I took the teak trim off of my 1985 Overnighter and am stripping off the varnish. The wood is in excellent condition. Should I just apply a couple of coats of teak oil to them or apply polyurethane. I don't mind applying teak oil each year.
I suspect that the OP stopped and took a deep breath after the part about needing to be redone every monthI have done a bunch of teak work over the years. From my Egg Harbor covering boards and back of the house to my friends 56' F&S cockpit and covering boards. I have used polyurethane, Sickens and simple chemicals to maintain them.
You have to remember the harder the finish, the longer it lasts and the harder it is to take off. At this point we are all natural on the F&S. We use the Te-Ka products to clean the teak (turns black), bleach them out and then cost with teak oil. It is a soft non-slip finish that looks great. It needs to be re-done once a month. You can try re-oiling too. But if it doesn't look right strip it and re-do - it will look like new.
We also used sudsy ammonia from supermarket straight out of the bottle to clean the teak and oxalic acid crystals from Home Depot dissolved in some water. Keep cleanser off the fiberglass with hose. It won't damage it but will leave a stain you have to clean off. Cheaper but if you only have a little to maintain use the Te-Ka kit. Use the best teak oil (not sealer).
When you say strip to the bare teak - use the Te-Ka two part or the sudsy ammonia and oxalic acid (in the wood brighteners). When dry two coats of teak oil are fine. You may have to do it again in the spring depending on the weather and sun. It's really not difficult to strip, bleach and re-oil. Best part is the results - it really looks good!Thanks everyone. If I strip to the bare teak and then put 2 to 3 coats of teak oil on each piece will I have to recoat with the teak oil again next year to maintain the natural color?