Staining fences

Soldato
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
On recommendation from this forum a couple of years ago, I bought this stuff to paint my shed and will be restaining again this summer.

20200420-144433.jpg


I really need to protect the fences now. Is Barrettine recommended for fences or is there anything else to use? Perhaps it would be good to have the same colour as the shed.

I've got 10 panels on the right (my fence) and there's a few panels on the left (two my neighbour will be replacing). So a fair bit of stain needed. I was thinking of staining just my side of the panels. Will that be effective enough?

20200420-184819.jpg
 
Permabanned
Joined
24 Jul 2016
Posts
7,412
Location
South West
Staining one side only, won't the neighbours side have a load of seepage?

Might be best to check with neighbours first.
Lol it doesn’t look like the neighbours on the left would care that much with a panel completely missing, the panels on the right wouldn’t see any seepage due to the way the slats are layer on each other.

Op one side is better than no side at all but obviously doing both sides would be the better option but not always practical.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
Thing is, I'm the only owner occupier, my neighbours either side are tenants so I can pretty much do what I like. :D

But it's too much work for me to paint both sides of my fence even though it would be better to do it. I'm sure it would need at least two coats per side and there's 10 large panels. Hmm, I'll speak to the tenant to my right and ask him if he'd mind staining his side of my fence if I supply the stain, tea and biscuits. He's been pretty helpful and has recently cut down a load of branches and done some some general garden maintenance. And frankly, with this lockdown and nice weather, he.might not mind.

The tenant on the left won't paint his, he really doesn't care nor has the time. He's also got a lot of heavy stuff in the garden blocking some of the fence so it wouldn't even be possible to stain most of his side. Best I could do for now on the left fence is stain my side of the existing panels and when the new ones get installed, I can do those.

I arranged with my builder a few weeks ago to replace the two broken panels on the left and the owner agreed and was ready to pay for it. Then the lockdown happened so it's on hold.
 
Soldato
Joined
2 Aug 2012
Posts
7,809
If you do not mind the colour (It ends up about the same colour as the fence in the "Hot Fuzz" clip)

Waste motor oil is hard to beat.

It is free, It is essentially non-toxic to wildlife and plants, (It smells a bit when first applied, but that only lasts a couple of days) It makes the fence waterproof, rot proof and insect proof. And it lasts for ever.

Really, you wont have to do it again for 10 years, maybe even rather more, (Though there is no harm in doing it more often, it even saves you the bother of taking your old motor oil down to the tip)
 
Permabanned
Joined
24 Jul 2016
Posts
7,412
Location
South West
D9-D42905-F82-A-4778-BFF8-3-AEE2-A74-C38-C.jpg


Did mine the end of last summer. I just used Ronseal medium oak when it was on offer and it made it look a lot tidier. No idea how long it’ll last though I did think about giving it another coat but theirs no rush.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
If you do not mind the colour (It ends up about the same colour as the fence in the "Hot Fuzz" clip)

Waste motor oil is hard to beat.

It is free, It is essentially non-toxic to wildlife and plants, (It smells a bit when first applied, but that only lasts a couple of days) It makes the fence waterproof, rot proof and insect proof. And it lasts for ever.

Really, you wont have to do it again for 10 years, maybe even rather more, (Though there is no harm in doing it more often, it even saves you the bother of taking your old motor oil down to the tip)

Hmm, clearly a lot of advantages then! But it really is too dark for my taste and would make my garden look a bit narrower and closed in so I won't be going for that option. Thanks though, good idea. I prefer something more like the golden shade of my shed or even Doobedoo's fence, but that's the darkest I'd go.

Well I must say, I've just looked at Toolstation and I'm pleasantly surprised at the prices of both Ronseal One Coat Fence Life and Barrettine Shed and Fence Treatment. Both are £4.88 for 5 litre tubs. That's far cheaper than my can of Barrettine Wood Protective Treatment. Anyone know how good the Ronseal One Coat is? It would certainly save having to stain it twice. Or will it?
 
Permabanned
Joined
24 Jul 2016
Posts
7,412
Location
South West
90-DC39-EC-7858-4-AA0-A1-E5-2-FE463-CA079-A.jpg

That’s what I brought same as what your looking at. No idea how it compares to the barrettine or how long it will last. Ronseal do a better version called fence life plus I believe, again no idea if it’s worth the extra for it.

I just figured for the price and size of my fence it’s not the end of the world if I have to do it again. Maybe invest in a decent sprayer as that will make the application easier.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
90-DC39-EC-7858-4-AA0-A1-E5-2-FE463-CA079-A.jpg

That’s what I brought same as what your looking at. No idea how it compares to the barrettine or how long it will last. Ronseal do a better version called fence life plus I believe, again no idea if it’s worth the extra for it.

