How to salvage items from your flood-damaged home - Action News
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New Brunswick

How to salvage items from your flood-damaged home

If you're returning to a flooded home or cottage, you may be wondering how you can save a wet photo, book or other water-damaged item.

Some water-damaged items can be placed in a freezer until you have time to dry them

The procedure for dealing with water-damaged items varies depending on the materials they're made of. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

If you're returning to a flooded home or cottage, you may be wondering how you can save a soaking photo, book, or other water-damaged item.

The New Brunswick Museum is directing people toa three-pagedocument featuring tips on how to savetheir flood damaged items.

The museum's guide was adapted from a version first published by the National Capital Region Conservators, which featured material gatheredby conservators following flooding along the Ottawa River in 2017.

Claire Titus, a conservator atthe New Brunswick Museum, said there are some simple ways people can salvage their flood-damaged items.

"Almost everything can be retrieved, if given the right amount of time to respond to it," Titus said.

Before entering a flooded home, the guide recommends wearing gloves, rubber boots,a facemask and disposable coveralls toprevent coming into contact with sewage and mould.

Water-drenched photographs, paper documents and books can be frozen until you have time to deal with them, Titus said.

But some items, like paintings and furniture, can't be frozen because it will cause further damage.

"When something is wet and can stay wet, you can store that in a sealed Ziplocbag or in a plastic bin and get those things into as cold a freezer as you can find."

But the procedure for dealing with water-damaged items varies depending on the material it's made of, Titus said.

Some items, like paintings, can be rinsed with water if something is stuckto itssurface.

"If you've got something that is really clinging to the surface of the painting, this might be your best chance to remove it without damaging the actual surface underneath."

Titus recommends contacting a conservator if you're unsure of how to salvage an item made of several materials.

She saidstaff at the New Brunswick Museum and provincial archives are available to field questions about how to preserve flood-damaged items.

With files from Shift