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I've heard that the pine oil in pine soap is a natural antifungal.

However, I am sure that pine soap does not inactivate mycotoxins and

my own experience using it to clean wood floors one time was not positive.

OTOH, pine soap is often recommended for cleaning wood floors.

With hardwood floors, what you do to clean them deends on the finish..

Varnish or plastic..

Some hardwood floors are basically coated with plastic, and they have

special cleaners for them.

On 11/23/06, barb1283 <barb1283@...> wrote:

>

> Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small apartment with

> wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air conditioning unit,

> that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it probably

> sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have been

> painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I don't want

> to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience with

> right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping them

> with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards with

> ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can go on

> wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood floors with

> ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be good

> flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning I

> would imagine.

>

> I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment while still

> having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but landlord

> has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new toilet

> for him (one there is moldy).

>

> _

>

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These are old fashioned hardwood floors, not the shiny new ones with

the protective coating on them, so I guess the term would be

stained/varnished.

-- In , LiveSimply <quackadillian@...>

wrote:

>

> I've heard that the pine oil in pine soap is a natural antifungal.

> However, I am sure that pine soap does not inactivate mycotoxins and

>

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ammonia will dull or harm floor- use a mild solution of simple green

--- In , " barb1283 " <barb1283@...>

wrote:

>

> Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small apartment

with

> wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air conditioning

unit,

> that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it

probably

> sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have been

> painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I don't

want

> to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience with

> right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping them

> with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards with

> ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can go on

> wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood floors

with

> ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be good

> flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning I

> would imagine.

>

> I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment while

still

> having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but

landlord

> has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new toilet

> for him (one there is moldy).

>

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As a moldie, I would be leery of wood floors altogether. I would go

with a cement slab and tile. One that is on very high ground and known

to be very dry in wet seasons. If the apt. has a crawlspace under it

and no cement foundation I would avoid it. If the wood is over cement

I would be a little less worried about it.

On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 17:49:16 -0000, you wrote:

>Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small apartment with

>wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air conditioning unit,

>that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it probably

>sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have been

>painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I don't want

>to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience with

>right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping them

>with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards with

>ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can go on

>wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood floors with

>ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be good

>flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning I

>would imagine.

>

>I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment while still

>having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but landlord

>has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new toilet

>for him (one there is moldy).

>

>

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, Thanks for your ideas but had VERY hard time finding this

place. After two and a half months of looking at apartments this is

all I can come up with, too far from work or home to be convenient,

unhappy with move but to hold out for another place at $40 a day at

temporary spot to find tile on concrete, I'd be here with carpet and

moldy a/c forever.

I have *very* large porch on house which is outside of air envelope

of house that has concrete floor and is about 5 feet off of ground

with cement area underneath used as shed which has no mold or other

problem. I thought of putting solid windows and walls on it but I

would be coming and going from house constantly for kitchen and

bath, etc. Have you tried looking for such a place. I saw nothing

at all with TILE all over. You'd almost have to arrange to have

that built I would think.

What's wrong with hardwood anyway...poroused? It's an older

building that looks in good condition, basement is clean. I didn't

ask to see attic. I would if I were buying it but renting it,

landlord has agreed to a month to month lease. My mold plate test

grew no mold at all, but grew something that may be a small amount

of yeast or bacteria. I know there could be dead mold there or mold

behind the walls producing mycotoxins but it smelled clean. I can't

ask him to open up the walls for me.

>

> As a moldie, I would be leery of wood floors altogether. I would go

> with a cement slab and tile. One that is on very high ground and

known

> to be very dry in wet seasons.

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,

I agree with everything you said and the would like to modify the

last one - wood over cement IF the cement floor is below grade.

Cement is not impermeable to water. Moisture can and does penetrate

it. Over time moisture can accumulate under and in the wood causing

rot. Also, because wood floors are more expensive than carpet, for

example, people are more reluctant to replace them if there is a

problem.

This takes years, is better than most other flooring methods, the

molds causing rot are different than the airborne molds we are more

familiar with, and is not a reason in itself to reject such a floor.

But we all should be aware that cement floors do not always stop

water and they are more expensive to fix.

Carl Grimes

Healthy Habitats LLC

-----

> As a moldie, I would be leery of wood floors altogether. I would go

> with a cement slab and tile. One that is on very high ground and known

> to be very dry in wet seasons. If the apt. has a crawlspace under it

> and no cement foundation I would avoid it. If the wood is over cement

> I would be a little less worried about it.

>

>

>

> On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 17:49:16 -0000, you wrote:

>

> >Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small apartment with

> >wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air conditioning unit,

> >that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it probably

> >sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have been

> >painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I don't want

> >to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience with

> >right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping them

> >with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards with

> >ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can go on

> >wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood floors with

> >ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be good

> >flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning I

> >would imagine.

