The Green Monkey
Brap-brap
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2008
- Messages
- 1,404
I'm heading to my B&M tomorrow to pick up a bead system and a digital hygrometer and to discuss the following issue, but I've got a bit of a problem on my hands that likely needs decisive attention tonight.
I'm still trying to get the hang of maintaining my first humidor--a desktop Vector.
Unfortunately, my difficulties have gone beyond simply keeping pace with the rapidly fluctuating analog hygrometer to containing a small mold outbreak.
I followed the directions for preparing my rectangular black plastic sponge-based humidifier to the letter, but something has gone awry. I noticed this evening that a very fine patina of yellowish/greenish/greyish mold has developed on the cedar of my drawer underneath where the two sets of slats sit. It's also down through the slats of the drawer itself, with a little bit of fuzziness underneath. The portion closest to the humidifier is more of a dusty sort of presence.
My wife has some experience as a preservation librarian, and her first inclination was to put the tainted drawer into a Ziploc and freeze it overnight to kill the mold. However, I'm leery of doing this for fear of warping, cracking, or otherwise damaging the drawer itself.
If it is of any help, I can try to post pictures, although I make no promises as to quality--our camera has been acting up lately, and most of the mold is hard to see except from certain angles, etc.
What should I do?
Thanks in advance...
I'm still trying to get the hang of maintaining my first humidor--a desktop Vector.
Unfortunately, my difficulties have gone beyond simply keeping pace with the rapidly fluctuating analog hygrometer to containing a small mold outbreak.
I followed the directions for preparing my rectangular black plastic sponge-based humidifier to the letter, but something has gone awry. I noticed this evening that a very fine patina of yellowish/greenish/greyish mold has developed on the cedar of my drawer underneath where the two sets of slats sit. It's also down through the slats of the drawer itself, with a little bit of fuzziness underneath. The portion closest to the humidifier is more of a dusty sort of presence.
My wife has some experience as a preservation librarian, and her first inclination was to put the tainted drawer into a Ziploc and freeze it overnight to kill the mold. However, I'm leery of doing this for fear of warping, cracking, or otherwise damaging the drawer itself.
If it is of any help, I can try to post pictures, although I make no promises as to quality--our camera has been acting up lately, and most of the mold is hard to see except from certain angles, etc.
What should I do?
Thanks in advance...