Where does mold come from? Do you risk “taking it with you” when moving from a moldy apartment to a not moldy one?

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Where does mold come from? Do you risk “taking it with you” when moving from a moldy apartment to a not moldy one?

In: Biology

19 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

100% anecdotal, but a neighbor of mine had a minor mold problem in their home, like low enough to not cause problems for healthy people or to be of any concern. But the wife had Lyme disease and it increased her symptoms. They had to move and leave EVERYTHING behind. Just straight up moved out, hired a realtor and an estate sale company to recoup any money possible. So yes, it can go with you

Anonymous 0 Comments

As others have said, mold is everywhere. The key to avoiding it is to reduce the environments where it flourishes.

Mold likes damp dark places with little ventilation. Identify and remove these and all will be well.

The ramifications of this are almost endless. I will leave the list to your imagination (and skill).

To remove it, high-concentration hydrogen peroxide is your least-toxic option. Works a treat.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Mold. (Mycelial fungus)

If you’re on (in, under, over) planet Earth it’s part of your environment. So are the spores by which it propagates. No escape…

The good news is that they’re integral to all the other biological phenomena here in our Homeworld…including our species.

As to the issue of “too damn much mold where I don’t want it” it comes down to denying it the stuff it needs to grow…substrate (what it eats), moisture (which it needs just like us).

Anonymous 0 Comments

Technically, yes. Practically, no.

Mold can only grow in moist areas. If you’re having mold problems, you have moisture problems. That might be due to leaky plumbing, water coming through the foundation, or moist air condensing on cold surfaces. Remove the moisture, and the mold can’t form.

But, if you bring the moisture along with the mold spores from your old apartment, you could get the same mold in the new apartment.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The best mold tests are NOT air tests. Of course most “professionals” will tell you air tests are great, because that’s all they know. But it’s old technology.

The problem with air testing is that you’re only testing at one point in time. Depending on wind, ventilation, air flow, etc, you may get lucky and catch the spores, or you may not.

Over time, mold spores will gradually settle out of the air, and get added to dust. So the best method, recommended by the EPA, is to collect dust and do a DNA analysis on it. This is called an ERMI test. Mycometrics is the best company for this test. They will send you a test kit which is basically a Swiffer and a plastic bag.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Yes you can take it with you. If you’re sick from mold, then it will be on everything you own. Some people who are extremely sick have to throw everything away. Literally everything.

People who are less sick can get away with carefully cleaning everything. Some things that are porous like pillows and furniture are impossible to clean completely. If you need to clean things, then you’ll need to do some research. There are different methods. Join the mold groups on Facebook. Read survivingmold.com.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Fungi are the most common living organisms on earth. The largest single living thing known on earth is a fungus growing underground in a national forest in Oregon. I’ve been in property management for years and I’ve done this speech for hundreds of people.

Yeast, molds, mushrooms, and their spores are literally everywhere, they just need food and moisture. If you leave a piece of fruit out and it gets moldy does that mean your house is contaminated by mold? No, the spores are already there. If you have poor insulation such that the walls are cold and indoor warm air condenses on them, then they will mold. Is your house contaminated? Well, it is now that you’ve grown a colony but the spores were there all the time. Molds come in a million different varieties. Some eat fruit, some eat acrylic paint and drywall, some grow on human oils and skin that are on your walls. Of course you take spores with you and they will join the spores that are guaranteed to already be there. Mold is a moisture problem, that’s it, end of story.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I moved from a nasty mold situation, allergy-triggering for me, in an apartment to a house. Of course it poured the day we moved and a few things got wet. But I never noticed anything once we got to the house. I was really stressed about it but it wasn’t bad. The moisture in the air was way more important than the presence of whatever mold was living on things when we moved it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Spores, which are like the seeds for mold, and yes if you don’t destroy all the spores, which is also hard to do because they are armored.

Mostly you just have to make sure the conditions that form a place for spores to “sprout” don’t exist, or they will. Spores fly around on air and are everywhere. HEPA filters can remove them, but they can also survive a while on surfaces.

Also when there is obvious outbreak of mold, even if it has since died and dried out, don’t clean it inside your house, and if you don’t absolutely need the container just toss it without opening it. Otherwise you’re agitating and spreading spores everywhere and will just make the next thing “catch” mold faster.

Spores can just be around for years awaiting the moisture and substrate needed.