For anyone living with aspergillosis, ABPA, bronchiectasis or asthma, mould exposure can trigger symptoms or flares. Recently, several patients have reported that rough-cut timber is arriving mouldy from DIY suppliers, sawmills, or timber merchants.
Here’s why this happens — and what suppliers should be doing to prevent it.
⭐ Why rough-cut wood gets mouldy (especially in the UK)
Mould grows on timber whenever three conditions are present:
-
Moisture
-
Poor airflow
-
Warm or humid air
Rough-cut timber is especially vulnerable because:
-
its uneven surface holds moisture,
-
it is often stacked tightly,
-
it may not be dried properly,
-
and UK weather (rain + high humidity) encourages mould.
Many suppliers wrap wood in plastic, which traps condensation during transport. This can create a humid “greenhouse” around the timber — perfect for mould growth in only 24–48 hours.
⭐ What UK suppliers should be doing (even for low-cost timber)
These are standard industry practices in UK timber yards and sawmills. None of them require wood to be kiln-dried (which is more expensive).
✔ 1. Air-dry properly (“sticker stacking”)
Boards must be stacked with spacers (“stickers”) between them so air can circulate.
No airflow = mould.
✔ 2. Store under cover, not outside in the rain
A simple open-sided shelter is enough.
Rain-soaked timber nearly always grows mould in transit.
✔ 3. Use breathable wrapping — NOT plastic sheeting
Plastic traps moisture.
Breathable paper wrap or perforated cover prevents condensation build-up.
✔ 4. Apply anti-fungal dip (borate)
Most UK sawmills use anti-mould dips to prevent blue-stain and mould during storage.
This costs pennies per board.
✔ 5. Moisture-test before delivery
A good supplier will check wood is below 20–22% moisture before dispatch.
Wet wood + UK weather = guaranteed mould.
⭐ Kiln drying is not essential
Kiln-dried timber is more expensive because it uses energy, equipment, and time to force-dry the wood.
But you do not need kiln-dried timber to avoid mould.
You simply need a supplier who:
-
stores the timber properly,
-
allows airflow,
-
avoids plastic,
-
and checks moisture before delivery.
If rough-cut wood is arriving mouldy, it usually means these steps were not followed.
⭐ What you can do to protect yourself (aspergillosis patients)
If you receive wood that:
-
smells musty,
-
has surface mould,
-
or shows green/black spots,
…it is best not to bring it indoors until cleaned.
✔ Immediately unwrap outdoors
Plastic wrapping traps mould spores.
✔ Keep well away from ventilation intakes, windows, or living areas
This avoids airborne spores entering the home.
✔ If mould is visible — return it
You have the right to reject mouldy timber.
✔ If keeping it, clean outdoors with PPE
Use:
-
gloves
-
FFP3 mask
-
borax solution (borax + hot water)
to remove early surface mould.
Never sand mould indoors — sanding releases spores.
⭐ Simple Diagram: Correct Way to Store Wood to Prevent Mould
Correct storage includes:
-
boards stacked with spacers between them (“sticker stacked”),
-
raised on bearers above the ground,
-
stored under a roof with airflow on all sides,
-
NEVER wrapped in sealed plastic,
-
ends exposed to allow moisture to escape.
This method is cheap, simple, and prevents mould without needing expensive kiln drying.
⭐ Summary for Aspergillosis Patients
Rough-cut wood should not arrive mouldy.
Mould growth usually means it was:
-
stacked badly,
-
stored wet,
-
wrapped in plastic,
-
or shipped before drying.
For people with aspergillosis, ABPA, bronchiectasis or severe asthma, mould spores can trigger symptoms — so it’s completely reasonable to:
-
refuse mouldy timber,
-
request proper handling,
-
or ask the supplier to follow UK best practice.
Share this post
Latest News posts
🔬 Charcot–Leyden Crystals in ABPA and Asthma
February 13, 2026
Event: 📸 Science is Open: A Photo Journey of Research Lab Samples
February 12, 2026
How to Join Our Microsoft Teams Meetings – Troubleshooting
February 12, 2026
Health effects: why aspergillosis patients are higher-risk
February 10, 2026
Damp, mould and aspergillosis in rented homes (UK)
February 10, 2026
Recognising a damp or mouldy home
February 10, 2026
Your rights, the law, and UK support organisations
February 10, 2026
Remediation, verification, and refusal to move you
February 10, 2026
How to raise damp and mould with your landlord (and get action)
February 10, 2026
News archive
- ABPA
- Air Quality
- Airway Clearance, Diagnosis & Physiotherapy
- Antifungals
- Aspergilloma
- Aspergillus Bronchitis
- Biologics
- Blood Tests
- CPA
- Carers & Family
- Communities
- Complementary & Supplements
- Complications
- Conditions
- Diagnostics
- Environment
- Events & Recordings
- GP Guidance
- General interest
- Housing & Damp
- Imaging
- Immune System
- Lifestyle & Coping
- Living with Aspergillosis
- Mental Health
- Monitoring
- Monitoring & Safety
- NAC & Guidance
- NAC Announcements
- Other
- Other Forms Aspergillosis
- Patient Research
- Pets & Animals
- Professional Guidance
- Recordings
- Research
- Research Summaries
- SAFS / Severe Asthma
- Side Effects
- Steroids
- Symptoms
- Travel and Insurance
- Treatment
- Vaccines
- Weekly Updates
