Power Wash Redwood Fence?
I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on
it in quite a few places. (From watering the flowers I suspect). My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. Does anybody have an opinion on this? |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
"woods" wrote in message
... I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. (From watering the flowers I suspect). My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. Does anybody have an opinion on this? If you can remove a single board, you can the power washer. Choose one that can be replaced reversed if the PW wrecks the weathered finish. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
In article
, woods wrote: I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. (From watering the flowers I suspect). My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. Does anybody have an opinion on this? Are you kidding? This is usenet. Not that you would know anything about that, since you think it's a google group you're posting to. *Everyone* has an opinion. Mine is that if the moss bothers your wife, she's the one who ought to do something about it. Moss adds character, says I. Meanwhile you should just crack open another beer and call one of those adult entertainers from craigslist to come over and keep you company. |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
On Apr 30, 10:39*am, woods wrote:
I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. *(From watering the flowers I suspect). *My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. *The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. *The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. *Does anybody have an opinion on this? Use bleach to kill what is growing, put it in a garden sprayer, just washing wont do it easily. Bleach then wash and spray before it gets all green again in the future. |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
On Apr 30, 8:39*am, woods wrote:
I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. *(From watering the flowers I suspect). *My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. *The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. *The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. *Does anybody have an opinion on this? Try one of the moss killers that works with natural fatty acids, several come in liquid form that you apply with a garden hose hookup. Kill the moss first - takes about a week for the stuff to work and loosen it up. Then with a broom or similar you can loosen the stuff enough to take it off with a stong hose spray. This reduces the risk of damage to the wood. I haven't tried redwood, but I have "firred" cedar and spruce, and you will almost certainly see a difference in the finish using a high pressure spray. |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 08:39:19 -0700 (PDT), woods
wrote: I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. (From watering the flowers I suspect). My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. Does anybody have an opinion on this? Use Jomax (a detergent) to clean your fence. Power wash can damage wood. |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
In article , Phisherman wrote:
On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 08:39:19 -0700 (PDT), woods wrote: I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. (From watering the flowers I suspect). My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. Does anybody have an opinion on this? Use Jomax (a detergent) to clean your fence. Power wash can damage wood. Correction: power washing *will* damage something as soft as redwood. |
Power Wash Redwood Fence?
On May 1, 8:05*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:
In article , Phisherman wrote: On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 08:39:19 -0700 (PDT), woods wrote: I have a redwood fence that has quite a bit of green moss growing on it in quite a few places. *(From watering the flowers I suspect). *My wife wants me to power wash the moss off the fence, but I have some concerns about how good this is for the redwood. *The fence was built in 1961, so the wood is getting quite old. *The boards on the fence are 1 X 8. *Does anybody have an opinion on this? Use Jomax (a detergent) *to clean your fence. *Power wash can damage wood. Correction: power washing *will* damage something as soft as redwood. There is a zinc compound that is good for moss. I forget what you call it but remember google is your friend. Jimmie |
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