Thom chats with the home improvement guru Gary Sullivan 12/18/2025 - podcast episode cover

Thom chats with the home improvement guru Gary Sullivan 12/18/2025

Dec 18, 20259 min
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Episode description

Keeping yourself safe during the holiday season with Gary.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Harry, Let's get right to it, because I was thinking about when you sent me this email last night. I'm looking around my house and you know, we have a fireplace right in the middle of the living room, you know, the whole nine yards. We're going to talk about home safety tips for the holidays. Let's start with we have a live tree. Let's start how important is it to continue to make sure that thing has water on?

Speaker 2

Oh, it's so important. You ever see any of those videos when they actually light to Christmas?

Speaker 1

Yes, I have a friend of mine that does it outside every year, and I've never seen anything like it.

Speaker 2

It is unbelievable how quickly it gets consumed. So we don't want it to dry out. And a lot of this is just common sense, but it needs to be repeated every year. Don't put the Christmas tree over a register vent that's blowing warm air on it. Not that it's going to catch fire, but you're going to dry it out. Make sure. And when you first cut that tree and cut the little you know, stump down at the bottom, open up the and let us start drinking water.

It's amazing. You're gonna You're gonna fill up that stand every day, every day, okay, and it'll take about two or three weeks before it starts sealing off. So keep it really watered, I mean from a standpoint of just keeping it from drying out.

Speaker 1

So important. Okay, that's number one. And then I started paying attention. I talked about the fireplace right and hanging garland that could be hanging down off the mantle, say above it, and you don't want that obviously, right.

Speaker 2

Right right, and and kind of the same way. I guess a lot of it depends, I'm on what type of garden you know, you got that foil garden and stuff like that. How much heat comes out of the fire box and just kind of warms that mantle. But you don't want to be hanging evergreens there. And I see it all the time this time of year, and I'll even say something to the people like them, So.

Speaker 3

You guys use that fireplace during the holidays and it's always yeah, you know, we always make a good fire and Christmas, and go like what you know, I just I'm not trying to be you know.

Speaker 2

Nosy, but I wouldn't put that garland there. And then they look and they go, oh, yeah, that makes sense.

Speaker 1

Because I do have a question for you on that one though, is the fake garland stuff is flammable? As you know, a lot of people will go out and then they'll you know, when they get their tree, they'll get the garland that you know is live for all intents and purposes. Is there a difference as far as being more flammable, Well.

Speaker 2

There is to a degree. So some of them will say flammable. In fact most of them will, okay, but it's nothing like a real live garland. Again, going back to the story about the Christmas tree, how fastly it can busts. This would lot of your garden garland's plastic. It may melt or kind of warp. So I was really kind of focusing on the live. But it's really not a good place to put garland anyway because there's a lot of heat coming out of that firebox.

Speaker 1

Yes there is, okay, now talking about a lot of folks, I've seen it done. They burn the gift wrapping, yeah, or boxes right right in a fireplace after people open them up.

Speaker 4

Not a good idea, it's not, it really is.

Speaker 2

And here's the story on that. So I think a couple months ago we might have talked about making sure the chimney is clean, making sure the creoso's gone out of the chimney. It's flammable, make sure you haven't had a chimney fire. Let's say you didn't heed the advice and you don't know when you had that chimney cleaner inspected. If there's kreosode in there, it catches fire with real hot quick fires, which is exactly what paper produces.

Speaker 1

And so that would be more reason than to follow that up based on those of us that have seen a Christmas tree and the way it ignites and burns almost immediately.

Speaker 4

Sure don't burn tree trimmings in the fire place.

Speaker 2

Absolutely, and it happens all the time. I mean, it happens all the time. And you know, once we get to November, I'm sure you know, you watch the news and there's there's a house fire almost every other no doubt about it, and they never say what caused it. But we don't have those problems in the summer, and a lot of times it's just because we've got everything inside. People are burning fires, they're cooking more, et cetera. So I know these are common sensical, but boy, just just

think about it. What happens it's pretty You throw the paper in there and maybe you get a little different color of flames. But that's burning so hot, and if that chimney's dirty, you run the risk of a chimney fire. And if you've already had a chimney fire and that liner's cracked, you run the risk of starting the house fire.

Speaker 1

Okay, sometimes my wife does this from time to time, where she'll close the flume right, and then all of a sudden, I'll fire up the you know, the fireplace, and then you know, smoke is everywhere now. Cracking the window certainly helps, right m M. Anything else that the well recommend, it's the.

Speaker 2

Real deal too, Not so much as that. I mean, it certainly would do that if the damper was closed. But a lot of times it's negative air pressure inside our homes. So remember, you build a fire, it creates heat, It warms the chimney, and it creates a drawl bringing

the smoke out. But if you got the kitchen fan and somebody's doing a cooking and it's a ventilating fan, that's pulling air, and that's pulling air down the chimney, or the bathroom fan, it's pulling air down the chimney, so you get a negative air pressure inside the house, you start a fire, and the smoke can't really warm up the chimney, so it starts coming into the house. That's not a good look. No, just crack the window.

Speaker 1

So now, now here's the one that these things terrify me. They always have. I don't know why. I never had a bad experience from them, but talking about space heaters, these things just scare me to death. Now, there are certain places, in certain ways that you would suggest do not do these things. If you're using a space heater, what would they do well?

Speaker 2

For sure? And if people read the directions and all people do Number one, a lot of them will say don't use in bathrooms for just basic reason. A lot of water. Make sure they're ul listed, make sure it has a ground false circuit interrupter on the plug of that space heater. And the number one thing is people get a space heater and then they run a lamp cord extension cord that's fifteen feet long.

Speaker 4

That's a no no.

Speaker 2

It tells you do not use extension cords with this. Those things are pulling about fifteen hundred watts. That's a lot of juice. So no extension cords on a space heater, and don't run them under the carpet or under a throw rug in a doorway or in the family room. People walk over that carpet. It's abrasive on the back with jute. So no, no to the extension cords, and

read the directions. And if you're going to buy one, see what that thing is actually designed to be, how it's designed to be used, and keep flammables away from these things, you know, like blankets and stuff about it.

Speaker 1

Well, and with all that in mind, a lot of us have a fire extinguisher. Probably a lot more of us do not.

Speaker 2

Boy, I agree with that. And then the next big question is doeserve by the family know how to use it? Yeah, And I'll bet you a lot of people driving right now said no. No.

Speaker 4

There's you know, the old the old fire extingus.

Speaker 2

You know, pull the pin, you take, you aim, you sweep at the base of the fire. But there's a lot of fire extinguishers out there now that come in almost it's almost like an aerosol, like an aerosol campaign, only it's about twice as big as an aerosol, has as much power as a regular good sized fire extinguisher so they can be conveniently located. They're inexpensive and there's no mystery. I mean you it's like aerosol. You press the button down on the top and it's blowing out

the powder and putting out the fire. It's an ABC, so it takes care of you know, all types of fires. But man, today they just go you know, fireplace, no fireplace, a lot of cooking. If you do anything at all and you don't have one, go buy one today and put it in the kitchen cabinet underneath the stove, okay, and you can probably get to the garage with it. You could probably get to the fireplace with it. You

can get to the cooking. But there's nothing worse than having a kitchen fire or something like that and you have nothing.

Speaker 1

All right, I got less than a minute. Last thing that I found interesting you put on here about trimming candle wicks.

Speaker 2

Yeah, yeah, that's another thing. Number one we all know, blowout the candles before we go to bed. Before you light it again, make sure it's just got about a quarter inch wick at the top. Tom. If it's got a real long one, you'll get a real long flame. It'll produce a lot of smoke. You can kind of, you know, you can kind of start messing up your walls if you're burning them a long time with the long wick, So trim those wicks down. The base of a pillar candle should almost be two times the size.

Add the pillar candle, make sure it's good and steady, and stay safe.

Speaker 4

Amen. Merry Christmas to you, my friend. You are the very very best. Tom.

Speaker 2

You have a merry Christmas too. Well talk in a couple of weeks.

Speaker 4

I guess I'll look forward to it, all right. God speed ahead.

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