ,

(03:09):
sure that there are probably some other painters out there
us saying oh yeah, we'll come out and do it.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Well, of course, you know they don't want to miss up,
miss out on something like that. But we have to
be transparent with our customers. Look, our you know, our
name is on this and that's all we have, Gary, right,
and we got to make sure that the longevity is
there and the quality is there. And you're not going
to get that doing any sort of outside.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
Painting right now.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
Okay, you know, the pain's got adhere to to the substrate,
right to the siding, whatever you're doing.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
And uh, it.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Creates a lot of other funky things too. A lot
of people think that pollen this is kind of a
little bit of a misconception, but not totally. They think
that it'll cause mold in the future. Okay, and the
pollen itself doesn't cause mold, but pollen is a is
a it's a food for mold to to breed off of. Okay, okay, correct,

(04:01):
So therefore, you know you can potentially get more mold
than you would have because of that very reason right there.
Not to mention the paint not adhering to it just
not a good, not a good situation, you know, I
we do. We we go through this almost every single
year where there's about a good you know, good month
or so where we just really can't do a whole
lot outside. Once it starts easing up, we'll start scheduling

(04:24):
it again and getting back out there and getting and
hitting the exteriors. But I can't tell you how many
conversations I have yearly with customers, uh maybe not fully
understanding it, or a lot of times you get somebody
that is new to this area that hasn't quite experienced
it yet. Well, you know, so you're you're you're educating
them on this as well. And uh, you know, it's

(04:45):
just nature, the beast, uh, the area and where we live,
and you know, you got to you gotta navigate it
the way you can.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
The rest of the story, by the way, sure is
just to see all are aware of this. Originally my
plan because I went out there and and I went
out and looked at that pool house and I thought, yeah,
we can paint that. And then I looked and there's
a it's it's not a two story deal, but it's awkward.
It is tall, and in order to get to the

(05:14):
front at the top, I'd have to get up on
this kind of small overhanging roof. It is it's only
about three and a half foot area, and I thought,
you know what, I'm just this is probably a bad
idea for somebody of my advanced age. You know, it's
a little tricky. Yeah, So my first thought was, well,

(05:34):
let me call Russ.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
And by the way, just so you know, because like
I always say, you know, actually I think I texted you.
And it was maybe an hour later if that, that
you texted me back. Because this is what you do.
It wasn't because you knew me that you texted me
right back. This is the way you do business. You're
not going to wait around to hear back from this

(05:57):
guy right here. But so my original idea it was, okay, hey,
can you guys just just paint the top of this
for me, right, and I'll take care of the bottom, right,
And then I started thinking about it. Now, wait a minute,
I'm gonna wind up with a pool house with the top,
with a bottom that looks good, but with the top

(06:19):
that looks spectacular for how long? Right? For how long
until you can get to that? Yeah? And you know
it because they're between a diy And you know, my
wife's a very good painter. I've offered her a job
a few times. Yeah, but it is you know what
you guys do at finishing. Yes, it's just above and beyond. Man.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Yeah, man, you know, Gary, and I I kind of
knew going into it, uh, just because I've i've you know,
had this circumstance so many times, right, but especially after
looking at it for what it what it would take
for us just to bring those sides down, right, the
rest of it is really nothing, right, So I you know,
I I I kind of figured on that a little bit,

(07:03):
but uh, for the amount of time that it takes
us to uh to just bring those sides down. And
we're talking about a pool shed, right, it's I think
it was what maybe twenty five by twelve or something
like that, thirty or yeah, really cool poolhouse by the way, though,
it's beautiful, Yes, yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
Pulled outside in a pool table inside I will tell
you what it's like, a double full house.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Yeah, that's a that's a future man cave I can
see in the future possibly.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Right, or future doghouse.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
There one are the other you know, hopefully not the latter,
but you know, but now we'll yeah, we'll get that
thing looking real good. Gary, it's you know it and
again we got you know, we gotta wait, right, we
gotta wait till this pollen's gone, till uh till it's clear.
And uh, because I have I have definitely seen evidence
of areas being painted, you know, when when there's been

(07:49):
pollen like that. And and i'd tell you sometimes it
doesn't take long at all. A couple two three months
you'll start to see peeling and popping. That is way premature. Absolutely,
it's it's just a bigger mess at that point, right,
You're causing more work, more labor, and you know that
equates to more money down the road.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Now there's also stuff you're starting to see now. And
and you've got something else, something we've not talked about before,
right that you're that you're you're looking at here, and
and that is I mean, it's just a streboard times rush.
You know, people are throwing up homes these days, they are,
and they're cheap. It's like we're just doing a quick

(08:30):
spray job on the exterior of a home, correct, and
it's causing problems. It is, it is.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
I can't tell you how many neighborhoods we drive through,
large neighborhoods, you know, two three, four hundred homes in
these neighborhoods that all have hardy board siding on them, right,
which is a great siding, fantastic, it's a simittatious uh
you know, substrate siding, right, it lasts forever, not wood,
not vinyl, correct, you know, it's it's fantastic, holds up forever.

