Calgary Herald

Follow your nose to stay safe

Some odours indicate hazards

- MIKE HOLMES

You need to put all your senses to work to make your home safe and healthy. That means using your nose to sniff out problems, as well as your eyes to see what’s wrong.

I’m not just talking about noticing and avoiding volatile organic compounds when you smell them (that’s those chemicals in many building products, which evaporate quickly and can sicken some people who smell them). I’m talking about training your nose to recognize dangerous odours that warn of potentiall­y lethal outcomes, such as a natural gas leak, an electrical fire or septic gas.

All these hazards can kill, and they all have a specific odour you’ll probably smell before you see anything. But that’s only if you know the special scent when you come across it.

Leaking natural gas, for instance, can smell something like a dead mouse or skunk. Utilities add that unpleasant odour to naturally odourless and colourless gas for the purpose of warning you when it escapes. Ignoring the warning smell and flipping a light switch can cause a spark that ignites the house. Turn off the gas source. Leave the house and call the local utility company.

Rotten-egg smell is a symptom of both septic gas, which leaks in through the plumbing, and toxic drywall, which off-gases hydrogen sulphide. If the house has been sitting vacant for a while, dried-out traps might be letting in septic gas, which is lethal in large doses. If running water through the system doesn’t eliminate the smell, call a plumber. Once plumbing gets ruled out as the source and the smell persists, you could have a worse problem with that bad drywall, which can short electric systems and make you sick. It was imported to North America from 2001 to 2007, so some homes still have it. It must be profession­ally removed.

Don’t write off a strong urine smell as a pet accident. Accompanie­d by a stain on the ceiling, it could also mean a raccoon infestatio­n in the attic. And, in some cases, it’s a red flag that the house might previously have been used as a lab to make methamphet­amine, an illegal synthetic drug. Residue can cause breathing problems, similar to an overgrowth of mould. Decontamin­ation can cost thousands of dollars.

Never ignore a burning smell, either, especially one that’s like burning rubber. Your nose is tell- ing you an appliance or outlet is dangerousl­y overheated, which can lead to a fire. Turning off the circuit you think is causing the problem at the breaker box is a smart first response, before you phone an electricia­n. But leave the house if you see flames.

Ever catch a whiff of something you can only describe as mushrooms? In an older home, especially where the wood framing wasn’t pressure-treated as it is now, it could be dry rot, a fungus that sucks the structural strength out of healthy timber. To get rid of it, you’ll need a good mould remediator who knows dry rot.

Why am I making a big stink about odours? Probably because so many homeowners do ignore or tolerate bad smells, until it’s too late. They never guess it’s affecting their health or, worse, signalling real physical danger brewing behind the walls.

You can’t count on inspectors to identify bad odours unless they actually see evidence of a problem. They’re typically not trained to address a bad smell on its own; it’s categorize­d as “environmen­tal” and not part of their visual evaluation. A good one, however, won’t ignore smells which, in their experience, are linked to a broader problem.

Some inspectors use dogs specially trained to sniff out mould. Just the way dogs are able to detect drugs and explosives, they can smell dangerous mould spores that can affect your indoor air quality and family’s health.

As basic as it may sound, it pays to educate yourself about smells that spell danger. Then you’ll be able to react quickly and call the right profession­al before things get out of hand.

 ?? Courtesy, Mike Holmes ?? A mushroom-like scent in an older home could mean there’s a fungus known as dry rot in the wood framing.
Courtesy, Mike Holmes A mushroom-like scent in an older home could mean there’s a fungus known as dry rot in the wood framing.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada