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Pine Tar


AngusR
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Hi all,

 

I am looking at milling timber for fencing  over the next few years. It will all be home grown Scots pine and larch that I’ll be using but I’m swithering on treatment. I can’t seem to find any form of treatment that works (20 years +) except creosote. I have existing fences that were installed in the 60’s and 70’s, made from the old estate sawmill but these are very well soaked in creosote. So I know it works but it’s kinda nasty stuff so I’d rather not work with it or use it on the land if I can help it.

 

Then I stumbled across pine tar - the self proclaimed black gold! I doubt it works that well or I’d have heard about if before now but does anyone have any experience of using it specifically on ground contact timbers like fence posts as a sole form of treatment. Would it need reapplication which makes it impractical or could I super dry posts and soak them in tar to get the best absorbsion of tar?

 

Also with the Scots pine I have available i assume I could extract it myself. Was thinking about using a retort to minimise firewood needs and make charcoal at the same time.

 

Anyway this might all be too good to be true but would be great to hear others experience or thoughts on this.

 

thanks

 

Angus 

 

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2 hours ago, AngusR said:

Hi all,

 

I am looking at milling timber for fencing  over the next few years. It will all be home grown Scots pine and larch that I’ll be using but I’m swithering on treatment. I can’t seem to find any form of treatment that works (20 years +) except creosote. I have existing fences that were installed in the 60’s and 70’s, made from the old estate sawmill but these are very well soaked in creosote. So I know it works but it’s kinda nasty stuff so I’d rather not work with it or use it on the land if I can help it.

 

Then I stumbled across pine tar - the self proclaimed black gold! I doubt it works that well or I’d have heard about if before now but does anyone have any experience of using it specifically on ground contact timbers like fence posts as a sole form of treatment. Would it need reapplication which makes it impractical or could I super dry posts and soak them in tar to get the best absorbsion of tar?

 

Also with the Scots pine I have available i assume I could extract it myself. Was thinking about using a retort to minimise firewood needs and make charcoal at the same time.

 

Anyway this might all be too good to be true but would be great to hear others experience or thoughts on this.

 

thanks

 

Angus 

 

Just looked it up and it states that it is good for wood that has to be below ground . Expensive but can be thinned with Linseed oil .

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4 hours ago, Stere said:

Stockholm tar is extracated from pine tree roots in scandi countries navy used it to tar ropes

 

 Jack tars slang for sailor

 

just looked up ther price 😲

 

 

We had a small tub for the old horse. Her feet used to crack up badly and you could dab a bit on to seal it and stop it getting infected. Bloody pricey to be buying loads only to bury it.

 

Pine is full of natural creosote anyway isn't it?

 

 

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