(08:55):
But the issue is is that they're painting these things
with very very cheap exterior paints. In some cases I've
seen where they're using interior paints to save money. Oh yeah, yeah,
we've seen it all. And what you do is so
when you're driving through these neighborhoods, you see how faded
it is. Okay, that's your telltale sign, right there, is
how quickly they fade. So yeah, we're we're trying to

(09:17):
put together a little marketing campaign for exterior heart hardy
board siding homes like this. Okay, we're offering fifteen percent
off all the way through July for exterior painting. Obviously,
we're gearing up for that while the pollen is almost
in you know, full height here is when as soon
as it settles down, you know, we want to hit

(09:38):
these exteriors pretty hard. So yeah, so we're offering fifteen
percent off any exterior as well as continuing for our
interior cabinetry, right right, Yeah, we're still we're still offering
that promotion as well for cabinetry.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
And yeah, we haven't talked about that. We've talked about
it back over the Brown Christmas I know. Yeah, yeah,
that's touched on a little bit. Yeah, still going on.
Absolutely reminds of what that is now.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, So fifteen percent off of your your
any cabinetry, vanities, kitchen islands, whatever the case is.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
Right, we probably do at least probably already like ninety
percent off of what it would cost to actually reply, Oh.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
It's a fraction of the cost Gary, fraction of the costs.
A matter of fact, I was talking to one of
my cabinet buddies last week actually just to kind of
see where where the pricing was with cabinetry right now,
because I've been stating some amounts and I wanted to
be correct, but I was wrong. Actually it was actually
more than I even thought it was. Really Now, grant
you can get some you know, cheaper cabinets for you know,

(10:40):
fifteen to twenty thousand dollars somewhere in that range. But man,
he's putting cabinets in Gary, that are you know, forty
fifty thousand dollars sometimes in these kitchens, Okay, and you know,
for a fraction of the cost, you can paint these things.
You can do the sky's the limit. If there are
bare bone cabinets, you can add trim to them, crown
molding panels, any the sky's the limit, right, and beef

(11:02):
your cabinets up for a fraction of the cost. And
we are offering fifteen percent off of all that. Yeah,
off of fraction. Yeah, it's a heck of a deal,
it really is. They look fantastic, spectacular, Omredonald. They really
do something we're very proud of.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
As well you should be. I mean, the results are fantastic.
They are, they really are. They just are. Yeah. Just
curious now when it comes to because I know, I
know your process for painting interiors, right the process for
the exterior. Sure is that different in any way? Or yeah?
All the time?

Speaker 2 (11:34):
Yeah, yeah, So it's all about the prep work no
matter what, right, your your finished product is only as
good as a substrate that you put it on. Okay,
That's that's the name of the game in this industry.
So the prep has got to be there. So yeah,
we're still sanding down whatever. We're painting. Okay, uh, we're calking,
we're filling. We're using Bondo products to fix. Let's see,

(11:55):
you have a little tiny, little soft area on some wood.
But it's not quite worth ripping all that down and
replacing it just yet. Right, we can come in with
some Bondo filler repair those areas, and quite honestly, those
are those areas that we repaired probably last.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Longer than a house would.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
I mean, it's a it's an actual hard Bondo finish
on there, right, and you can never see it again.
It completely goes away. But we go through all the
you know, normal procedures. If there's any bear wood, for example,
you have to prime that bear would with a really
good I prefer an oil based exterior primer, Okay, to

(12:31):
ensure that those areas are never gonna pop again. All right,
So we go through our due diligence one hundred percent
of making sure any metal areas, like let's say a
set of rallings on the front of your house that
have rust all over them, Okay, you can't just sand
those down and put pain over it. You just can't,
because that rust is going to come through so we'll
prime those areas with a product called kem Chromik, which

(12:53):
is a fantastic metal primer. You're just getting a whole
lot longer out of your pain shot. I'm doing it
this way and we go through every step to ensure
that that you're getting.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
That So it's it's not just painting, but it's not
just Finishing Touch Team delivers. It's the whole nine yards.
So that's right, Russ. How to folks get a hold
of your Finishing Touch Team, my friend.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
Yeah, you can always give me a call at eight
oh three four sixty seven six seven five nine.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
All right, good to see you man, Good to see
you Gary. Thank you right back with more on the
Home Improvement Show of the Midlands on one O three
point five FM and five sixty am WVOC.

Speaker 4 (13:34):
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(13:58):
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(14:20):
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Speaker 1 (14:32):
Hi is Gary David. Looking to refresh your home or
business with a fresh code of paint. Call Finishing Touch Team.
Finishing Touch Team for outstanding service, quality and professionalism. There
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(14:53):
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(15:17):
from Beverrufg and gutters Heath.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
Good morning, sir, Good morning that we're doing today doing
good man.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
We uh we talked a while back. You guys, what
was then known as Anthony John Construction now beaver rufig
and gutters uh Heath. Nothing's changed but the name and
the phone number of the website, right, Everything else is
the same.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
Correct, that is correct, same service, same guys doing the installation,
same warranties, same reputation.

Speaker 1 (15:44):
There you go, uh, go to Facebook, go to Google,
go to home Advice, go to Angie, and then check out.
I guess it's probably still listening to Anthony John Construction.
I suppose. I don't know how that works, but yeah,
go check out the reviews there because you guys, you know,
I taught the summer. She says she had hurt. Just people,
go check out those unbiased reviews.

Speaker 5 (16:03):
Absolutely, the biggest difference between most gutter companies is just
going to be the people you know and the service
on the back end. If you do have an issue,
if you do have a problem, we're going to get
right out there and take care.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
Of it for you. So a couple of summers ago,
you guys came out explain to me what was wrong
with the gutters I have on my home. We bought
that home about four years ago and it had gutters
on it, and you know, I thought, okay, we're good.
But there were issues.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
Right there was you had. You had the smaller five
inch gutter, which most builders did put up. You know,
we get a pretty heavy rain here. When it rains,
it tends to come in waves and pretty heavy, and
there's just just not enough capacity in those five inch gutters.
So unless we are matching and existing or doing a repair,

(16:55):
we're going to put up a six inch seamless gutter.
It does a couple of things. One, obviously it's a
higher capacity gutter, but two, it allows for less down spouts,
so there's less areas where the water is actually coming
to the ground, less areas for you to control the water.

