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What types of Hardwood Flooring are Best for Pets? | Raleigh New Home Tips and Trends

Wondering what type of hardwood flooring will stand up best to your pets in your new Raleigh home? 

We get asked this question often - so I'm going to share this great answer from Debbie Gartner at Floor Coverings International, who has answered the question thoroughly here! 

Any comments should be made on the original post, thanks.

Via Debbie Gartner - Westchester Flooring -Hardwood Floors Carpet Tile Refinish - (Floor Coverings International Westchester NY & Stamford CT):

I get this question often from my customers - which type of hardwood should I use for pets?  It's a hard question to answer because truthfully all hardwood will dent and scratch over time - it's just a matter of how much and how much you can see it.  But I do not think this is a reason to avoid getting hardwood for your home.  Tons of consumers have hardwood and pets and they can easily co-exist together.

Usually, this question is less of an issue for cats and more of a concern with dogs, especially active dogs.  And, while there are things you can do w/ your pets (e.g. clip or file nails), I'm going to focus on hardwoods that can take a better beating and/or not show it as much.

1.  First, by all means stay away from the softer woods:American cherry wood westchester NY

  • American Cherry
  • American Walnut
  • Pine

These woods are softer and will dent very easily - even without a pet or without kids.  They look beautiful, but they are not practical.  And, ironically, they often cost more (because fewer people buy them).  Note: American Cherry and Walnut are different than Brazilian Cherry and Walnut.  American = soft; Brazilian = hard.

 

2.  Take your shoes off.  A lot of customers blame their pets for scratches, but often we are the worst culprit.  While high heels are often not wonderful for hardwood floor, the biggest culprit is not the shoes themselves, but rather what gets caught in the shoes.  It's those pebbles and dirt that get caught in our shoes that cause most of the scratches.  Or, sometimes w/ high heels that have been worn a while, the rubber wears off and there is a nail at the bottom.   So before blaming your lovelu pets, look at your own habits.  For my customers that take their shoes off, their hardwood floors are in way better condition and it's a much longer time before they need to be refinished.

 

3.  Consider handscraped or distressed hardwoods.  This is a stylized look tHandscraped distressed hardwood in Westchester NYhat some customers love and some hate.  It tends to be in style in the South, certain areas in the west, and more rustic homes in the Northeast.  This look is not for everyone.  But, here's why it's good for pets...it shows the scratches and dents less because that's how the wood is designed - it dent looks like it fits right in.  Likewise, hardwood that has more knots and character marks will hide the dent and scratches more.

 

4.  All things being equal, harder hardwoods are better.  This is tricky because not all things are equal - see the next point.  But, Hickory is great choice (1820 on the Janka scale).  There are many other hardwoods that are harder...see the janka scale of hardness...but you can't jut look at hardness by itself.

 

red oak hardwood flooring westchester NY5.  Woods with stronger graining are better for hiding the scratches.  Oak is a great example of this, especially red oak which has stronger graining than white oak.  While Red Oak is only 1290 on the janka hardness scale (which is still hard and is hard enough), it does an excellent job of hiding the dents and scratches due to the strong graining.  In fact, it usually hides them better than Brazilian Cherry (2,350) and Brazilian Walnut (3684) which have less and smoother graining.

 

6.  Less glossy finishes.  Satin finishes are usually best.  The glossier the finish, the more it will show the scratches from the light reflecting off of it.

 

7.  Usually, lighter colors are better for pets.  First, darker colors seem to show the scratches more.  I'm not sure why, but they just do.  Second, oak is the most common type of hardwood and oak is naturally light.  So, if you have a scratch that penetrates the stain color, it will show less on lighter colors since what is revealed beneath is simiar in color.

 

8.  Solid hardwood or high quality engineered hardwood that can be refinished.  It's always good to have an insurance plan so that you can refinish the hardwood floors when you need to.

 

9.  Bamboo is "iffy" with pets - can vary greatly - some are good; most are not.  Bamboo's resilience can vary widely pending the type and the brand, and what follows are some generalizations.  a) stay away from stained bamboo - these scratch very easily and bamboo does not accept stains as well as oak does, b) carmelized bamboo is weaker than natural as the process of heating it weakens the grass, c) strand bamboo can be very strong - so if you have pets and want bamboo, this is a GREAT option - more expensive, but will hold up better, d) buying bamboo from big box stores and/or cheap bamboo results in a lot of dents, e) even though natural bamboo is technically stronger than oak, it shows dents more easily (and carmelized bamboo is usually softer than oak).  See my page on bamboo flooring for more info and for pictures.

