40-60% measured by the humidistat or no sparks measured by the "humidicat".
My dulcimers stay out all of the time
Robin, love your commento. Now the "guess" is on. ha ha ha. Well for my instruments. I've lived in a rain forest in Hawaii for many years. I had more trouble with moisture then dryness. We now live in Nauvoo, Illinois and in the summer....woah.....it is HUMID. I have had trouble with humid much more then dryness. I think my instruments are happy for the dryer winter...but a log house and wood floors .....LOTS OF WOOD....it all breaths. I've had no trouble with cracking of instruments. When i make instruments I use Tight-bond glue. Glue is important in understanding where the instrument is going to live. I've found that to be the best for me. aloha, irene
Susie's posting reminded me how I should have added that most of our instruments live in cases when they are not being played. Yes, I keep 3 out. I never said how many are in cases.
I live in Illinois, this is something to think about. Never thought about the dry air effecting my dulcimer. I practice almost daily and I put it away in its soft case. Don't want my fur babies messing with it.
A couple of questions for those up north and in the Midwest who keep their instruments out all the time. Don't you have a problem with the instruments drying out and cracking when the furnace is running and the air in the house dries out? Isn't that why a lot of musicians keep humidifiers in their instrument cases?
We live in Northern MI. In addition to the 4 dulcimers, we have 6 guitars, and many other wooden instruments. We also have a house made of wood, lots of wood furniture and trim and us and the dogs. For the instruments, structure, belongings and living creatures, we have 3 whole house humidifiers for the 3 levels of the house. In the summer, we use Central A/C and a dehumidifier. We keep the relative humidity controlled between 40% and 60% all year. But, given that, I've have always stored my instruments in their cases (since 1973). It's a personal choice I know, there's no one right way. I fully respect those who choose to have their instruments out.
updated by @susie: 01/29/20 10:03:22AM
I keep 3 instruments out. As far as humidifying goes, a large pan of water is on our free-standing gas stove (heater) all the time and I fill old coffee mugs with water to keep by the instruments themselves. I know the humidity level in the house is pretty good because I'm not getting snapped with sparks when touching some objects or petting the dogs.
Mark keeps 2 guitars out-- a steel string and a nylon string. Again, I keep a coffee mug with water right by those left out. He rotates his steel string guitars so none of them are out all the time; those in cases are humidified in-case.
As far as dusting them. . . Well, I brush stuff off my instruments from time to time with my hand. :)
Our house in Chicago was built in 1923 and has radiators, not forced air. We run two room humidifiers 24x7 and keep the houseplants well-watered. Still, the cats throw sparks when we pet them. Which is kinda entertaining for us... but it puts the cats in a worse mood than usual.
You better believe my dulcimers spend the winter inside their cases. I try to remember to re-fill the case humidifiers every couple of weeks.
A couple of questions for those up north and in the Midwest who keep their instruments out all the time. Don't you have a problem with the instruments drying out and cracking when the furnace is running and the air in the house dries out? Isn't that why a lot of musicians keep humidifiers in their instrument cases?
Why put them away? Mine are out on instrument stands in the area where I play, usually daily.
You mean you're supposed to dust them?
With a dust cloth or feather duster. I keep mine "string side up"!!
My dulcimers lay on tables, on my music stand, lean against the bookcase or on the bed. How do you dust them and keep them?