Rank: Super forum user
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If you have a dry rot infestation, what action should you take until the specialist contractors come and remove it all?
Should the area be isolated.
what are the real health risks.
what if it was in a school :)
Thanks for any advices, Google is full of misinformation and scare stories, I need some Friday facts.
Thanks all.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Jeez, dry rot may take more than removing it. I thought that stuff spreads like wildfire and it can invade through concrete as well can't it. Massive works involved to rid the building of that. Which would be my biggest concern!
I know what you're saying as I'm assuming you are worried about spores. We were worried about having it at home (phew, we didn't) but I don't remember reading anything about health risks. Don't count that advice as gospel though.
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Rank: Super forum user
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ClaireL reply - #honoured :)
I agree...
Contractor removing with 'fun' chemicals and a big hammer next week. The area will be isolated and work controlled.
In the mean time access through the area is possible.
Staff member has apparently raised concern and reassurance was required, trouble is I have no idea :)
You are the third person to say much the same thing, so I think my advice is to avoid the area when possible, not to hit it with a hammer / poke it or eat it.
But not to panic too much.
Thanks for helping, and happy Friday!
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Rank: Super forum user
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Ok it’s Friday and I don’t know much about dry rot (although I have been told a talk of lot of it!)
I was getting confused between serpula lacrymans and Lacryma Christi. The latter is definitely toxic if consumed in large quantities and is known to have a number of undesirable (or some might argue desirable) effects on the human body, including blurred vision, headache, vomiting, lack of co-ordination and, less frequently, waking up somewhere strange, ‘sans’ trousers!
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Rank: Super forum user
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Rentokil did the rot works in my flat. Timbers may need to be cut back some considerable distance and spliced with new wood. Probably lots of plasterwork to come off to enable adequate chemicals injection. Possible temporary structural instability issues to contend with.
The previous owner of the flat was about to get the kitchen room window lintels replaced with steel. No proposed temporary works. In practice the lintels were so over engineered in the 1870s that there was still plenty of good wood left. Rotten cut away and rest injected. Saved a fortune.....£22k about to be spent down to £6k.
As regards health risks, lots of information and disinformation at http://toxlaw.com/chatboards/blackmold/
Mold (Americans can't spell!) is big litigation topic on the other side of the Pond
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Rank: Super forum user
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Thanks for that link Peter
I have now advised that the entire town be burnt down with flame throwers - just in case!!!
That is an insane site, #scared!
@canopener - I had to Google your joke :( - knowing there is red, white and inbetween is a sign of my class...
Thanks for the help guys, I quickly decided this was one with no real answer, lots of scaremongering and one best treated with common sense.
Is it Friday yet?
to cheer you all up as I am now happy (ish) and ready for a cup of tea - here is a quiz.
I got 9 out of 10 (as I think a question is misleading :) - The Guardian and IOSH tweeted to this effect)
http://careers.theguardi...d-safety-quiz?CMP=twt_gu
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Rank: Super forum user
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I only got 7 out of 10. Off now to tender my resignation and live out the rest of my days under a stone.
Can I play the Irish card?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Ha ha ha ha.....
I got 6!! :-)
But then I don't keep up to date with stats and I couldn't care what My Cameron says.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Clairel wrote:Ha ha ha ha.....
I got 6!! :-)
But then I don't keep up to date with stats and I couldn't care what My Cameron says.
:)
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Rank: Super forum user
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Type I hypersensitivity reactions are not unknown and will result in asthma-like symptoms.
Don't disturb fruiting bodies or mycelium; dampen all areas when undertaking remedial work; clean carefully during and afterwards; ventilate well; don't panic
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Rank: Super forum user
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Saw QI a while back and it was stated on there that a growing number of people involved in the field are coming to the conclusion that dry rot doesn't really exist. That it is a sort of industry diagnosis from previous times when identification of the exact cause of that case specific problem was not scientifically possible.
Can dry rot be split into different specific 'diagnoses'? If so, would it not be possible to identify specific strategies to deal with each eventuality?
Sorry if this is a silly question. Just sounds like someone having a nervous disposition being described as having a case of the screaming habdabs or the heebiejeebies.
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