Speaker 1 (17:12):
And the downspouts you put up in our home, did
they look they're bigger than the ones we had up there?
Aren't they? They are?

Speaker 5 (17:17):
You had a two by three which is paired with
the five inch goutter. We put up a three by
four down spout on most residential houses, you pair the
two of them together roughly forty percent more capacity to
move the water, which is quite a bit.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Yeah, because it doesn't even matter now, even a light rain.
I can walk outside and hear that that water coming
out of those downspouts. I mean it's moving it quick,
and it.

Speaker 5 (17:43):
Moves it quick, and you know, you can put them
in in less areas. So your typical ranch style house
you can get by usually if it's a if it's
a regular you know, gable roof, you can get by
with four down spouts, whereas on the longer runs with
the five inch scudder, you may have six down spots
and have to figure out what to do with the

(18:03):
water in the middle of your house. This way, you
can push everything to the ends, get it to run
away into the backyard, preferably not have any water issues
around your foundation.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
And that's that's that's the big problem right there, right,
I mean, not only can water running unimpeded off the
roof do damage to the exterior of your home, but
most costly, can do damage to the foundation of your home. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (18:26):
The the things water does is you know, just amazing.
I've had I've had three foot trenches around people's houses
that I've come to. Uh, one day, not too long ago,
I was at one of the newer neighborhoods and not
even sure how it happened, but they actually had a
hole in there that came up to my knee. Goodness,

(18:49):
and you and I have met. That's a long way, yeah,
right there, pretty people. So you know, there's there's cosmetic issues,
there's water under your basement, there's foundational issues. Just you know,
water causes all sorts of issues. The best way to

(19:09):
control it put it into a gutter, get it to
come down four or five spots around your house, then
you can control where it goes.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Right new home construction these days, heath, you know, there
is no and we've mentioned this before, there's in most
states in the country, with the exception of South Carolina
and just a couple of others, it's a requirement that
homes have gutters. Is that still act correct?

Speaker 5 (19:33):
And if that is correct here, there's still no requirement
for gutters. Most of the builders don't put them up.
If they will put them up, they'll be the smaller
five inch gutter and then only in noticeable areas, you know,
over the front door over the back door. A lot
of times they'll just put a diverter up on the

(19:54):
shingle to kind of push the water so you're not
getting wet when you come out of your back door.
But all that does is push higher volume of water
to a couple other areas.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
All right, So it's more of a matter of convenience,
is what they're doing here, so you don't get wet
entering go leaving the home. Correct.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
Yeah, you walk up, you walk up to look at
a house you're going to buy, and it's raining and
there's a gutter over the front door. You may not
look everywhere else, so you know, and typically, like I say,
it'll be a smaller gutter.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Right. So they're still to this day putting up the
five inch gutters typically on most new homes constructed, if
they put them up at all, because there's no recrrect
and that requirement is I guess, to really protect the homeowner.

Speaker 5 (20:34):
Correct, Yes, it protects their homeowner, and in a lot
of cases it can protect the neighborhood because you know,
the neighborhoods are built with drainage between the houses. But
if you can't get the water to the drainage, it
doesn't do any good right now.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
You mentioned a few minutes ago that you use these
six inch seamless gutters unless maybe you're going in and
adding on or doing some repair work. So in other words,
I guess even if somebody hasn't used Bee for roofing
and gutters at their property, if there are issues, you
guys are more than happy to go out and try
to rectify the situation.

Speaker 5 (21:13):
Right absolutely. You know, we're one of the few. We're
one of the few companies around based on what I've
found that can do a five inches six inch and
a seven inch gutter. Well seven inch has more commercial applications.
We can do box style gutters, we can do half
round gutters, we can do copper pretty much. If you

(21:34):
want it, my guys can do it.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Let's talk about the other You just mentioned a couple
of options there, half rounds, copper, tell us about those heath.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
Well, the half round gutter typically will only be used
if it's a requirement. There are a few hoas around
that require half round gutters. You know, it's it's the
oldest gutter technology. I mean, it's basically a pipe cut
in half. It's a shallow with low capacity. You pair
it with a round down spout and it's it's got

(22:05):
a really nice look, but it's not your best option
to move the water.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
So it's just a.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
Yeah, it's an aesthetic thing and it's a very minimal
amount of hoas that still require those Copper gutters is
another one. It's a it like the half round comes
into sections. You can get them in ten twenty we've
done a couple of thirty. It's a once again another

(22:36):
aesthetic look at a significant cost increase over a traditional
case style gutter. Most people, if they want a copper gutter,
we will do what's called a copper penny color and
you can get that for the same price as your
other colors of gutter. It's still the aluminum. It does

(22:57):
not betina, but it gives you that copper look and
it's a clean copper look. For for quite a while.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
What colors are available heath, because you know, we typically
see a white for the most part, but I know
you guys could do a variety of different colors.

Speaker 5 (23:10):
As I still still we can and depending on you know,
depending on supply issues, you have four or five different
kinds of shades of brown, brown, and tan. You have
a couple shades of gray green, the copper penny four
or five shades of white. You know we have, we

(23:30):
have quite a variety. It's it's been been very rare
over my very long time doing this that I've not
been able to match something to wear it where it
looks acceptable. I've run into probably three over twenty years.
I'm like, there's just no match for that color.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Tell us how we can reach.

