What do you clean the cockpit floor with?

FullCircle

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HAving just returned from our wonderful 2 week hols, the cockpit floor was a tea/coffee/wine/unidentified spillage area, and of course foreign dirt from the marinas, pontoons etc.
We have a Jeanneau with the diamond non slip pattern in the GRp, but it is a sod to clean, and always looks grubby.

Anyone got any ideas for a simple scheme to keep this looking reasonable, or should I just sprinkle grass seed on it and wait a month for a luxuriant lawn?
 
Having obtained a flagon of HLB's wonderful elixir and conducted tests on one set of garden furniture,one bike and a boat which had been occupied by licentious soldiery(and me)for 4 days,I can heartily recommend it.It does seem to reach the parts that other cleaners don't!

Don't use Cif unless you're selling the boat and want a quick fix,it's abrasive and continued use will create a dirt trap.

PM,HLB for details of purchase.
 
Don,t know never spilt any wine .

But "Other Stains" Now don,t Larf ,Used tea bag bit of vinnegar.


No kidding, and if it dos,nt work .

Tea bag, vineger, vodca (large), tabasco sause, dribble ,grated nutmeg, dash more vodca, evict the tea bag, ice cube, bit more vodka, maybe a slice of lemon lob some more ice in , watch the stain and the Whole World and it,s Stain dissaprear!hic! /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
 
Cif Oxygel cleaned our Jeanneau non-slip when nothing else would after neighbours in the yard had their antifoul blasted in a gale and gave us all some as a souvenir. Macro sell it in big bottles, the thicker version is better than the spray, both are cheap. Wet the surface, brush the CIF on, leave about 5 minutes and hose/scrub off.
 
Well that could spoil one of the three most useless things to have on a boat, a standard lamp, a naval officer and a lawn mower /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
A fine, if somewhat expensive way to relieve the visual orridness.
Do you have a couple of cubic metres left over from your own marquetry exercise Ken?
 
We had one of those grating thingies to hide the debris on our W33, looked good too! Now we do have a teak laid cockpit and seats but no more which pleases me as I hear tell teak decks can lead to madness and an end to happy relations with the bank manager.
 
"Do you have a couple of cubic metres left over from your own marquetry exercise Ken?"

Do you really think a boatyard would hand over spare teak, even if I had paid for it?

"I hear tell teak decks can lead to madness and an end to happy relations with the bank manager."

Now, I wonder where you heard that?
 
Cillit Bang (honest, real name) works very well. Would not be without it now.

On the other hand:

Definition -

Clean (nautical): an imaginary unstable transient state of infinitely short duration between dirt and dirt.
 
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