Closing a Remote Property for Winter
Draining plumbing, stabilizing fuel, sealing entry points, and the order in which to shut systems down before the first hard freeze.
Read the closing checklistCabin & Cottage Maintenance ยท Canada
Practical notes on closing a cabin before freeze-up, opening it after the thaw, keeping mice and larger wildlife out, and running off-grid water, power, and heat without surprises.
Seasonal Reading
Northern cabins follow a rhythm set by freeze-up and thaw rather than the calendar. These notes group the work the way most owners tackle it.
Draining plumbing, stabilizing fuel, sealing entry points, and the order in which to shut systems down before the first hard freeze.
Read the closing checklist
Inspecting for winter damage, recommissioning water and power, and checking what moved in while the cabin sat empty.
Read the opening checklist
Sealing a building against mice, and reducing the attractants that bring bears and other wildlife close to the structure.
Read the protection notesWhat the notes cover
Standing water that freezes is the most common cause of cabin damage. The notes cover draining supply lines, traps, water heaters, and pressure tanks, and using non-toxic plumbing antifreeze in fixtures that cannot be fully drained.
Battery banks, generators, propane, and wood heat each need their own shutdown and start-up steps. Carbon monoxide and propane safety run through all of it, so detectors and ventilation get checked first.
Mice fit through a gap the size of a dime. Sealing with steel or copper mesh and hardware cloth, then removing food and nesting attractants, keeps a closed cabin from becoming a winter shelter.
Securing garbage, removing fallen fruit, and closing crawlspaces reduces the chance a bear or other animal investigates the building. Roof, flashing, and foundation checks round out the structural side.
Contact
Send a note and we may cover the topic in a future update. This form is for general questions about cabin and cottage upkeep. For wildlife conflicts that threaten safety, contact your provincial conservation authority directly.
Volinion
Box 214, Huntsville, ON P1H 2J6, Canada
editor@volinion.org