YOUR YARD* Keep ladders, garbage
cans, building supplies and tools locked up
out of view so you don't provide an intruder
with the means to break into your home.
* Put big, bold numbers on your mailbox so
your home can easily be identified in case of
an emergency.
* Never put your name on your mailbox.
Anyone can call directory assistance, get your
number, and find out you aren't home.
* Don't hide a spare key near your front
door; burglars know all the hiding places.
Leave a spare key with a trusted neighbor
instead.
* Planting thorny shrubs, rosebushes or
cacti around the outside of your home can
discourage burglars from entering your
property.
* Placing alarm-company signs,
neighborhood-watch decals or dog notices on
your property tells burglars to steer clear of
your home. Having these signs as a deterrent
is only good if you can back them up. Don't
rely on them or mistake them as doing the job
of the real thing.
* Trim shrubs and trees so they do not
provide hiding places for an intruder. Remove
tree limbs that could allow someone to climb
to an upper-story window or balcony.
* Harmless fog machines can be installed to
"scare" intruders off your property.
* A solid privacy fence can provide a
burglar with cover to break into your home.
Consider an iron railing (topped with spikes,
to discourage climbers), picket or chain-link
fence instead. If you have a gate, install a
strong magnetic lock on it to prevent
intruders from easily penetrating the
perimeter of your property.
* Keep all points of entry to your home
well-lit. Consider installing motion-sensor
lights on the rear and sides of your home and
position them in out-of-reach places so they
can't easily be turned off by a would-be
thief.
* Spending most of your day in the back
yard may be relaxing, but it leaves you
clueless as to what's going on out front.
Consider an intercom system featuring
motion-sensor video that turns on when someone
approaches your house. If you live on your
own, consider implementing a camera-bell so
you can see who is approaching.
* If you have video surveillance cameras,
get a lockbox to store the central recording
device. That way, a thief can't make off with
the record of their crime.
* Baby video monitors can double as
surveillance monitors for other points on your
property.
* If you travel a lot, surveillance cameras
around your property — with viewing access
through the Internet — will allow you to keep
an eye on your home while you're gone.
* Install cameras that operate off a motion
sensor to keep from wasting valuable
hard-drive space for your video files.
* Consider buying a wireless enunciator,
which will alert you — anywhere in your home —
when someone comes up your driveway or
otherwise enters your property within 50 feet
of its range.