It usually happens out of nowhere. Your child is playing, watching TV, or sleeping — and suddenly there’s a nosebleed. Meanwhile, the adults in the house feel fine. So what gives? In many Utah homes, the answer is surprisingly simple: kids have smaller, more sensitive airways — and dry indoor air affects them first. Let’s
You’ve scrubbed the toilet, wiped the counters, washed the bath mat — and yet that musty, damp smell still hangs in the air. It’s frustrating, especially when the bathroom looks spotless. If this sounds familiar, the issue usually isn’t cleanliness at all. In most Utah homes, a musty bathroom smell points to hidden moisture combined
Shot on a blue-sky day out by the river and sorghum fields… which is exactly why we need to talk about the air inside our homes. Most of us have heard the stat: indoor air can be 2–5× more polluted than outdoor air, and sometimes much higher. That sounds wild when you’re breathing crisp mountain