I just figured for the price and size of my fence it’s not the end of the world if I have to do it again. Maybe invest in a decent sprayer as that will make the application easier.

Sprayer is a good idea. Was it just one coat for your fence then? Did it take 2 x 5 litre tubs to finish the job and did you do the neighbour's side or is it street side?
 
Permabanned
Joined
24 Jul 2016
Posts
7,412
Location
South West
Sprayer is a good idea. Was it just one coat for your fence then? Did it take 2 x 5 litre tubs to finish the job and did you do the neighbour's side or is it street side?
I can’t actually remember it was at least 2 coats though and I still have half a container left.

If I was you I’d grab 3 or 4 for safe measures while it’s cheap and store what’s left for a future coat.

No I didn’t do the neighbours side one look at his garden will tell you he ain’t that bothered, but to be fair if he brought it up I’d come to some arrangement.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
I can’t actually remember it was at least 2 coats though and I still have half a container left.

If I was you I’d grab 3 or 4 for safe measures while it’s cheap and store what’s left for a future coat.

No I didn’t do the neighbours side one look at his garden will tell you he ain’t that bothered, but to be fair if he brought it up I’d come to some arrangement.
Ah right so you've only got one side protected. Better than nothing though. I spoke to my neighbour today. He wasn't overly keen on the idea of him doing his side of my fence but he's considering it.
 
Caporegime
Joined
21 Jun 2006
Posts
38,372
D9-D42905-F82-A-4778-BFF8-3-AEE2-A74-C38-C.jpg


Did mine the end of last summer. I just used Ronseal medium oak when it was on offer and it made it look a lot tidier. No idea how long it’ll last though I did think about giving it another coat but theirs no rush.

well the people i'm looking to buy a log cabin from recommend a new coat every year if you want it to last.
 
Soldato
Joined
2 Apr 2006
Posts
3,700
Sprayer is a good idea. Was it just one coat for your fence then? Did it take 2 x 5 litre tubs to finish the job and did you do the neighbour's side or is it street side?
I have a sprayer and it makes it a lot easier but the downside is it uses a lot more product. I ended up spraying some on the panel and then working it in with a brush, seems a happy medium. :)
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
I have a sprayer and it makes it a lot easier but the downside is it uses a lot more product. I ended up spraying some on the panel and then working it in with a brush, seems a happy medium. :)

I think I'll just use the largest brush I can get. I guess I should mask off where concrete posts come into contact with the panels. I've decided on Ronseal One Coat. According to the Ronseal calculator, for 5 foot high x 60 width of panels I only need 4.65 litres per side, so two tubs should cover both sides.

Do you think I should go for the Medium Oak or Harvest Gold colour? In other words, match the shed or have something darker? There's a bit of green algae beginning to discolour a couple of panels and maybe a darker stain will disguise that better.



 
Soldato
Joined
9 Mar 2003
Posts
14,247
I’ve never found a ‘one coat’ type product that ‘does exactly what it says on the tin’.

If your painting for the first time or changing the colour then it will probably need two coats to get a good finish. I might get away with doing one coat on my fence buts it’s already pained in the same colour and isn’t badly faded or peeling.
 
Soldato
Joined
7 Feb 2004
Posts
8,114
Location
North East
I used the barretine wood treatment.

It's more like an oil and soaks in - should be much longer lasting and goes on nicely.

The one coat paint types in a big paint tub are a waste of time imo. More work to put on. Fades and peels. Needs redoing more frequently.

To get rid of your algae or moss, "paint" it with diluted bleach and leave it a few days. Then you can treat the bare wood :)
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
17 Aug 2009
Posts
17,823
Location
Finchley, London
I used the barretine wood treatment.

It's more like an oil and soaks in - should be much longer lasting and goes on nicely.

The one coat paint types in a big paint tub are a waste of time imo. More work to put on. Fades and peels. Needs redoing more frequently.

To get rid of your algae or moss, "paint" it with diluted bleach and leave it a few days. Then you can treat the bare wood :)

Thanks, on my way to buy a big bottle of bleach. I'm going to do 1 part bleach to 2 parts water. I've made a start, got seven brushes from toolstation including one large cheap one for the bleach and one large fence brush for staining. £5 the lot. :p
20200424-153607.jpg


Will bleach, then jetwash the other parts of fence that are generally a bit dirty, leave for a couple of days and start staining. I think if I don't put time into the prep, I'll find the stain might not last as long.
 
Back
Top Bottom