Speaker 5 (23:49):
You at three nine nine one roof and we can
be reached at Beaver Roofing dot com.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
Heath, good to talk to you, my friend. Have yourself
great weekend, buddy, all right, you too, thanks sir.

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Speaker 1 (24:16):
Today.

Speaker 7 (24:17):
As a farm, when your power goes out, there's not
a lot to do, but you can call mister electric
with priority dispatching. One of our electricians will be at
your door ready to safely restore your power fast because
not having electricity is.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Annoying, very annoyer.

Speaker 7 (24:36):
So next time you need an electrician, call mister Electric
because life is better with electricity services provided by locally
owned and operated franchisees. Products and services may vary by location.

Speaker 8 (24:47):
Hi there, I'm Jeremy Holliday, local owner of mister Electric
of Columbia. I've been servicing the Midlands since twenty ten,
and I'm happy to answer questions and give you free
estimates with upfront pricing. Schedule your free safety check with
mister Electric of Columbia and received fifty dollars off any
work over three hundred dollars. Call eight oh three eight
six eight four two four three or visit my website

(25:09):
mister Electric dot com forward slash Columbia.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
This is the home improvement show of the Midlands. On
one O three point five FMN five sixty A m WVOC.
Good to have you with us as we rolled on
on this Saturday morning. I'm Gary David, now joined by
Jeremy Holliday, mister Electric. Good morning do you, sir?

Speaker 8 (25:40):
Good morning, Gary?

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Good morning? You they ever call you Sparky?

Speaker 8 (25:44):
No? No, uh not Here lately, I'm known as mister Electrics.
That's when people know mister Electric. They see the name,
they say, oh you're mister Electric.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
You have a first name, mister Electric. Yeah, what's good
to see you, as always, my friend. I had no
idea when when I first met you. I'd heard of
mister Electric when I was out tooling around. Oh it's
been a couple of months ago, and happened to drive
by your operation. Man, you got it. You got a
massive operation going. Man, there there are trucks out everywhere.

Speaker 8 (26:16):
Yeah, we're we're we've got a good team and we're
we're happy that we have these guys. So uh yes,
and we are ready. So springtimes here.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Well, this is uh, this is that time of year
when again we with so many folks on the show here,
things really start to ramp up. You know, people want
to fix things up and uh you know, whether it's
you know, new countertops or paint jobs or you know
whatever I mean, you name it. Do you find that
this time of the year gets busy for you guys
too with people? Because if people okay, well you do

(26:50):
electrical stuff, all right, So I'm only going to call
you when I got an issue, But a lot of
people call you not for that, but because they want to.
They want to spruce the place up.

Speaker 8 (26:58):
Yeah, exactly, anytime you know you want to. You want
some you know, light up a dim room, landscape lighting. Springtime,
everybody's going to be in the yards, you know, get
your area lit up outside. Ah, then you have the
temperature changes, you know, you want to get us out there.
Any job we do, we do a complimentary safety check. So, uh,

(27:18):
it's good to have your system looked at. If you
got flickering lights, if you got buzzing coming from the panel,
or you just want a home enhancement done where you
need some additional lighting, or a circuit for something. You know,
we put circuits in for all kinds of things. People
want freezers in their garages, you know, they want a
circuit for it, window units, space heating. You know, we

(27:43):
could do forced heat. I know a lot of people
here have it hurt. You know, probably done it if
you're if you're native to the area. But when the
cold temperature comes, you know, if you have a space heater, yeah,
we can do in wall forced air space heater. Really
that just it just takes the chill off that room
so you don't have to heat up your whole house

(28:04):
to the temperature.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
You know, those things suck up a lot of energy,
don't they typically, well, the typical space heater does, right.

Speaker 8 (28:10):
Yeah, they're not too bad though if you use them
like that, because you're saving from having to warm up
the whole house.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
Right. But a lot of people will put these things
on things that have other things on that circuit. Next thing,
you know, you're tripping a circuit, right. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (28:25):
If you buy the space heaters, you know, and you
plug them into a general purpose circuit, you're probably gonna
end up tripping a breaker. But if we put in
a circuit with an in wall space heater for you
that forces air just to warm you know. Take I
have one in my bathroom and it's great because in
the morning, you know, we have the climate control in
the house to a certain temperature, but in the morning,

(28:47):
I can go into my bathroom and just hit that
in wall heat just to warm me up real quick.
If I'm chilli and my wife loves it.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
You know, these are what's what kind of size are
these things?

Speaker 8 (28:57):
They're probably six by twelve a little. It looks like
a register in the wall, but it's a space heater
that is built in. It's got a dedicated circuit thermostat
on the wall and you can just turn it on
just to take the chill off, and.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
You can actually install those and do the whole nine yards.
Oh yeah, wow, yeah, absolutely, we should have talked about
that was good and cold.

Speaker 8 (29:19):
Yeah, summertime is coming now, right, Yes, but we do
we do circuits for acs too, you know, just.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
A point of explanation. So when you talk about circuits,
what do we what does that mean? Because what do
I do? What I know about electricity is you plug
it in, you unplug it. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (29:38):
So yeah, it's uh, you have your load center, your
breaker box, your fuse panel, your distribution center, whatever you
want to call it. Where the breakers are that you
turn on and on that yeah, yeah, and we run
a wire from that point to the location of wherever
you need your unit item.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
You get your own circuit breaker that's this outlet.

Speaker 8 (30:01):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Okay, that's right. I'm with you, okay, okay. So is
that a tall task to do.

