SailorBill
Well-Known Member
Possibly, but why would the Star Brite product get good reviews?
More healthy barnacles writing reviews.
Possibly, but why would the Star Brite product get good reviews?
Sarabande's comments are absolutely true, this stuff will enter the food chain via sealife and end up in people with serious consequences. I really hope that this crazy plan to concoct anti-fouls is just a silly idea and will not materialize. Covering your hull with illegal and potentially dangerous materials is reckless to humans and all life.Coppercoat has been widely tested and is generally reckoned to be the safest of any anti-foul. If you can't afford to do the job properly then you will have to scrub your boat more often.
It is illegal to mix and apply any pesticides/biocides without the relevant licences, it is to protect users and the environment.
I think these suggestions to add broad-spectrum antibiotics are those of short-sighted and selfish people, who cannot relate to the environment in which they sail or motor.
It is utterly wrong - as well as illegal.
If it illegal in the UK, then you must assume that there are sufficient and proper reasons for the ban. Does living abroad change the laws of biology ?
Yes I would boycott Starbrite products in the same way I boycott many other products that have the potential to serious environmental damage. The reason I have farmed organically for 40 years is to protect the environment and bio-diversity. You must be planning to mix your cocktails out of EU then as the pesticides laws are EU wide?
It's a really interesting discussion.
I'm talking about making a simple copper/epoxy mix, which will expose critters to chemicals on contact, rather than a specifically leaching product.
Surely a product which actively injects these chemicals into the water is always to be just as bad - although I'm not sure precisely what chemicals are in leaching antifouls, and how they stack up to the additives I've found.
Perhaps what's more alarm is that these chemicals are supposed to be added to any antifoul you like, including leaching types, for a double dose!
I’m sold. If I could afford it, I’d buy some Coppercoat today. I’d find the best professional painter(s) money could buy and set them to work.
But this is not a real world option for me.
It's a broad-spectrum antibiotic - originally produced by Pfizer in the 1950's.
It's a bacteriostat and is one of the many added to animal feed to make animals grow faster and people grow obese.
Rather like letting a toddler loose with a detonating cap.
My advice would be to buy real Coppercoat and DIY it. I applied it to my kit boat, and it was very easy indeed - 4 rolled-on coats in a day. A friend tried a lookalike and ended up with dollops of slumped copper and areas of naked epoxy.