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| cabin Home Web Site: http://www.ALStrongwood.com | Authorized
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Mold,
fungus, termites or bugs in a Log Home … should you worry?
Yes, you should worry about these problems; yet, at the same time, you don’t have to worry about these problems. Molds, bugs, termites, fungus … all of these issues are problematic in any home, and it doest not if it is a solid brick home or a log home. Nonetheless, because of construction techniques and the mass of wood in a log home, you do need to look more closely at these issues and make some decisions when building a log cabin or home. Let’s start at the beginning, and that is the root of a log cabin or home --- the TREE. A tree is a living-breathing thing right up until the moment it is cut down. While still alive, a tree plays host to all sorts of organisms. Bugs eat, sleep and lay their eggs in the bark and wood. Molds and fungus will grow just about any place if there is the right moisture content. If we are going to be able to control these potential enemies, we need to understand how they get there, how they live and what they need to survive. Let’s first look at the life cycle of a tree. It starts life as a seed, germinates and grows to a seedling and over years develops into a mature tree. Then along comes a logger and he cuts down our tree, which is destined to become a log home. As soon as the tree is cut, it begins to decompose. This is normal and all things do this, but we want to stop the decomposition of our wood for this log is destined to be part of our log cabin or house. But Mother Nature doesn’t know what we plan to do; and molds and fungus do their part and continue the decomposition of the tree with the intent of turning our log back into dust. The insects also continue to do their part as they continue to eat their way through our log. This is all part of nature’s process of decomposition but we want to stop that process and preserve the tree for hundreds of years. As we said, molds and fungus begin turning our log into dust immediately. What molds and fungus need to survive and prosper is a warm, moist environment with a food source. By weight, a tree trunk is over 40% water. As long as there is moisture in the log, this will be a viable environment for our molds and fungus and they will continue to consume the tree trunk. Insects likewise do their part. As the tree rots, the wood becomes softer and more and more insects fine it a nice place to eat, live and raise a family. If left unchecked, the process continues until nature has totally decomposed the tree. If we left this tree lying on the forest floor, in no time at all, this tree would become a rotten skeleton of what was once a once mighty tree. In our case, we want to break this natural cycle and preserve this tree trunk using it to build a log cabin or a log home. What we have to do is break the life cycle of the molds, fungus and insects. How a log home manufacture breaks this cycle is dependent on the company, but they all must break the cycle. Let’s look at what the fungus and mold needs. Their needs are pretty simple. They need a moist environment and, for optimum growth, it should be both moist and warm. So all we need to do to stop them is dry the wood out and then keep the wood from getting wet. As for the insects, they are a bit more complicated as some insects will love dry wood as well as moist wood. Further, when the tree was cut down, there were large numbers of insects already living in the wood and they have laid thousands of eggs just waiting to hatch and eat away at your log home. Somehow we have to break their life cycle, and then we have to protect the wood from additional intrusion by bugs. Let’s now look at what different log home manufacturers do to break the life cycles of molds, fungus and the wood-destroying insects. All log manufacturers first remove the bark. This is important as the bark used to protect the inter parts of the tree like skin protects our bodies. The inner part of the bark is called the cambium layer, and it is where the tree’s sap rose and fell moving nutrients and water between the roots and the leaves or needles of the tree. Bugs, mold and fungus love this region of the tree. All log home manufacturers remove the bark to destroy this important habitat for the bugs, molds and fungus. After the bark is removed we next have to remove the moisture and kill off the insects and bugs. Manufacturers vary as to how they handle these problems. There are two camps of thought. On one extreme you have the log home manufacturers that build with green or wet logs and on the other extreme you have the log home manufactures that build with fully kiln-dried logs. Between these two extremes are all the manufacturers that do air drying, and partially kiln dry their logs. Let’s first look at those that build with green or wet logs. The logs
will be stripped of their bark and stacked for a while awaiting the next
order for a log home. As soon as the log is cut, it begins losing moisture
so this will allow some of the moisture to escape and will start the drying
process. If the manufacturer protects the logs under a shed, it will keep
the rain off and speed up the drying process, but the amount of water
in a home build of green logs can be huge. A typical log home will need
to lose up to 5 tons of water before it becomes fully dry. When an order
comes in, the logs are sent to the construction site and the log home
or cabin is built. Green logs are very heavy. An eight-foot log that is
about 12 inches in diameter will weigh over 200 pounds but over time,