Speaker 8 (30:06):
Depends. There's a lot of factors that come into play,
but we're very good at it because we do it
all the time, every day, every week out the year.
That's you know, we're putting in circuits, we're adding lights,
and our guys are very good at doing it, so
we make it look easy.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
Let me ask you this from a purely personal, selfish
point of view here, but there may be other folks
like me here. Yeah, the home we moved into late
late last summer, there was some landscaping, lights, lighting out front. Okay,
you still got the timer box in the garage and all,

(30:44):
and I have seen where some of the wire rand okay,
but but the lights themselves are long gone. In a
situation where the apparatus seems to be there, and maybe
you just need to replace the lights and check the
wiring and all that. I mean, that's some of you
guys do too. You don't just install the new stuff.
I mean, so nobody needs a thing upgraded or fixed
or looked at or whatever.

Speaker 8 (31:03):
You do that too, right, Oh yeah, absolutely, yeah, yeah,
we do anything you do electrical to your home. We
could do it. So if you have old can lights,
we can upgrade them, retrofit them, get rid of incandescent fixtures,
put in LEDs, you know, worn out you know devices

(31:26):
once they become twenty years old. A lot of times,
especially if they're builder type applications, we can come in
and replace all your devices. You wouldn't believe how much
of a difference that can make for just the appearance
of your home, having a new switches and outlets installed
right right, So you do the paint job, you might

(31:48):
as well do the switches and the outlets and get
all those nice and chris, especially if they're fifteen twenty
years old. It's it's time anyways.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
Well, what if that outlet is a crooked can you
can you remember that?

Speaker 8 (32:01):
Well, we'll find you know, outlets can be sloppy in
the wall. We go to plenty of homes where we
put in a plug tester and the outlet pushes into
the wall, slides around, and that's a bad situation because
there's connections to that outlet and you don't really want
it moving because the connections can get loose over you know,
that's going to cause problems with the connections and make

(32:21):
them become loose if you're continuously doing that. So they
should be straightened up. They should be tightened up. They
should have box extenders, they should have you know.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
Well, this gets to be the thinking here, jeremy new construction.
These crews and most of them do a very good job. Okay,
I'm not out here to rag on anybody here, but
when a home was newly constructed, are they actually required

(32:55):
to bring in a licensed electrician or is it just hey,
I got this guy that you know those drywall and oh,
by the way, he can you know, do this too.

Speaker 8 (33:05):
I'm sure most of the builders are using electricians. I
would hope you know, there's probably a main electrician on
the job that works under a license. And then you
can have guys that aren't licensed.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
But are well which is going to be inspected anyway,
it's going to be inspected. You can miss things, yes, right.

Speaker 8 (33:24):
And the builders, I mean they don't really do a
bad job, it's just after after fifteen twenty years, you know,
everybody has to compete in there in their realm, right,
So in a in a builder contractor great environment where
it's not a custom home where you have to compete
with other guys, they're going to have to backstab the

(33:45):
receptacles just to compete, you know. So when I say
that there's a way to quick connect devices and that
it's a hole in the back of the device that
you just push the wire into and it connects that way.
Whereas we will take the wire and wrap around a screw,
you know, strip it out, wrap it around the screw
and tighten it down. And that's, in my opinion, that's

(34:06):
a better way. But they're all code compliant, so whether
you push it in or wrap it, its code compliant.
But if you're buying one of these new homes, they're
probably going to be backstabbed. And that's not saying anything
bad about it. It's just after fifteen twenty years, you're probably.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
Gonna develop some issues.

Speaker 8 (34:27):
Call us out, let's do an inspection on that home,
see what's going on with it.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
I think you've told us in the past year. I
mean that the code basically gets updated almost annually, doesn't it.

Speaker 8 (34:36):
Every three years?

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Every three years.

Speaker 8 (34:37):
There's things that are added to the code, there's things
that are taken away from the code, and there's things
that are just adjusted, you know. So and it might
not might not affect you, you know, but it could.
So that's why it's good to have these inspections, right,
and we do complimentary anytime we come to your house,
we'll do a complimentary safety check.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
Okay, this time of year, What were the most popular
enhancements that you guys wind up doing well?

Speaker 8 (35:05):
AC circuits. You know these split units. People are loving
the split units.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
That's the way we got the little tiny thing outside. Yeah,
I see these and I'm like, what is that. I
know it's got something to do with an.

Speaker 8 (35:15):
H VAC but yeah, so it's a ducklist system. So
but they require electricity, and uh, you know, we we
we get a lot of calls for those. We get
a lot of calls for you know, landscape lighting for
you know, the outdoor scene that people want to get into.
Hot tubs, uh, you know, pools, uh, anything outdoors, a

(35:40):
lot of outdoors stuff. And then uh, you know, it's
just everything. This time of year is you know, remodels. Uh,
we're in the time of year where everybody's getting busy,
right doing the spring cleaning and and checking everything out
and getting ideas.

Speaker 1 (36:00):
So, uh do you do you find I don't know
if you can put a number on this or not,
but you know, on any given day, your guys are
out working, the gals are out working. I mean, what
percentage of this is is we're actually improving the experience
for somebody versus revenue fix on it's broke.

