The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto rented a "reefer trailer" (sic?
usually used to transport foods), which they parked in a loading dock
bay and used for years. It may still be there.
 
js
 
Jerry Shiner
Keepsafe Microclimate Systems
800 683 4696  www.keepsafe.ca <http://www.keepsafe.ca/>
[email protected]
Specializing in the design, procurement, and installation of
environmental control systems in museums and archives.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, May 18, 2010 7:33 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [pestlist] Pest Treaments



Abigail -
 
If you are near a seaport, there are large, steel ship containers which
will maintain minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit.  In Israel, we used such a
container for freezing a large quantity of books infested with Anobium
punctatum beetle larvae.  The container was delivered to the library
parking lot and left there for as long as we needed it.  The total cost
was $600.  Make sure the items are not packed tightly in the container.
I'd leave them in for a week.
 
Another option is to take the materials to a frozen food warehouse.
Such a warehouse usually has large freezer rooms which maintain the food
at 0 degrees Fahrenheit.  If you select this option, then you'd have to
leave the materials for at least two weeks in order to compensate for
the higher temperature.
 
Thomas A. Parker, PhD
President, Entomologist
Pest Control Services, Inc.




-----Original Message-----
From: Abigail Stevens <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, May 18, 2010 5:25 am
Subject: [pestlist] Pest Treaments


Dear all,
 
I work at the Manchester Museum in the UK, and we are about to embark on
a redevelopment of our Mammals Gallery. All the taxidermy specimens on
display will have to be moved to elsewhere in the Museum (including
other collection stores) due to lack of storage space, and so to be on
the safe side I would like to treat all the specimens as soon as they
come off the gallery and before they go into their new/temporary home. 
 
We have a small chest freezer at the Museum that we use for treating
small specimens, but there are an awful lot of specimens on the gallery,
as well as several very large ones. We have used the walk-in freezer at
Liverpool Conservation Centre in the past, but this would involve a
great deal of journeys back and forth, and would be very time consuming.
 
Please can anyone recommend a company in the north west that could
provide the facilities to treat a large number of specimens on site?
Ideally we are looking for a mobile freezer unit?
 
Many thanks,
Abby
 
Abby Stevens
Preventive Conservator 
Manchester Museum, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road,
Manchester, M13 9PL
0161 3061590
[email protected]

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