Choose Your Poison – The Dangers of Attic Work

 

Going into attics can be an occupational hazard and it helps to know what some of the dangers are going in. Aside from the structural aspects and potential or placing a foot through a ceiling or crushing a duct, it always pays to be protected. P100 pancake filters on a silicone half face is my preferred breathing protection and clothes that can be taken of after attic inspection to be bagged helps.

I had the pleasure of auditing a 100+ year old house a few weeks back and prior to going up was happy to hear the client had the vermiculite tested for chrysotile asbestos. Results were negative so I went up and discovered something I have never seen in the hundreds of attics I’ve been in:

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Standing on the attic floor (see attic hatch upper left) I found this large, deep dark pile of what appeared to be mouse droppings on a deep bed of vermiculite. I’d never seen such a large pile.

 

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Closeup: Two possibly deadly dangers; both invisible. On closer inspection the dark pile sure enough looked like mouse droppings.. but so much in one place? The vermiculite got the green light through testing.

I didn’t make the connection until I found a dead bat on the attic floor. Being related to mice their poop was bound to look a bi similar. Though exaggerated, there is a fungus that can be in the bat guano that causes Histoplasmosis or “Cavers Disease.

So when your up there, practice good PPE, protect the air your breath every time!