Surface impressions in early spring are not a sign that a wood floor is weak or poorly made. They are a sign that the wood is transitioning.
Winter dries wood aggressively. Spring gives moisture back—but not all at once, and not without consequence. During that transition, wood fibers are temporarily more vulnerable to compression than at any other time of year.
At Huggins Wood Floor Specialists, early spring impressions are understood as part of the seasonal story, not a sudden failure. Recognizing this window—and protecting floors accordingly—prevents cosmetic damage from becoming permanent.
Winter tests wood floors through stress.
Spring tests them through recovery.
Knowing the difference is what protects the floor for decades to come.









