π§° What You'll Need
BoracareFreezerHeat gunPetroleum jelly test
π Steps
1
Confirm active vs. historical infestation
Fresh exit holes: clean, sharp edges with light-colored frass. Historical: darker, rounded edges, no fresh frass. Fresh larvae-visible holes only need treatment; old holes can be cosmetically filled. Don't treat historical infestations with chemicals.
2
Petroleum jelly test for activity
Apply petroleum jelly over suspect holes. If the jelly is pushed out within 2 weeks, larvae are still active and boring. This confirms active infestation before committing to treatment.
3
Freezing for small items (most gentle)
Place small furniture items or components in a sealed plastic bag to prevent condensation damage, then freeze at 0Β°F for minimum 2 weeks. All life stages including eggs are killed. No chemical exposure. Best for valuable veneered pieces where moisture from Boracare could be a concern.
4
Boracare for accessible bare wood
Boracare (disodium octaborate tetrahydrate) penetrates raw/unfinished wood and kills larvae throughout. Apply to any bare wood areas (interior drawer sides, unfinished backs). CANNOT penetrate through paint, varnish, or finish β only works on unfinished wood.
5
Heat treatment for sealed pieces
Heat the furniture to 120Β°F throughout for minimum 60 minutes. Use a heat chamber (professional) or a well-monitored enclosed space with portable heaters. This kills all stages without chemical exposure but requires careful temperature monitoring to avoid finish damage.
π‘ Pro Tips
- Fumigation (Vikane) is available through professional fumigators for high-value pieces β 100% effective but requires evacuation and professional application
- Antique dealers use professional heat chambers routinely for new inventory
- The humidity inside a frozen bag will condense on the furniture when removed β allow sealed items to come to room temperature before opening
β οΈ Warnings
- Heat treatment above 130Β°F can damage glue joints, finishes, and inlay in antique furniture β monitor temperature carefully
- Never use methyl bromide fumigation β it has residual toxicity and is restricted