Speaker 8 (36:21):
There's a lot there's a lot of times you know people, Uh,
there's a lot of things we use now that we
didn't use before in the home, you know, as far
as appliances and all these different uh you know, car
chargers and uh, you know, computers and everything that's relevant
today is is caught is needing electricity. And so working

(36:44):
from home that was a big one. You know, a
lot of people started working from home. So we get
a lot of calls, you know that are upgrading the home,
updating the home services. Ah. So it's not always a
negative experience, like you know, I've got a troubleshooting problem, right,
So and even those we try and make them delightful

(37:06):
for you. Right, And so you come out and we
can give you all kinds of recommendations, you know, dimmer switches, uh,
you know, add some lighting, put in some smart devices.

Speaker 7 (37:18):
You know.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
That's that's big. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (37:19):
Yeah, it's fun. That's fun stuff. People like that.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Yeah. So all right, Jeremy Howley. Oh, by the way,
with me Nastalis. For a long time, I had had
an engineer years ago at radio station, give me some
advice and dog on if it doesn't work. Almost every time,
when something's not working, right, unplug it. Let us sit
for thirty seconds. Plug it back in.

Speaker 8 (37:37):
Yeah, why is that reset? I guess I gotta do
that myself sometimes.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
Yeah, right, all right, right for all your electrical needs.
Vista Electric Jeremy always good to see how the foks
get a hold of man.

Speaker 8 (37:52):
You can reach us by phone eight zero three eight
six eight four to two four three, or go to
us online mister Electric dot com forward slash Columbia.

Speaker 1 (38:02):
All right, you're listening to the Home Improvement Show of
the Midlands on WVOC.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
I'm James Carwell, local owner and operator of Freedom Plumbing
right here in the Midlands. After working as a plumber
for nearly a decade, I decided to open my own business,
and Freedom Plumbing was born because of my love for
this country and the great respect I have for the
men and women of our armed forces and our first responders.
I named my company Freedom Plumbing. What sets us apart

(38:27):
from other companies is our customer service. We have a
five star rating on Google, a five star rating on Facebook,
an A plus rating on Angie's List, and an A
plus rating with a Better Business Bureau. I'm James Carwell,
local owner of Freedom Plumbing, and we look forward to
servicing you for all of your plumbing needs. Get fifty
percent off your next service call. When you mentioned you

(38:48):
heard us on WVOC, learn more at Freedom dash Plumbing
dot com. That's Freedom Dash Plumbing dot com.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
You are listening to the Home Improvement show in the
Midlands on one O three point five FMN five sixty
AMWVOC and across the planet. Of course, we got folks
listening to it on the iHeartRadio app. How cool is that?
All right? Went to our final segment on this fine
Saturday morning, won't be fine by tomorrow, and sound like
we got rainhead in our way. We'll have to ask
John Farley about that. He's he's with preservation specialists. They'll

(39:32):
be joining us coming up next hour in one of
the segments there, so I'll be sure to ask about
that right now though. Welcome back to Trey Powell from Mosquito. Joe.
Good to see you again, brother, Hey, good to be seen.
How are you, eh, you know, it's always good to
be seen. I've been doing well. We have been a
couple of months that you've been on the program. We
kind of that down period, you know, we take it

(39:52):
all the way through like December. We talk about the
holiday lights and all that, and then we take a
few months off, but you guys don't take a whole
lot of down timing. Basically, I guess January is about
the only month where you're really not doing a whole
lot when it comes to well mosquitoes, correct you, I know,
I guess you guys came out to our place. I

(40:14):
know it was last month. I don't remember the day,
but you start, yeah.

Speaker 9 (40:16):
About late February, when the temperatures start getting consistently above
fifty degrees, it is time to start treating because if
you don't start larva siding and eliminating those those eggs
start hatching when it starts getting above fifty degrees. We
had people even calling that we're seeing mosquitos and getting
mosquito bites. In the first week of February, we had
a week it was about seventy degrees, and so that's

(40:38):
a little out of the ordinary for this area. Usually
it's you know, after President's Day and till about Thanksgiving
is usually when you need to be treating for mosquitoes
if you don't want to see any. And so that's
that's kind of what our schedule is. But always weather pending,
we've had years where we treated in December, and you know,
we a lot of times we'll treat our late customers

(41:00):
year round, even in the month of January. Really for spiders,
because folks on the lake, you know, that's like the
welcoming committee. When you move in to some place on
the lake, is you get every imaginable bug, and that
attracts a lot of spiders and they will live on
your house and live like kings.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
What is it about the just all the water, I
guess yeah.

Speaker 10 (41:23):
It's just a lot of moisture in the air creates
a great environment.

Speaker 1 (41:27):
You know.

Speaker 10 (41:27):
I've found a lot of people on the lake. They
want to see that view.

Speaker 9 (41:30):
They don't have backdoor neighbors because they have a big lake,
and so most of them don't have blinds, and so
even if they don't leave their outside lights on, which
is a big no no. If you live on the
lake and you leave all of your outside lights on,
you are attracting bugs of all kinds directly to your home.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
I'm seeing that Beatlejuice sign of the movie, you know, flashing.

Speaker 9 (41:53):
Yes, yes, right here, come here, bugs welcome. You know,
midge flies are a big problem on the lake, and
so you know, you are just a beacon. You know,
what you hope is that your neighbor leaves all their
lights on so they all go there. Yeah, right, And
so whatever house does that, they're going to have, you know,
midge flies and all kinds of things which attract spiders,

(42:15):
and so spiders are going to build webs around all
the doors and windows and anywhere that there's light, because
all the bugs are going to come to that and
they're going to sit there and live like kings and
then poop all over your windowsills and build spider webs.
So you have to have a broom by every door.
So when you go out the door, you got to
knock those webs down. And so you know, having a

(42:36):
service like Mosquito Joe coming out regularly treating for the
spiders and things is important. But even when you cut
those outside lights off, the inside lights coming through the windows,
that brings them all to the windows and doors, right,
and you know, you open the door and you'll end
up getting bugs in the house.

