How to View House Roof Without Climbing onto It

written 5/19/25, updated 5/19/25

What

Viewing roof without climbing on it

Why

Too tall, unsafe

Effort and Time

Easy & Quick

Sometimes you want to view your roof. You don’t want to pay a professional to come do it you don’t have to, but you also want to know if there’s damage that needs to be addressed. Say, you live in house with more than one-story and you really don’t have a ladder nor want to climb that high, or you simply don’t feel comfortable on one (especially by yourself! I knew a capable, single man whose ladder kicked out and he landed on his feet 2 stories down which fractured both ankles and his back. True story). Here are some options available to you without costing an arm and a leg or a back monetarily and physically (hopefully).

Methods

Disclaimer: There are many different types of situations and house configurations out there. Also, I am NOT a professional, just a DIYer in a townhouse.

Camera on Stick – Easiest, Cheapest Method

Pros: Easy, Fast, Safe

Cons: May have to buy items if you don’t already have them, limited by length and curves

Materials: Livestreaming Camera, Pole (broom, garden, PVC pipe, anything solid and strong), Duct Tape, Phone/Viewing Screen

Cost: You can get a decent camera (beware unreputable brands and apps in case they release malware into your home internet system) for less than $15, Dollar Tree sells broom handles and tape for $1.25 each. Assuming you own a smartphone and nothing else, you can do this for under $20.

Instructions:

  • Most houses these days have wi-fi connected security cameras that can livestream, a broom or some other strong pole(s), and tape
  • Decide on the best place to view your roof from (e.g. upstairs window)
  • Duct tape your camera to the tip of the pole, making sure it’s secure
  • If you need height, duct tape together a few of them making sure the pole overlap is enough to stay strong when you extend it
  • Open the camera app and start livestreaming the camera
  • If you want to and have the function, hit the “Record” button
  • Extend your camera-on-a-stick towards the roof with a firm grip, and inspect it
  • Watch video on phone later

DONE. Easy Peasy.

Drone

Pros: Easy, Good View, Maneuverable

Cons: Expensive unless you already own one or want a nice one, Crash/loss Potential, Beware drone flying laws

Because the stupid app is stupid, I tried to tape a camera to the drone which otherwise flies decently for something under $50

Materials: Drone, Phone

Cost: At least $200 for a decent drone (any less and it’s worthless and possible security risk), $15 subscription fee for app

Would be fine if you already have a good quality drone or want one to begin with, but I wasn’t paying $200-400 for a drone just to look at the roof. Instead, I spent 2 weekends trying this fancy method with 2 cheap drones ($130 together) before I realized I wasted good money. This is useful and easy only if you already have a decent quality drone and/or live in a one-story house. My first drone could fly decently, but the app (3rd party separate from the drone seller) not only failed to load, but tried to hack into the internet system of my house both times I tried to unsuccessfully launch it. So, I got a second drone with its own viewing screen and no need to connect an app, but the drone itself was utter garbage and was impossible to fly. Absolute waste of money. Determined to make it work, I paid for the smallest camera ($42.99) I could find (after hours of scanning the internet) that didn’t need phone connection to work, just an SD card. I taped it to my first drone and tried to fly that up to the roof. Terrified that it would fly off on its own (I’m not very good at flying drones, so I crash often), I tied a string to it, but it didn’t matter in the end because the range between the controller and drone was about 1 story tops. Total FAILURE and an utter waste of money ($172.97. OUCH)! The only good things that came about this is that, 1) Now I know I don’t really care to fly drones anymore, and 2) It’s a fun gadget to antagonize the dog with.

Instruction: Very simple

  • Connect drone to phone
  • Fly up
  • View roof
  • Don’t Crash
  • Review footage

Complete!

Others

Similar to the drone, you could try a Rock Crawler RC Car with a camera either built-in or taped to it. It’s easier to control than a drone, especially the slower speed of the Rock Crawlers, though beware the tilt of the roof, if you can lift it onto the roof with a grabber arm or something. Just don’t drive off the edge! I’d tie a string or fishing line around it in case it does (just don’t get it tangled in the wheels).

An Endoscope could be useful? You could shove it along the roof? It’s flexible enough to snake around things, though the small field of view might not be so great.

Pet Rat with Camera and Leash… Maybe not. A hawk might get it.

You could hire someone to permanently mount a Solar Powered Camera somewhere up there, like the chimney. That way you can view it at any time. Weather could be a problem, as well as retrieving it if you needed to.

Spider Bite Chronicles

written 5/4/25, updated 5/4/25

Foreword

I have skeeter syndrome to begin with, yet I really enjoy being outside doing yardwork and gardening. It’s a bad mix. I’ve also been bitten, scratched, and stung by lots of critters in the past… and my body reacts powerfully to them. Here, I chronicle my spider bites. My mosquito bites I have chronicled on a different post (and poison ivy, too). It’s important to note that my immune system is odd, and these lesions rarely fully disappear in a hurry. They tend to hang around and flare back up for some time.

Memorable Cases

October 2024

Location: Across forehead

Symptom Duration: Oct 5, 2024 – Oct 15, 2024; 10 days

36 hours

48 hours

Day 3

Day 4

Facial swelling and lymph node involvement, spreading to eye a little, let up around 10 days later

May 2025

Location: Right eye area

Symptom Duration: May 2 – May 9 (7 days)

4 Hours

Uh oh. It’s starting.

14 hours

Affecting vision from inflammation, increased BP. Notice the eyebrow pushed upwards from swelling

24 hours

Fever, lymph node involvement. I feel badly. Bite site has filled with pus

27 hours

Tired, diarrhea, spreading under the eye

36 hours

Very itchy, hard to see, painful to turn head from lymph nodes, still diarrhea, but feel much better

48 hours

Doing better. Greatly less inflamed, bite is weeping, neck very itchy and stiff from lymph nodes. You can see the eyebrow has come down

60 hours

Whenever I wake up it looks worse, but swelling under the eye and around cheeks are decreased, and bite is weeping heavily now

72 hours (3 days)

Weeping continuing, swelling noticeably diminished, side of face still a bit stiff when talking, neck itchy, inflammation going in and out

4 days

Markedly different, slept soundly, weeping has mostly stopped, zero discomfort on head turning, side of face feels mostly normal, minor swelling remains (eyebrow still mildly raised)