Local Roofing Network — Grays River, Washington
There's a reason roofing work picks up in Grays River every spring and fall — these transition seasons are when the damage from the previous extreme season becomes visible, and when the upcoming season creates urgency. A roof that held through last winter's freeze-thaw cycles may have developed slow failure points in its sealants and flashings that won't show up as interior leaks until the first sustained rain. We catch those problems during the window between seasons, when there's still time to fix them right.
Our inspectors have assessed thousands of Washington roofs across every climate zone in the state. That experience informs every recommendation we make — we know what conditions actually look like, not just what the manual says.
Homes built in the 1960s — when much of Grays River's housing stock in Wahkiakum County was established — used roofing materials and installation standards that have changed substantially. Ventilation requirements, underlayment specifications, and flashing methods from that era are now considered undersized by current code. Older homes aren't necessarily failing, but they benefit from a contractor who knows what original 1960s construction actually looks like from the inside.