A Seasonal Maintenance Calendar for Canadian Cottages
What to check at spring opening, through the humid months, and again before the first hard frost.
Open guideCottage & rural home care · Canada
Blue Cottage collects field-tested upkeep notes for seasonal cottages and year-round rural houses, from snow loads on the roof to closing the place up before freeze-up.
Reference articles
Each guide walks through the reasoning, not just a checklist, so the steps still make sense when your site, slope, and budget differ.
What to check at spring opening, through the humid months, and again before the first hard frost.
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Draining plumbing, protecting against snow load, and the small steps that prevent a spring surprise.
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How moisture, sun, and freeze-thaw cycles wear exterior wood, and how to slow it down.
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Why this exists
Most cottage problems are not dramatic. A gutter that overflows in October feeds an ice dam in January; a deck board that stays damp in summer is soft by the third winter. The work is rarely complex, but it is seasonal, and a missed window can turn a twenty-minute task into a spring repair.
These notes are organised the way the calendar actually arrives in much of Canada: a short, busy opening in spring, a steady summer of small jobs, and a firm deadline before the ground freezes.
How the guides are built
Lake-effect snow, clay soils, and long shoulder seasons change the right answer. Guides note where region matters.
References point to widely available products and standard practice rather than a single brand or supplier.
Where a licensed electrician, well technician, or structural inspection is the right call, the text says so.
Contact
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