10.  Use felt pads underneath furniture and area rugs/entrance mats.  This is especially important for chairs that are used a lot.  Oh, and stay away from chairs with wheels - often thing get caught in the wheels and cause scratches.  If you do have chairs with wheels, put an area rug underneath.  And, make sure you have area rugs/entrance mats at all your main entries.  You can even have one outside, too.  These are the areas that get worn down the fastest due to rain, snow, salt, dirt, so protecting these areas will go a long way towards preserving your floors.

 

I hope this is helpful.  Sorry it's long, but there are a lot of things to consider with hardwood and this is not an easy question to answer.  Above is meant to address denting/scratching.  If you are concerned about pets peeing on the hardwood, that is a whole different issue...basically no hardwoods will stand up well to that, so clean up the mess quickly is the best advice I can give you on that.  Also, if you have pet stains already in the hardwood, when you refinish the floors, try to replace those boards as that blackness from the water/urine, will not sand out.  If you replace them and refinish, your floor will look good as new.  Alternatively, if you can't replace them/can't afford it, then use a dark color to hide the dark marks.

Hardwood Flooring - Carpet - Tile/Natural Stone - Laminate - Refinish Hardwood - Backsplashes

Floor Coverings International Westchester and StamfordDebbie Gartner, President and Owner

"The Flooring Girl"Debbie Gartner - Westchester Hardwood Flooring

Floor Coverings International: Westchester NY/Stamford CT

You can download our free flooring guide.  Or, visit our flooring selector - 2,000 options for hardwood flooring, carpet, tile. Call us for a free estimate 914-937-2950. 

"We bring the store to your door."

WC19920-H07, HIC619252

Raleigh Custom Home Builders - Model Home Tours

Finding Your New Home in the Raleigh Area 

New Homes Raleigh NC - New Home Raleigh - Raleigh NC New Homes - New Home Raleigh NCStanton Homes makes it easy!  We'll guide you through the entire process - select from thousands of different floor plans, and hundreds of different locations, with a focus on new custom homes in the upper $100s to the $500s. Custom design build options available too!

Call 919-278-8070 or visit www.StantonHomes.com to find out more about new homes in the Raleigh area today. 

Custom Home Floor Plans | NC Custom Home Builders | Floor Plan Options Floor Plan Price | Raleigh New Home Cost | Custom Home Cost Estimate Floor Plan Ideas | Floor Plan Styles | Custom Home Floor Plans Raleigh New Home Lots | Custom Home Lots for Sale | New Home Lots Raleigh NC

Articles copyright Stanton Homes 2006-2011.  Unauthorized use is not permitted.  Provided for informational purposes only, no claims are made by Stanton Homes regarding the validity of any statements.  Please note:  all listing information per MLS, and current as of posting date.  Information subject to change.  Stanton Homes does not make claims to ownership of  any lot listings, but can work with homebuyers to purchase available lots and build.  Home plans to be approved on an individual basis, subject to neighborhood restrictive covenants and lot restrictions.  Ask for further information regarding any community, lot or floor plan.  Photos represent typical homes and details of each neighborhood, to help highlight different options available in the Raleigh/Triangle area.  No claim of ownership is made to homes or land pictured.  

That's Not An Installation Defect Under The Kitchen Sink; It's The Work Of A Genius.

Ever tried to fill the "built in" soap container at your kitchen sink?  Read this, and you'll be off to Lowe's and Costco before you wash your hands again.  What a great idea!

Via Minneapolis Home Inspections - Reuben Saltzman (Structure Tech Home Inspections):

One of my least favorite chores in the kitchen has always been re-filling the built-in hand soap dispenser at my kitchen sink.  Through years of extensive research in to this matter, I've discovered that I'm not alone.  Approximately 57.3% of soap dispensers in the Twin Cities metro area remain unfilled; sitting next to the empty soap dispensers, I often find unsightly store-bought bottles of hand soap.

I have many reasons to not refill my soap dispenser.

For one, they're difficult to access.  Mine is so tough to get at that I need to lay on my back under the kitchen sink just to unscrew it.

They're difficult to fill.  Why are the openings so damn small?!  The photo below shows what used to happen to me every time I would try to fill my dispenser.  I've tried a funnel, but this doesn't work either - the soap is too thick.

Soap won't pour

Another problem is getting the dispenser screwed back in place under the counter - it's very difficult to see under there.  I actually installed a fluorescent light inside my kitchen cabinet to help with this chore.

Finally, this is a grueling task that demands action about once a month.  If I only had to do it once a year, that would be fine, but we wash our hands in the kitchen more than anywhere else in the house, and the tiny container doesn't hold much soap.

But now... I DON'T HAVE TO FILL MY DISPENSER ANY MORE.

While inspecting a home in Minneapolis last year, I came across an unusual container for the hand soap dispenser while looking under the kitchen sink.  Instead of having a tiny 8 oz container screwed to the dispenser, there was a long tube dropping down in to a Costco-sized container of hand soap.

hand soap container
For a split-second I figured the owner had broken their soap container, but I quickly realized that this was no accident, my friends.  This was a stroke of genius.

No more refilling the soap container.

No more running out of soap every month.

No more back-breaking acrobatics while reaching under the sink trying to unscrew the soap container.

No more tears of anguish and frustration trying to pour liquid hand soap in to a 3/8" hole.

You too can do this.  Just pick up three feet of 1/4" plastic tubing, cut it to length, and replace the little plastic tube coming out of your soap dispenser with this long tube.  Now drop it in to a huge container of hand soap.  That's it, that's all.  The Home Depot by my house sells a twenty-five foot roll of this plastic tubing for under three dollars. Many hardware stores sell this stuff by the foot, and you can even cut it to length with a pair of scissors.

Polyethylene Tubing

Now just sit back and marvel at your tricked-out hand soap dispenser.

 

 

Reuben Saltzman, Structure Tech Home Inspections - Email - Minneapolis Home Inspector

        

Raleigh Custom Home Builders - Model Home Tours

Finding Your New Home in the Raleigh Area 

New Homes Raleigh NC - New Home Raleigh - Raleigh NC New Homes - New Home Raleigh NCStanton Homes makes it easy!  We'll guide you through the entire process - select from thousands of different floor plans, and hundreds of different locations, with a focus on new custom homes in the upper $100s to the $500s. Custom design build options available too!

Call 919-278-8070 or visit www.StantonHomes.com to find out more about new homes in the Raleigh area today. 

Custom Home Floor Plans | NC Custom Home Builders | Floor Plan Options Floor Plan Price | Raleigh New Home Cost | Custom Home Cost Estimate Floor Plan Ideas | Floor Plan Styles | Custom Home Floor Plans Raleigh New Home Lots | Custom Home Lots for Sale | New Home Lots Raleigh NC

Articles copyright Stanton Homes 2006-2011.  Unauthorized use is not permitted.  Provided for informational purposes only, no claims are made by Stanton Homes regarding the validity of any statements.  Please note:  all listing information per MLS, and current as of posting date.  Information subject to change.  Stanton Homes does not make claims to ownership of  any lot listings, but can work with homebuyers to purchase available lots and build.  Home plans to be approved on an individual basis, subject to neighborhood restrictive covenants and lot restrictions.  Ask for further information regarding any community, lot or floor plan.  Photos represent typical homes and details of each neighborhood, to help highlight different options available in the Raleigh/Triangle area.  No claim of ownership is made to homes or land pictured.  

Learn How To Landscape Your New (or Existing) Home | Special Event with Stanton Homes

Landscape on a Budget - Meet the Builder Special Event!

Saturday October 9th, 12 to 3 pm - Landscaping Presentation at 1pm

Mark Sanborn Landscaping | Meet the Builder | New Homes in Raleigh | Landscaping on a Budget

 

If you plan for landscaping at the same time you design your home, you'll save money while opening up opportunities that dramatically emphasize your home and increase your outdoor enjoyment.

Come on out and see how to do it first-hand, at the Stanton Homes Meet the Builder event featuring landscape professionals from Mark Sanborn Landscaping Company

 

  

 

Mark Sanborn Landscaping | Meet the Builder | New Homes in Raleigh | Landscaping on a Budget

 

This Planning for Landscaping open house event will be on site at a new custom home (the Beaufort plan) under construction in Harrison Pond, just a few minutes from Chapel Hill

 

Whether you're interested in walkways, patio areas, plants, trees, gardens, or other special touches to the exterior of your new home, the experts at Stanton Homes and Mark Sanborn Landscaping Company will help!

 

 

Mark Sanborn Landscaping | Meet the Builder | New Homes in Raleigh | Landscaping on a BudgetLearn budget-conscious landscape customizing tips in a special 30 minute information session about Landscaping and Outdoor Living beginning at 1pm.

Learn About Landscaping

• Think about future landscaping during home design.

• Consider adding landscaping one "stage" at a time - find out how.

• Place those permanent walkways strategically to allow future plantings.

• Learn which ornamental trees and bushes work best - and won't need replacing!

 

Mark Sanborn Landscaping | Meet the Builder | New Homes in Raleigh | Landscaping on a BudgetLearn How to Create Outdoor Living Spaces

• Get advice on pathways, outdoor fireplaces, terraces, and other future needs - and make sure your home will allow your future outdoors to grow.