Speaker 10 (42:54):
And so it can be a real real problem.

Speaker 9 (42:57):
I mean, one of the ways to lower that by
as much as eighty percent is getting like blinds or
blackout blinds that would come down once the once the
sun goes down and you can't see the lake anymore,
shut those blinds, shut those you know, shades, and you
will reduce the number of bugs that you are attracting

(43:19):
to your house.

Speaker 10 (43:20):
Interesting significantly.

Speaker 1 (43:22):
But you say, even not on the lake, but in
other places. You've had people in February say they had
gotten bitten by mosquito. Yes, okay, So how does this work.
So we're coming off the winter months, and any mosquito
that was, you know, hanging around last November should be
long dead.

Speaker 10 (43:38):
Yeah, right, very long. I mean they basically live.

Speaker 9 (43:42):
The females might live six weeks, the males usually ten days.
The type of mosquitoes that we have, and so once
the eggs stop hatching, which is when your your temperatures
are consistently below fifty degrees, the egg stop hatching, and
so the pressure goes down because there's just less and
less mosquitoes because the ones that are living start dying

(44:04):
off slowly. If you get you know, a week where
you're in the thirties every single night, that will eliminate
a lot of adult mosquitos just because they can't handle
the cold. But there are some that will find places
to overwinter, underneath the house or you know, in a
tree hole or somewhere that they can find some protection
or insulation, they will.

Speaker 10 (44:23):
They can overwinter and live as long as six weeks.

Speaker 9 (44:26):
And if the temperature wherever they're hanging out is okay
and they have water, then they can breed. And you know,
you can't have mosquitos that are all the way through
the winter. They don't fly south, but they do lay eggs,
and if those eggs don't hatch, they're just going to
sit there and wait and incubate until the time is right.

Speaker 1 (44:44):
Have we gotten to a point now where some of
those eggs are starting to hatch.

Speaker 9 (44:48):
Oh, the eggs were hatching in February, which is why
we were out there. And you know our philosophy. We're
not a company that just does what I call the
spray and prey. You know, that is about half the job.
You know, we spend half of our time scouring the
yard and finding standing water. The type of mosquitos we have,
they don't travel very far, and so if you're getting bit,

(45:09):
unless you have a very small yard less than a
quarter of an acre, they're not coming from your neighbors.
They are coming from somewhere in your yard, a flower pot,
a kid's toy, a willbarrow, a bucket that's unattended, somewhere
that is holding water, and they're coming from that. So
we're we are very adamant about finding where they're breeding,

(45:30):
hitting that with a larva side so they're never born.
If you eliminate them before they're born, they can't bite you,
and so you significantly lower the population. And then you're
going to put that barrier spray down to protect you,
eliminate the adult mosquitos and protect you from any any
mosquitos possibly coming from from outside of your yard.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
It's funny. I was just I don't know how they
came up in conversation here, just in the last week
or two talking to an acquaintance, and we were mentioning that,
you know, because we moved back late last August, and
from the time we put a contract on the house
at the time we sold that. You know how that goes.
You want to go over and just see, even if

(46:09):
you can't get in, you want to look around it.
And this is a home that's got a you know,
a pool in the backyard, and it's really that okay,
So we would just go over there, you know, early
in the evening and just sit by the pool. We
did that once and realized that we were getting eaten
a lot. So, you know, once we knew where our

(46:30):
closing day was, first thing I did was call you
guys and say can you come that day?

Speaker 10 (46:34):
Absolutely?

Speaker 1 (46:35):
And I think I'll actually came up the day before.
It was fine, but I was I really honestly, goodness,
and we've been using your service for years now, but
I was amazed at how quickly your service was able
to rid that back. We couldn't. I mean, I couldn't
stay there before. It Really it's people, you'd be surprised

(46:56):
how quickly can work.

Speaker 10 (46:57):
It's a real game changer in the yard.

Speaker 9 (46:59):
If you've never had a professional mosquito service, you know
that's done right and done well and consistently.

Speaker 10 (47:07):
It's a game changer.

Speaker 9 (47:08):
I can't tell you how many people have said, you know,
I'll give up a lot of things, but I'm not
giving this up. I'll avoid going out to eat to
save money, and I'll cook out in the backyard because man.

Speaker 10 (47:18):
Being able to just walk into your yard anytime you want.

Speaker 9 (47:21):
Without having to spray yourself down, you know, it's just
people just love it.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
Now we have an exciting announcement to make this morning
here on the Home Improvement Show of the Midlands. And
I'm excited because I just signed up with you guys
for this something you've been doing for a while now,
but now you're doing it bigle. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (47:43):
We really never advertised it. We would do it for
customers that were really begging us. They really enjoyed the
way that we did business, and they like our service,
and they wanted us to take over more pest control.
And so Mosquito Joe as a whole, not just here
in Columbia, but all over the country. We're now a
full service pest control company. We don't do termites yet,

(48:05):
but we can take care of inside outside the yard,
including rodent exclusion, keeping mice and rats out of your house.
There's nothing worse than coming home from vacation and finding
mouse poop going down the hallway or in your bed.
For you know, of all things that happened to us
one time, really years and years ago, and man, almighty, Uh,

(48:27):
it was like turning the house upside down. Like, oh,
it's nothing worse than having you know, mousepoop in your bed.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
I don't know. We had cat throw up in the
bed the other day, so that's that's not good, all right,
so great, So now this is but this is a
separate service you offer. It is it is. You can
get one or the other or both, you can.