the log will lose this water. One thing that happens, as it dries, is
the logs shrink and the whole wall will settle. When you are looking for
log home manufacturer, you can always tell which log home builders construct
with green or wet logs because they must have some method of handling
shrinkage and settling. Some of them are not straightforward when you
ask these questions because they know that building with green logs can
lead to potential problems and increased maintenance over time so question
This is the same process used by the pioneers and some of those cabins have lasted hundreds of years, but they do require additional maintenance, especially in the first few years. While drying your logs this way will work given time, these log home manufacturers need to address the bug, mold and fungus issues immediately and so these manufacturers will typically put some poison on the logs or will dip them in a tank of poison. Modern man has developed a wide range of pesticides, insecticides, fungicides and herbicides. There is a poison for just about anything you may want to kill. This can be sprayed on the logs but more commonly the manufacturers that use these poisons will dip their logs into the solution. The poison soaks into the wood and kills the bugs, the fungus or the molds. The poison has residual properties and can continue to kill molds, fungus and bugs for a long time to come. This is good and bad. Remember that this same poison that is killing the insects, molds and fungus, is being released into your home day after day, year after year. If your log home manufacturer uses this method of control pest control, do your homework. Find out what type of poison and what concentrations they are using. Do your research and find out if the poison could have any harmful side affects for adults, children or pets or people with allergies. Some log home manufacturers build with huge logs and kiln drying is not
feasible. Some of them will stack these huge logs for a log time in a
controlled environment and will dry their logs this way. This is an extremely
expensive process and is normally only used on high end, one-of-a-kind
houses. Most log home manufacturers that do not build with green wood
kiln dry the logs. Let’s see how this is used to kill off the bugs, mold,
and fungus and get rid of the water. These log home manufacturers place
the whole log into a large kiln. Some are the size of a warehouse. If
they leave it in the kiln for a few days, they are not truly trying the
log. It can take three or four days to dry out just a piece of lumber
much less a log. The log home manufactures that bring the internal water
content down to under 19% will leave them in a kiln for up to 30 days
and will slowly move the temperature up to as high as 180 degrees. The
benefits of kiln drying are that it dries the log and means you don’t
have to compensate for shrinkage and settling. It also allows them to
control the checking on logs and any logs that warp or check too much
can be discarded before they are placed into your home. Being dried in
a kiln also kills off all of the insects and destroys their eggs and larvae
breaking their life cycle. This means that these manufactures do not need
to put poison on the logs you are using for your house. There are other
benefits to be gained from using kiln-dried logs. One of them is that
you can put a stain and sealant on your logs immediately. With a log home
that builds with green lumber, you have to allow the moisture to escape
from the log and so you need to wait a while before putting on an exterior
or interior finish. Kiln drying also has the benefit of crystallizing
the sap in the tree sap. Homes built with green wood can ooze sticky sap
for years to come. The last benefit to kiln drying is something I touched
on earlier and that is quality control. When you look at a log, there
is no way of guessing how it is going to dry. It can twist, warp and split
badly. You can see this easily if you ever go into a lumberyard. Have
you ever noticed that out of a pile of boards there will always be a few
that do some wild warping? They can twist and bend as much as a foot over
a ten-foot length. When logs are fully kiln-dried, if you find any of
these rogue logs, they can be discarded. If you build with green wood,
you will never know this until it is a part of your home. Checking is
another big issue with logs. All logs will check and this can’t be stopped,
but, by kiln drying, you can discard logs that check too badly or you
can turn them in such a manner that bad checks no not collect rain water
and lead to trouble spots on the outside of your log home. I am a log home dealer for Strongwood Log Homes, Inc., a company that fully kiln dries their logs for 30-36 days at a temperature of up to 180 degrees. I have lived in Japan, Panama, Bahrain, England and the USA. I am an ex-Army Office, and a long time educator. I have now turned my hand to working as a freelance writer and photojournalist. I have build home and know the construction trade. If you would like to see examples of how manufactures construct with green wood, I invite you to go to our online Quiz on Log Home Construction. My company, Alabama Strongwood Log Homes, LLC is situated on the boarder between Alabama and Georgia and we would love to help you in your quest relative to building log homes or cabins.
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Alabama Strongwood Log Homes,
L.L.C. |
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| Phone: 877-AL4-Logs (toll free) 334-745-6622 (local)
eMail: info@ALStrongwood.com |
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