Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Jeanine, Thanks for your input. I have one culture plate with slimmy stuff on it but it is cream colored. Could stachy start out cream colored before it turned black?? Regarding allergies: I developed allergies after moving into this house and I feel sure there is a connection. I developed them when I started to feel sick and sickness seemed to have come from the mold. --- who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: > Barb, heres what I've gotten from several > abstracts, most fungi's > (mold) release spores while their growing,and > blumming, but stachy > releases them when its drying. stachy has a > slim covering it and can > to some point hold moisture a little longer > because of that Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Don't waste your time with these mold culture plates. IMO (others may correct me) but these plates seem to be fairly useless. Why? because different kinds of molds will grow under different conditions (temps, esp) with different culture media.. Try to find the mold in your house growing somewhere, then get a tape lift and send it to some real experts.. Or chop a chunk out of the mold (a bulk sample) - put it in a clean new Ziplok bag and send THAT to a lab. The professionals are out there and they are very good ... (The labs that process these petri-dish based mold test kits are prob. NOT pros and I doubt sincerely if they will give you meaningful results.) Who do I mean by pros? For example, Texas Tech's lab is doing all sorts of cutting-edge research and their prices seem very competitive... ( http://www.indoorairresearch.net ) P & K Microbiology are the lab Dr. Shoemaker recommends.. I think they charge $35 for mold analysis.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 I *LIKE* culture plates, okay?? We have gone over this before in group. I'm not relying on plate to answer all question. I'm just trying to locate problem areas, just piece of puzzle and these are plates from and going to Dallas Environmental Clinic, Realtime Labs is their lab name I believe. Don't think if culture plates is mentioned, it means Home Depot. However I did fine with Home Depot plates also. I've done this before with Home Depot plates and professional testing later backed up results in *general way*, such as which areas were problematic. However I did testing in winter and I wanted to do another test in summer humid weather. However due to bellyaching here about the Home Depot plates or from other convenience stores, I ordered these from Dallas Clinic. I know the drawback, such as no stachy detection likely, etc. It's just that this one plate I did I decided not to send but something is growing in it that doesn't look like mold. Decided maybe it is just bacteria but when Jeanine said stachy was slimy looking, my ears perked up because his is slimy, glossy looking but it is cream colored, not black. I know some molds start out one color and then change to another when they mature, so was just wondering. I could send it in also, just out of curiosity. Incidentally they were only $25 a piece which is less than the Home Depot kits (maybe due to no middle man to sell product), and I consider that a bargain for the plates and analysis, mailing not included. They come two day air and tell you to refrigerate and use within two weeks. I left one out of refrigerator just to see if it would grow anything before opening and it didn't. --- LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: > Don't waste your time with these mold culture > plates. IMO Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 I dont know barb, heard it can be white. > > > Don't waste your time with these mold culture > > plates. IMO > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Okay, Jeanine. I guess I will send it off. Might as well know what it is. If it is just bacteria, then next time I'll know what it is. It is plate I put in my fireplace. I'll tell you why. I put plastic over my fireplace to prevent air leaking down from attic since attic air isn't good. However it has a damper which should hold back most air from coming down if not all. So I thought if I stuck a plate behind plastic and took a test of that air I would see if anything is there or not. I loosened plastic a little at bottom so air could get through. This way if nothing developed in plate, I could feel comfortable removing plastic from fireplace and not have that eye sore. I did get one regular looking spore and two 'other things', one kind of satiny looking cream colored disk shaped form and two glossy irregular shaped blobs, so now I'm interested to find out what those are, since I have not seen anything like that in house tests. --- who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: > I dont know barb, heard it can be > white. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 barb, sounds interesting, let us know what happens. you know, i got to thinking about this, i've seen slime mold that has had several different colors, but not in the homes and have no idea what kind it was or what else could of been involved.but i did see more colors of mold at the second home, but i cant really say I saw mold slime. smell from chimneys, fire places even without fires get to me, I can smell it when it rains. put plastic over fireplace in last apartment because the back draft was smell was getting to my sinuses. wonder if bird droppings (moldy dung) might be a factor in chimneys? > > > I dont know barb, heard it can be > > white. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 attic air getting in through any cracks in the chimney comes to mind. also, the air from outside could come in through downdraft or shifts in the wind. who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: barb, sounds interesting, let us know what happens. you know, i got to thinking about this, i've seen slime mold that has had several different colors, but not in the homes and have no idea what kind it was or what else could of been involved.but i did see more colors of mold at the second home, but i cant really say I saw mold slime. smell from chimneys, fire places even without fires get to me, I can smell it when it rains. put plastic over fireplace in last apartment because the back draft was smell was getting to my sinuses. wonder if bird droppings (moldy dung) might be a factor in chimneys? > > > I dont know barb, heard it can be > > white. > --------------------------------- Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Jeanine, re: chimney/slimy mold. Yes and there was leak around chimney that caused attic to be moldy and chimney brick is not in good condition, been repaired alot outside but inside attic chimney brick is not repaired so I figured air from attic can come down into house by coming in through cracks in chimney bricks. That's why I put plastic over front of fireplace until I can be sure attic air is clean OR have chimney repaired or liner in it, attic floor sealed, etc. A lot of work but I would not be happy in trailer. Not yet anyway. Maybe some day might appeal to me when I'm not working anymore, then perhaps I can travel around, running from mold plumes like . It could be fun if you don't need to be any place in particular, like those people who run after storms, storm chasers. We could be mold plume runners, MPRs. --- who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: > barb, sounds interesting, let us know what > happens. you know, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Leigh, I just posted those same words! --- Leigh McCall-Alton <mccallalton@...> wrote: > attic air getting in through any cracks in the > chimney comes to mind. also, the air from > outside could come in through downdraft or > shifts in the wind. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2006 Report Share Posted August 12, 2006 We > could be mold plume runners, MPRs. lol's barb, just what I always dreamed of being when I grew up a MPR. > > --- who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: > > > barb, sounds interesting, let us know what > > happens. you know, > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2006 Report Share Posted August 12, 2006 Leigh, incidentally, I just meant we had the same thought. May have sounded different. > > > attic air getting in through any cracks in the > > chimney comes to mind. also, the air from > > outside could come in through downdraft or > > shifts in the wind. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2006 Report Share Posted August 13, 2006 I'm really sorry. Clearly I was wrong and jumping in to a thread that I had not been paying as close attention to as I needed to. BTW, some stachy in my old apt. was white.. It varies in color.. Again, I'm so very sorry! On 8/10/06, bbw <barb1283@...> wrote: > I *LIKE* culture plates, okay?? We have gone over > this before in group. I'm not relying on plate > to answer all question. I'm just trying to > locate problem areas, just piece of puzzle and > these are plates from and going to Dallas > Environmental Clinic, Realtime Labs is their lab > name I believe. Don't think if culture plates is > mentioned, it means Home Depot. However I did > fine with Home Depot plates also. > I've done this before with Home Depot plates and > professional testing later backed up results in > *general way*, such as which areas were > problematic. However I did testing in winter and > I wanted to do another test in summer humid > weather. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2006 Report Share Posted August 13, 2006 LiveSimply, That's okay. I was a being a little dramatic, anyway. I just use the plates to see where I need to do more cleanup. I'm not as interested in what kind of mold it is, just counting how much there is, and where. My doctor said any mold can make you sick if there is enough of it. I had professional testors once two years ago and no stachy found anywhere. They didn't test chimney though, so sent that sample with glossy growth out yesterday. I just have had the usual culprits, lots of cladosporum, aspergillus and penicillum. If this glossy stuff turns out to be stachy, I will be shocked. Someone said it could also be yeast, so I am hoping for that. I do intend to do a swab test of some black sooty dust that is all over insulation in attic and on some of the wood beams in attic also. --- LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: > I'm really sorry. Clearly I was wrong and > jumping in to a thread that > I had not been > paying as close attention to as I needed to. > > BTW, some stachy in my old apt. was white.. It > varies in color.. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2006 Report Share Posted August 13, 2006 There are aspergillius/penicillium species that are as toxic as stachy! Did you get the mold speciated? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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