Did you ever feel like you missed the memo?
I spend a lot of time in Algonquin Provincial Park
and one thing that I have noticed is that there are a lot, A LOT, of pine trees
there. Where there are pine trees, there
is SAP! A lot of sap and every last bit
of it is sticky, and it doesn’t wash off and it gets all over everything…did I
mention that sap is really sticky!
So anyways, I am in the middle of the park when a
guide friend of mine says, “Oh by the way, isopropyl alcohol gets pine sap
off”. I am left thinking “What? How did
I not know this, did I miss the memo…”.
Now at least half of you are saying to yourself
right now, “Wow, I can’t believe he didn’t know that”. The rest of you are saying, “What? I didn’t
know that”.
To get pine sap off your skin, rub some alcohol or
hand sanitizer on your skin until it loosens and then rinse it away. If it has gotten on your clothes or your
sleeping bag or tent, carefully scrape the sap away (or put it into a freezer,
if it fits and one is available) and then rub alcohol on the remaining spot
with a cotton ball or rag and rinse thoroughly and wash as usual.
So, the hand sanitizer that you keep in your
toiletries bag, with the toilet paper and the benzyl chloride baby wipes,
actually does double duty. It will get
your hands, oh, so germ free and it will remove that really sticky, impossible
to get off by any other means, pine sap.
References:
Eddie Carrara , “How To Remove Tree Sap From
Anything”, https://dengarden.com/cleaning/removepinepitch, (accessed
9/15/2018)
Katie Herrel, “How Do I Get Sap Off My Gear?”, https://www.backpacker.com/gear/how-do-i-get-sap-off-my-gear, (accessed 9/21/2018)
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