Deep Detail
Materials, methods and variations we handle.
Every surface behaves differently under pressure, water temperature and chemistry. Here's the technical detail behind the work, the reason we don't quote sight-unseen for most jobs.
Deck types we work on
Softwood decking (treated pine, redwood) is the most common in Dorset gardens. It's softer, more porous, and takes on algae fastest, but responds beautifully to a proper clean because there's real grain and colour underneath. Hardwood decking (iroko, balau, ipe) is denser, holds its finish longer, but still needs specialist chemistry when it does eventually green over. Composite decking: Trex, Millboard, Ecodek, Fiberon, is engineered for low maintenance but is not maintenance-free; it still develops algae and black spot in shade.
- Softwood decking (treated pine, redwood)
- Hardwood decking (iroko, balau, ipe)
- Composite decking (Trex, Millboard, Ecodek)
- Capped composite decking
- PVC and modular decking
- Grooved and smooth-profile boards
Softwood vs hardwood vs composite, the honest differences
Softwood is the most rewarding to clean because the visible improvement is dramatic, pressure and biocide correctly balanced can take a green deck back to warm timber tones in a single visit. Hardwood is more forgiving of neglect but needs equal care because the surface finish sits on top of a much denser board. Composite decking has to be treated as a manufactured surface: chemistry-led, minimal pressure, and never scoured. If a supplier tells you their composite 'never needs cleaning', ignore them, every composite deck in a shaded Dorset garden needs occasional biocide work.
Slip resistance and safety
Algae is what makes decking dangerously slippery. It's not the boards themselves. Restoring grip is a matter of removing the film, not adding anti-slip coatings on top. On stepped or elevated decks, public gardens, coastal properties in Poole, hotel terraces, an annual biocide-led clean is the difference between a safe surface and a public-liability risk. On commercial jobs we document the before/after grip status as part of our records.
Prep for oiling or staining
If you're planning to re-oil or re-stain timber decking, cleaning is the essential first step. Oil applied over algae or dirt fails from the underside within a season. We clean, allow full drying (weather-dependent, usually 48–72 hours), then can either return to oil the deck ourselves or hand off to your painter. Getting the sequence right doubles the life of the coating.
Residential vs commercial
Domestic decks are typically a same-day job. Commercial decking, pub gardens, beach cafés, hotel terraces, is scheduled around trading, often early morning or off-season. Full RAMS, insurance certificates and PO invoicing available for commercial customers.