Add value to your new or current home through landscaping.

Prioritize your projects, and plan the steps you want to take that fit your budget.

• Find out how an expert can give you the advice you need, for a perfect project the first time.

 


 

At This Special Landscaping Event - learn about lighting too!

Outdoor Lighting for New Homes | Landscape Lighting | Adding Landscaping | How To Save Money

"Landscaping and Outdoor Living" - Talk at 1 pm Saturday Oct 9th 

Stop by to learn more about outdoor living and landscaping!  Find out how to plan walkways, beds, and more to have a beautiful outdoors you'll enjoy every part of the year. 

"All About Outdoor Lighting on a Budget" - Talk at 2 pm Saturday Oct 9th 

Stay a little longer, and learn how to integrate lighting in to your landscape plan!  Steve Roberts, Owner/Lighting Specialist with Carolina Outdoor Lighting Professionals will teach homeowners how to plan during construction to extend your living space outdoors. 

This 30 minute information session will help you get the most out of your outdoors.

 

 

s

 

Meet the Builder Open House 12 pm to 3 pm, Saturday Oct 9th

Stanton Homes will present this special "Meet the Builder" event at a new custom home (the Beaufort plan) under construction in Harrison Pond, just a few minutes from Chapel Hill. 

Popular questions at recent Stanton Homes "Meet the Builder" events have included:

Floor plans - is "design/build" best, or can a "ready-made" floor plan be modified?

How to find the perfect location, and what Stanton Homes can do to help.

Cutting costs while building value - what to watch out for before signing a contract.

Going green and saving green - what makes sense.

Mother in law suites, accessibility, and other special needs.

Build on Your Lot, how to get started and what to ask your builder.

Mark Sanborn Landscaping | Meet the Builder | New Homes in Raleigh | Landscaping on a BudgetBuilding Your New Custom Home

Let us know what you have in mind, and we'll prepare a free home building cost estimate for your favorite floor plans.

Not sure where to start? Check with us for suggestions for great online catalogs, or a selection of floor plans specifically chosen to meet your needs.

Want some changes?  We are custom home builders!  If your floor plan needs some adaption we'll tell you how we can help, and what moves will save the most.

Directions to Harrison Pond - Landscape and Lighting Open House October 9th

From Chapel Hill, turn south on 15-501.  Turn right at Mann's Chapel Road.  Continue until stop sign at Perry Harrison school.  Drive straight onto River Forest Road (Mann's Chapel Road turns into River Forest Road).  Harrison Pond is on the right. 

From Apex/Pittsboro, head north on 15/501.  Turn left at Hamlets Chapel Road.  Continue approximately 2 miles to River Forest Road, turn left (at Perry Harrison School).  Harrison Pond is on the right. 

Open House is at Lot 31 Harrison Pond.  Call 919-278-8070 or email info@StantonHomes.com for more information.

Landscape Photos courtesy Mark Sanborn Landscaping CompanyCall 919-235-8292.

 

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Wake County NC New Homes

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Raleigh Custom Home Builders - Model Home Tours

Finding Your New Home in the Raleigh Area 

New Homes Raleigh NC - New Home Raleigh - Raleigh NC New Homes - New Home Raleigh NCStanton Homes makes it easy!  We'll guide you through the entire process - select from thousands of different floor plans, and hundreds of different locations, with a focus on new custom homes in the upper $100s to the $500s. Custom design build options available too!

Call 919-278-8070 or visit www.StantonHomes.com to find out more about new homes in the Raleigh area today. 

Custom Home Floor Plans | NC Custom Home Builders | Floor Plan Options Floor Plan Price | Raleigh New Home Cost | Custom Home Cost Estimate Floor Plan Ideas | Floor Plan Styles | Custom Home Floor Plans Raleigh New Home Lots | Custom Home Lots for Sale | New Home Lots Raleigh NC

Articles copyright Stanton Homes 2006-2011.  Unauthorized use is not permitted.  Provided for informational purposes only, no claims are made by Stanton Homes regarding the validity of any statements.  Please note:  all listing information per MLS, and current as of posting date.  Information subject to change.  Stanton Homes does not make claims to ownership of  any lot listings, but can work with homebuyers to purchase available lots and build.  Home plans to be approved on an individual basis, subject to neighborhood restrictive covenants and lot restrictions.  Ask for further information regarding any community, lot or floor plan.  Photos represent typical homes and details of each neighborhood, to help highlight different options available in the Raleigh/Triangle area.  No claim of ownership is made to homes or land pictured.