travelled for an hour to brisbane, a big city just outside where i live...
took my camera and snapped some shots of EXTENSIVE lichen growth on these roofs...
my question is?????????? can i really trust the LOVE to kill and remove this LICHEN that has been growing on some of these roofs for over 60 years (majority of these roofs were installed in the 1930's and have not been cleaned since)...
enjoy the pictures and any hints on removing this extroadinary growth would be appreciated...
make sure to observe the way the LICHEN is GLUED to the tile...
DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY EXPERIENCE IN REMOVING SUCH HEAVY LICHEN BUILD UP??? THIS IS NOT MOSS BUT LICHEN
Hey Caleb,..I think Sodium Hypochlorite will kill anything that grows. You may have to mix it strong and do multiple applications. I think adding a bit of Sodium Hydroxide wouldn't hurt.
Are you going to be removing it also,..or just killing it and let time deal with it?
I wanna go to Australia someday!!
Jeff
-- Edited by Raystown Roof Cleaning Central PA 1-800-236-0322 on Monday 28th of September 2009 06:01:03 AM
yeh mate its a lovely country, i love it....worth visiting... i really want to visit america one time with my missus....would be a nice holiday, oh well, the more roofs i clean, the more i can holiday!!
mate im not settled on whether to leave this stuff or to remove it after the love is applied...
i havent really encountered lichen growth as yet so im unsure about what to do...what would you do with such a roof?? would you remove it or let time deal with it??
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Caleb Brown Owner
WASH N WOW Non-Pressure Roof Cleaning "We do the WASH, you do the WOW"
If the customer will spend the money,..and you can do it safely,..I'd remove it after killing it.
Lichen can be tough,...especially on shingles where there is no real choice but to only kill it and allow time to do it's thing. Forcibly removing it from shingles will pull granules off with it.
But, on tile you should be able to kill it and then physically remove by means of a washer.
I don't clean tile, but I'm familiar with lichen,...and you should be able to make these roofs look great.
That's definitely a lot of growth,...but you can handle it. Jeff
Raystown Roof Cleaning Central PA 1-800-236-0322 wrote:
Hey Caleb,..I think Sodium Hypochlorite will kill anything that grows. You may have to mix it strong and do multiple applications. I think adding a bit of Sodium Hydroxide wouldn't hurt.
Are you going to be removing it also,..or just killing it and let time deal with it?
I wanna go to Australia someday!!
Jeff
-- Edited by Raystown Roof Cleaning Central PA 1-800-236-0322 on Monday 28th of September 2009 06:01:03 AM
Exactly what Jeff said. the SH will kill the growth on the Tile Roof and the sodium Hydroxide will assist in breaking the bond to the Tiles. A few good hard rains and those Tile Roofs will be Clean and looking good as new.
Great Pics, Thanks for sharing them. Until today I never have seen Australian Lichen or any Australian roof growth.
Pretty HEARTY stuff you grow there. In Oregon, there are lots of roofs with major moss, fungus, Gloeocapsa Magma Algae and it ALL grows BIG due to the moisture that prevails in the Pacific Northwest.
SH (Sodium Hypochlorite) can shock and release the grasp of most any root system on every roof plant I have ever tried it on, so, I would imagine if you take the advice given here, from our knowledgeable members, Jeff, Larry, and others, and try a 35% Apple Cider or Mike's Hard Apple Hybrid Solution, you will see impressive results and that will kill not only the roof plant you are concerned with doing away with AND it will kill your fears about the effects of using a formulation that has been FIELD TESTED on tens of THOUSANDS of roofs here in the USA.
Caleb, Do make sure you do first go out and apply a small batch in a pump up or back pack sprayer and apply to an inconspicous area.
Once you have proven to yourself, that LOVE is the Answer to all your roof cleaning problems, then, DUDE, apply and spread the LOVE generously and get paid for it.
That looks some nasty stuff to deal with. Even if you shock and kill it it may have attached itself directly to the substrate. It might be like the 'feet' that vines attach to siding, brick etc Not impossible to remove, but very time consuming. Do you get the feeling that the customers want it off? Some of that stuff looks like its been there so long you have to wonder. Test one and see. I've dealt with heavy moss and if you don't remove it, the roof looks worse with dead brown moss than green moss. Waiting for rain to help out is a losing proposition in my humble opinion for this situation.
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