heimlaga
Established Member
Note that I suggested putting it in a freezer if you live in a "tropical" place where you don't have freezing winters.
One freeze and thaw cycle is enough and outdoors under cover in such weather is dry enough for furniture. Actually one will normally leave the furniture in a tractor shed or old barn or something where the temperature is the same as outdoors but no rain will reach it should the weather turn for the worse.
To my knowledge both France and Britain seems to have areas with freezing winter weather for a couple of weeks or so every winter.....or am I incorrectly informed?
That is a good deal less than the four months of freezing weather we typically had before global warming struck and the two and a half month we typically have now.
This method works only with the most common woodworm species found in furniture. It is called Anobium punctatum in latin if that helps. I don't know it's English name but the picture of the damage looked like that species to my eyes.
Another more costly method to kill of the same sort of woodworm is to heat up the room where you keep the furniture. Keep at least +20 degrees celsius and the relative humidity below 50% for a month or so. Then the worms all dry out and die.
This is also normally done in winter when to cold temperatures outside condense all humidity as snow and hence the heated air indoors becomes very dry.
One freeze and thaw cycle is enough and outdoors under cover in such weather is dry enough for furniture. Actually one will normally leave the furniture in a tractor shed or old barn or something where the temperature is the same as outdoors but no rain will reach it should the weather turn for the worse.
To my knowledge both France and Britain seems to have areas with freezing winter weather for a couple of weeks or so every winter.....or am I incorrectly informed?
That is a good deal less than the four months of freezing weather we typically had before global warming struck and the two and a half month we typically have now.
This method works only with the most common woodworm species found in furniture. It is called Anobium punctatum in latin if that helps. I don't know it's English name but the picture of the damage looked like that species to my eyes.
Another more costly method to kill of the same sort of woodworm is to heat up the room where you keep the furniture. Keep at least +20 degrees celsius and the relative humidity below 50% for a month or so. Then the worms all dry out and die.
This is also normally done in winter when to cold temperatures outside condense all humidity as snow and hence the heated air indoors becomes very dry.