Dry Rot Treatment
Because dry rot is such a serious problem it requires specialist dry rot treatment. Dry rot is a living and growing fungus, which feeds off and destroys timber in order to live.
There are four main stages in the dry wood rot lifecycle. It is therefore important to choose a supplier familiar with dry rot life cycles who is qualified as a dry rot specialist.
- Spore
- Hyphae
- Mycelium
- Fruiting Body
1, Spore Dry Rot begins as a tiny spore. These spores are omnipresent and one alone is practically invisible to the naked eye. In very large numbers spores appear as a fine orange brown dust. These spores will remain inactivated unless combined with timber and moisture. When combined with timber it is likely dry rot specialist treatment would be required to prevent further spread. Specialist dry rot treatment will be required to inhibit this.
2, Hyphae Where timber and moisture are present the spore will begin to grow. The spore produces very fine white strands not unlike cobwebs. These strands, known as hyphae, allow the dry rot fungus to grow by feeding on the timber. Where it can do this fungus will go on to produce increasingly more strands. It is through this process that the fungus breaks the structure of the timber down thus removing its strength. Specialist dry rot treatment will be required to stop this in its tracks.
3, Mycelium One spore never exists alone meaning that when one germinates, several others will too, causing further dry rot problems. The resulting hyphae mass is known as mycelium. Mycelium can travel great distances in search of timber and it is this ability to grow over great distances and a variety of materials, which allows one outbreak to progressively destroy the structural timbers of an entire building if left undetected. Specialist dry rot treatment will be required to finish it off.
4, Fruiting Body In suitable conditions, dry rot mycelium will continue to exist and grow at a considerable rate within a building. Fungi prefers dark and damp areas with little or no air movement, therefore where these conditions change and threaten the fungus; its natural response is to create a fruiting body (sporophore). This mushroom-like form is the fungi's response to a threat to its survival and its function is to pump out spores into the atmosphere that can be transferred by air currents to other susceptible areas within the building allowing them to germinate and create a new attack of dry rot. Specialist dry rot treatment will be required to inhibit this.
Dry rot treatment involves identification of the life cycle and eradication through chemical spray and other dry rot treatments carried out be the team at Wise Property Care.