> >

> >I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment while still

> >having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but landlord

> >has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new toilet

> >for him (one there is moldy).

> >

> >

>

>

> FAIR USE NOTICE:

>

>

>

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Re: wood floors/wood rot, etc

This is an old building but not ancient, maybe

1960 I would guess. Floors are not new but wood

looks in good condition. It is second floor

apartment. I would imagine wood supports under

floor. I'm sure not concrete. There is basement

in building which is clean and appears in good

condition, painted walls and floor and no dust.

I don't know how I could find such a combo as you

describe, concrete with tile. All homes here

have basements. I have never seen a crawlspace

in my life. I have never seen a concrete floor

anywhere but in basements and on porches. Maybe

they are under flooring of newer homes.

I had a new home in California and it had no

basement so I am sure it was on a slab but no

crawlspace. If there was one there, we never saw

it.

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I have lived in Levittowns almost my entire life and they all have a

concrete slab. No basements. I have never lived in a house with a

basement. We recently got rid of most carpets and are pautting down

ceramic tiles over the cocnrete slab. It is great. Just clean with

white vinegar.

Esposure was not at home though.

Theresa

>

> Re: wood floors/wood rot, etc

> This is an old building but not ancient, maybe

> 1960 I would guess. Floors are not new but wood

> looks in good condition. It is second floor

> apartment. I would imagine wood supports under

> floor. I'm sure not concrete. There is basement

> in building which is clean and appears in good

> condition, painted walls and floor and no dust.

> I don't know how I could find such a combo as you

> describe, concrete with tile. All homes here

> have basements. I have never seen a crawlspace

> in my life. I have never seen a concrete floor

> anywhere but in basements and on porches. Maybe

> they are under flooring of newer homes.

> I had a new home in California and it had no

> basement so I am sure it was on a slab but no

> crawlspace. If there was one there, we never saw

> it.

>

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I believe one is supposed to have a vapor shield when doing this.

Why we opted for ceramic tile instead of wood over concrete slab.

Theresa

> >

> > >Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small

apartment with

> > >wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air

conditioning unit,

> > >that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it

probably

> > >sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have

been

> > >painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I

don't want

> > >to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience

with

> > >right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping

them

> > >with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards

with

> > >ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can

go on

> > >wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood

floors with

> > >ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be

good

> > >flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning

I

> > >would imagine.

> > >

> > >I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment

while still

> > >having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but

landlord

> > >has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new

toilet

> > >for him (one there is moldy).

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

> > FAIR USE NOTICE:

> >

> >

> >

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I wonder why. Is guess so tornadoes there?

>

> I have lived in Levittowns almost my entire life and they all have a

> concrete slab. No basements. I have never lived in a house with a

> basement. We recently got rid of most carpets and are pautting down

> ceramic tiles over the cocnrete slab. It is great. Just clean with

> white vinegar.

>

>

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, I just reread your post and yes, everything in SW Ohio where

I am at is over cement because all houses are built over cement

basements. Some are built over ccncrete cinder blocks. My house is

over concrete cinder blocks and cinder blocks if they get a crack

can hold water and that is what happened to my basement in two

corners (fixed now) but this house has solid concrete basement that

is in good condition and I am on second floor, so if you count

basement as one floor, I'm on third floor but here we usually do not

count basement as a floor. However building has a flat roof but it

is best I can find. Here at hotel I am in a small room shared with

a large moldy a/c unit (I have wrapped) and carpet and toilet with

mold on lid (I have that wrapped also), moving to hardwood floors

and better everything except toilet there is also moldy, and I have

looked at ALOT of places! I'm not happy with place but I can't look

any longer. Landlord is allowing me month to month lease (since it

is hard for him to find tenant in the winter/holiday seaason,

otherwise he normally does not allow short leases), so I'm only tied

to a 30 day notice.

>

> >Does anyone have any advice. I am moving into a small apartment

with

> >wood floors. In the bedroom there was a window air conditioning

unit,

> >that they have taken out of window for winter but I'm sure it

probably

> >sprayed bedroom with mold spores over the summer. Walls have

been

> >painted but any advice on good way to clean wood floors. I don't

want

> >to damage them. I have carpet at home so I have no experience

with

> >right way to clean wood floors. I'm thinking of dry sweeping

them

> >with a swiffer very good and then lightly mist them afterwards

with

> >ammonia? This is what I am thinking but not sure ammonia can go

on

> >wood floors??? Does anyone know if I can safely mist wood floors

with

> >ammonia? I can see for first time why ceramic tile might be good

> >flooring all over, as it could take almost any kind of cleaning I

> >would imagine.

> >

> >I can't believe I'm about to sign a lease for an apartment while

still

> >having a home...can't see how I am going to afford this but

landlord

> >has agreed to month to month lease since I am putting in new

toilet

> >for him (one there is moldy).

> >

> >

>

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