Speaker 9 (48:49):
We we are you know a lot of customers just
want to bundle services, that want to deal with one company,
and we can be their one stop shop, your go
to solution for all your pest control needs, with the
exception of your termite contract, your termite bond really a
whole different you know, ball of wax with that. But
as far as keeping bugs out of your house and

(49:10):
out of your yard, we can handle that for you.

Speaker 10 (49:13):
And it's guaranteed.

Speaker 9 (49:14):
And as always, we have no contracts, uh, you know,
so you could you could start and stop whenever you want. However,
I will say, just like with a mosquito service, you
got to do it consistently, properly and consistently, and it works.
It is guaranteed. So you know, we don't have a
contract of any sort. We have a we'll have a

(49:34):
service agreement and let you know, either we're going to
come out bi monthly and do a home pest defense
and or and BI monthly with the rodent control, or
we can do actually quarterly on the home pest defense
if somebody wants it in that way. Either way is guaranteed.
Uh that BI monthly is a little bit more expensive.
It takes you know, or I'm sorry, quarterly is a

(49:57):
little bit more expensive because it's twice as much product
to exclude the the uh you know, uh bugs from
your house for for a little bit longer period of time.

Speaker 1 (50:09):
Right right, so and again again with a mosquito every
three weeks, that is correct.

Speaker 9 (50:15):
Yeah, there really is no other way to do it.
You know, you don't want a service that just works.
Sometimes I hear that a lot. You know, folks tried
somebody a landscaper or somebody who was doing it every
four weeks or something like that, and you know they
these companies tend to make a lot of excuses.

Speaker 10 (50:33):
Well it's a flying insect. It's only going to work.

Speaker 9 (50:35):
But so well, we don't do that. I don't want
you to see any mosquitoes. If you if you get
one bite, I you know, we will gladly come back
and redo it, you know. And you know what's what's
happened is we've probably missed a water source. They're never obvious,
and they're sometimes they are very difficult to find. And
so we we pride ourselves and having a lot of

(50:56):
communication with the customer. We're gonna we're gonna text you
and and and and contact you the day before, thirty
minutes before and then immediately afterwards telling you everything we do.
And you can respond to those text messages I do,
and you can be in direct contact with the person
who is in your yard around your home, telling them

(51:16):
exactly what's happening and what's going on.

Speaker 10 (51:18):
And if you have no problems, you don't have to respond.
It's fine.

Speaker 9 (51:21):
But you know, if a customer is saying, hey, I'm
still getting some bites on the deck, boy, that is
some great information because we might need to crawl into
that deck and see if there's.

Speaker 1 (51:29):
A hole down for you.

Speaker 9 (51:30):
A dog dig a hole before you moved into the house,
and that thing's always full of water.

Speaker 10 (51:34):
And now you've got a mosquito breeding site right under there,
all right.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
So now treatments for mosquitoes, ticks and fleas.

Speaker 9 (51:42):
And home pest defense, yeah, keep the roaches and ants
out of your house, as well as rodent control and
keeping the rats and bugs and that you know, last
year US News and World Report named us the most
eco friendly pest control company in the country.

Speaker 10 (52:00):
Which we were very very proud of that.

Speaker 9 (52:02):
We hold a gold standard in the UH, you know,
environmental the Pesticide Environmental Stewardship Act. Some part of every
single treatment that we do is eco friendly. From larva siding,
the rodent control is one hundred percent of natural UH
and the weekend that yet, right, yeah, well it's it's

(52:25):
not using rodenticide, which is being cooming highly controversial. It's
been outlawed in many states because there's a lot of
collateral damage that happens to pets and birds and foxes.

Speaker 10 (52:39):
It that is a bait.

Speaker 9 (52:40):
That means that it looks and it feels like food,
which is the only way to get the rats and
mice to eat it.

Speaker 10 (52:48):
And it's just really not that.

Speaker 9 (52:49):
What we're going to do is put an all natural
barrier around that house that those rodents will not cross.
They I saw a video they had a mother with
their younglings in that to the house and she she
comes out of the house and goes to get food,
and they put that barrier around the house and she
would not cross that barrier to go back and feed
those kids.

Speaker 1 (53:09):
We are out of time. Trey Powell, Mosquito Joe and
Home Defense, Home Pest Defense. I'll get that right here
by next show. I promise you. How to folks reach
you and get signed up? Buddy?

Speaker 10 (53:20):
Yeah, missus, But I say.

Speaker 1 (53:22):
Get signed up now. I said it makes a sign
as a contract. There's not a contract. How do folks
reach you and get you out there?

Speaker 9 (53:28):
Yeah, So it's gonna be Mosquitojo dot com or they
can reach us at eight five five Aska Joe, eight
five five Aska Joe.

Speaker 1 (53:36):
All right, good heavy back Tray, Good to see Eyboddy,
good to be here. Hi, this is Gary David. You've
heard me talk for years about Anthony John Construction and
the wonderful jobs they do for folks all across the Midlands.
When it comes to roofing and gutting, Well, it's the
same people doing the job, but the name has changed.
That's right now. It's Beaver Roofing and Beaver Gutters. Leave
it to Beaver for all your roofing and gutter needs.

(53:57):
The same great service and the same great folks. I'd
Anthony John Construction, just with a new name. Eight oh three,
nine nine one roof and Beaverroofing dot com the gutter
roofing work. Leave it to beaver. Beaver roofing and beaver
gutters
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