
A leaking roof doesn't wait for a convenient time. When water is already getting in and more rain is on the way, every hour matters. That's exactly the situation we walked into on this job.
We pulled back the tile to get eyes on what was actually going on underneath. What we found was what we expected - compromised decking and a leak point that had been letting water in. You can't patch over a problem like that and call it done. We opened it up the right way, dealt with the source, and made sure everything was solid before it went back together.
New OSB decking was staged and ready to go. Fresh underlayment laid down before any tile goes back on. This is the kind of work that happens before the pretty part - the part most homeowners never see, but the part that actually determines whether your roof holds up or keeps leaking.
The goal on a job like this is simple: stop the water, do it right, and get the roof buttoned up before conditions change. Rain was coming. We got it done.
A leaking roof that gets ignored - or patched poorly - tends to cost a lot more down the road. Rotted decking, damaged insulation, interior water damage. The repair we did here was about cutting that problem off before it had a chance to grow.