Moving Fort Wayne
This week on Moving Fort Wayne, Brad Noll sits down with Jamie Miller of Gold Key, a home inspection company that has completed roughly 27,000 inspections and is widely regarded as an authority on home inspections across the Midwest and Indiana. With Northeast Indiana swinging from freezing rain to 80 degrees in a single week, the two dig into how temperature differentials, rising humidity, and hidden moisture quietly shape the health of your home. Jamie clears up one of the most common misconceptions right away: mildew grows on living plants, and almost everything else people see on shower walls and crawl space joists is mold. From there, he walks through what mold actually needs to grow, why basements and crawl spaces are the usual suspects, and how a single ice maker line leak behind a wall turned into a six-by-eight-foot section of black, fully insulated drywall. The lesson is reassuring rather than alarming: mold is fixable when you address the moisture source that created it. Brad and Jamie also turn the conversation toward sellers and long-term homeowners, covering what to do when you spot a water stain before listing, why painting over a properly repaired stain is honest rather than deceptive, and how annual maintenance inspections catch popped roofing nails and bird-damaged exhaust ducts before they become expensive problems. It is a practical, plainspoken guide to becoming a confident homeowner who stays ahead of the climate instead of reacting to it. Key Takeaways ● Mildew only grows on living plants; the fuzzy growth on shower walls, crawl space wood, and stored clothing is mold, not mildew ● Mold needs three things to grow: air, water, and food; since air and building materials cannot be removed, controlling moisture is the only real lever homeowners have ● Humidity above 50 percent and temperatures of 70 degrees and up create the most active mold growth, while cold weather keeps it dormant rather than killing it ● Basements and crawl spaces are the highest-risk areas because they sit on low, damp ground and often have stagnant air; a dehumidifier can be essential even with central air running ● Surface mold from poor airflow can simply be wiped down with a proper cleaner, but staining from a crack, window, or wall leak likely means mold inside the wall cavity ● A one-time water event is usually fine if the area is fully dried within 48 hours; insufficient drying can produce problematic mold growth in as little as two days ● Before listing, confirm the moisture source is stopped, document the repair, and then paint over old stains to eliminate an unexplained variable for buyers ● Annual maintenance inspections are shorter and lower cost, build a documented repair history that supports resale value, and catch small issues like popped roofing nails before they reach the walls Connect ● Podcast: Moving Fort Wayne ● Host: Brad Noll, The Noll Team: https://www.thenollteam.com ● Guest: Jamie Miller, Gold Key: https://www.goldkeyinspect.com/ ● Also check out Brad's other podcast, Student of the Game, for small business strategy and leadership Mentioned in this episode: Mortgage you Home with Ruoff Mortgage Ruoff Mortgage [https://movingfortwayne.captivate.fm/ruoffmortgage]
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