Mark W
Well-known member
We have a few big white pines uo at our cabin and the branches hand over our wooden deck. Deck is coated with a Solid Stain. In the past 2-3 years, a significant amount of pine sap has dripped onto the deck making it basically useless as every time you walk on it, your shoes get the sap on them and then any pine needle or leaf gets stuck to the bottom of your shoe. A couple of questions:
1. How do I remove this sap. I don't have 1-2 spots, I have several hundred if not more. Spending more than a minute on each spot would be tiresome and get old quickly. I've tried everything I can think of and nothing short of sanding it off and recoating seems to work.
2. Anyway to prevent this. Our tree guy says when the trees get stressed, the drop sap. I don't know how they get stressed. These are big trees, really big trees. We have had dry spells, wet spells and average and they still drop sap.
3. Anyone know how to make the spots at least not sticky. While I don't like the white spots, I could live with them if they weren't sticky.
Went out for early teal and practiced extreme shell conservation. WI early ends today. MN just started but I think I have other stuff to get done instead of hunting.
Thanks everyone.
Mark
1. How do I remove this sap. I don't have 1-2 spots, I have several hundred if not more. Spending more than a minute on each spot would be tiresome and get old quickly. I've tried everything I can think of and nothing short of sanding it off and recoating seems to work.
2. Anyway to prevent this. Our tree guy says when the trees get stressed, the drop sap. I don't know how they get stressed. These are big trees, really big trees. We have had dry spells, wet spells and average and they still drop sap.
3. Anyone know how to make the spots at least not sticky. While I don't like the white spots, I could live with them if they weren't sticky.
Went out for early teal and practiced extreme shell conservation. WI early ends today. MN just started but I think I have other stuff to get done instead of hunting.
Thanks everyone.
Mark