Arsenic and Old Wallpaper - Walls of Death

Posted by Barry Flett on 11th Aug 2023

I know, the title sounds like it would be appropriate for a Halloween blog, doesn't it?

I realize I do mention and even harp on keeping safe when picking far more than most picking related blogs.


I do it because, frankly, it can be dangerous profession, and the better armed you are with the facts the better you can protect yourself from harm, and live to go picking another day. I have been lucky, and have learned the hard way to take certain precautions.


One of those precautions is wearing a respirator, not just one of those flimsy white dust masks. I will admit, I don't wear one of my respirators all the time when picking, but, frankly, I should.


I already have a type of asthma that is triggered by fine dusts, and fibreglass insulation in particular. That is a direct result of my chosen profession, not an inherited malady.


Dusts, seen and unseen can be a problem. You already likely know to be careful of lead paint, but the source of what I am about to reveal may surprise you.


Arsenic dust borne from wallpaper.


If you take a read of this article, you will see this is not just a paranoid thought.


The fact is that "near the end of the 19th century the American Medical Association estimated that as much as 65% of all wallpaper in the United States contained arsenic."


That leaves pretty high odds for that peeling wallpaper in that old Victorian farmhouse you are picking to be a very dangerous material....and the airborne particles you are breathing in won't be just from mouse/rat droppings, bird droppings, black mould spores and fine topsoil...you can add a lethal poison to the mix.


Go buy a respirator!


Pick safe!