Keep Your Home Safe While on Vacation
As the summer heats up, many
of you will escape the daily grind and head out on a well-deserved vacation. However, before you hit the road, take a few precautions so your home is not
enticing to thieves or susceptible to fire and other disasters. Not
only is having your home vandalized or burnt to the ground a highly unpleasant way to return from a trip, but it
also puts the rest of the association at risk, as these problems have the potential to spread quickly throughout
the neighborhood. So, before you take off, consider implementing
these safety tips to keep your home and our community secure.
Call on friends for help. If you’re
going to be away a week or more, ask a trusted friend to check on your house every day or two—or better yet,
housesit—while you’re gone. Not only will they make sure nothing
happens to your home, but you might also ask them to bring in your mail and newspapers, water plants or even
feed Fluffy. Of course, it is a good idea to let your neighbors
know a friend is monitoring your property so they do not call the police to thwart a perceived “break-in.”
Set your lights on a timer. Leaving your
house unlit for days on end is a sure sign to burglars that it is empty, but so is keeping the lights on
24-7. A good way to handle the lights on/off conundrum is to set
them on a timer that is scheduled to simulate your regular routine.
Of course, if the lights seem a bit too simulated, that can be another telltale sign, so it is a good idea to
set the timers in individual rooms on staggered schedules to make the light coming from your home seem more
natural.
Stop your mail and newspaper. Nothing
screams “nobody’s home!” like a pile of newspapers strewn about your doorstep or an overflowing
mailbox. Therefore, if you cannot get a friend or neighbor to
collect them for you, it is best to have your mail and paper stopped if you are going to be out of town for a
while.
Do not leave the spare house key lying
around. That fake rock where you keep the extra house key is not as discrete as you
think. Whether you keep a spare under your welcome mat, above the
doorframe or in a hide-a-key contraption, chances are it will take the nefarious types five minutes flat to find
it and gain easy entry to your house. So take it with you, let a
friend hold onto it or put it in a safe place inside your house, even if you are worried about losing your other
keys. Because when it comes down to it, calling a locksmith is less
traumatic than calling the police.
Make a last-minute checklist. Are all the
windows and doors locked? Stove and oven turned off? How about all the faucets? Are
the electronics unplugged and valuables secured? Take five minutes
before you leave to ensure your house is vacation-ready. Another
run-through of the house may seem unnecessary if you did it earlier in the day, but knowing you’ve left your
house as safe as possible will help you kick back and have a great vacation.
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