death watch beetle
We are well aware that the
house has problems with DWB - can't really miss that fact when you vacuum
joists up as they are now nothing but beetle poo... but I guess I was
harbouring the notion.. as proposed by the estate agent back along..
that maybe the beetle was long gone. Not so. Spring is the time the
beasties emerge and bang their heads on your woodwork to attract a mate,
so they can make lots of babies to eat your house up...I found a sound
recording of the delightful death watch beetle making
it' s tapping noise.. if you too are wondering if you have live and
well DWB, check out programme one, at about 12 minutes in.
If you talk to anyone about
beetle damage or damp.. it's something dreadful! Probably the house
will have to be demolished !.. fumigated at least. If you google for
these things at all, you are likely to find adverts selling you 'services'
to be rid of both damp and beetle. Well we would like to be rid too..
but older houses are not necessarily that obliging. Luckily I had found
the website period
property UK a mine of information, and best of all
a forum where answers can be found, with little hysterics over the words
'damp' or 'beetle'. (other useful reading: rideout
associates and buildingconservation.com).
Back along, the advice was
to throw insecticides around with mad abandon. Since research has show
this is not effective at all - more damage can be done to an old building
trying to rid it of the DWB that the beetle can do itself, not to mention
the impact of nasty chemicals on the house occupiers! The insecticides
were either unnecessary, as the beetle was long gone anyway, or would
not touch them as they were tucked nice and deep in the wood. The sprays
would, unfortunately wipe out the spider population, who are the predators...
DWB likes damp wood.. so the solution is to stop the water coming in,
and make the environment unsuitable, rather than tackling the beetle
. In our case, the tapping is coming from the chimney breast. The same
chimney breast that had a damp problem when we first moved in, and on
investigation water was pouring in via wrongly fitted flashings in the
roof. We got a roofer in.. the flashings were fixed,, the rain stopped
coming in, the damp has gone. In time the timber should dry out and
the beetle be less of a problem.
Water is sneaking into the
house in other areas.. and has been for some time before we got here..
and slowly we are sorting them,, fixing gutters is a simple but effective
way. We found next door's downpipe emptied water straight into a hole
next to our outside wall.. a little drain repair and that area is dry.
We do have to do a lot of exterior lime repointing at some point. .
that should improve things too. One thing that does occur to me, with
more eco-friendly living, I wonder if there will be a rise in DWB -
as we dry clothes in front of the rayburn, increasing the damp, heat
the house less, and so on? The other advice, we got, which was to put
a grandfather clock against that wall to cover up the ticking sound
is not a bad one either! (apart from not having the clock.. but ignoring
the ticking in principal) it is worth hanging on to the reality that
although this house is slowly being eaten from the inside out.. it is
400 years old, and it takes a while.. will probably outlast us, particularly
if we don't do anything rash and try to look after it. And should anyone
point out my terrible housekeeping and the large number of spider's
webs about the house, I shall reply 'what can I do? we have death watch
beetle and spiders are our friends...'