Once the ice has melted, rust begins to develop in each loop where the metal comes into contact with another piece of metal. A parent may one day pull down on the swing in the spring and not feel it move. The chain has wrapped around tightly. If a child is sitting on a frozen or rusted chain, he/she can rotate sideways rather than swinging forward. 

Little boy having fun on a swing on the playground in public park on summer day.

Unnoticed play structures with loose deck boards 

The child walks from the ladder to the slide on the wooden play structures’ deck boards. The wood shrinks due to cold, dry weather over winter, is swollen by wet snow, and shrinks again. Again and again, the weights (screws or nails) that hold the board down will loosen a little more. 

A board will raise up to ½ inch at springtime when a child steps on one edge. The parents will run their hand along the railing without stepping on each board. A loose deck board is like a seesaw! As the running child arrives at the opposite end, the other end pops up into the railing.

Moss and mud cover courts.

A backyard basketball court collects snow throughout the winter. This snow is not just clean water when it starts dripping off in March and April. It can spread dirt, chunks of leaves, and mold spores on the playing area. 

The damp concrete or asphalt is always shaded by trees and house shadows and never dries out. Moss begins to grow in the low corners where puddles have been for 2 weeks. Before a family opens their backyard recreation area for the season, pressure washing services for concrete cleaning in Riverview offer a fast way to turn slippery, stained concrete back into a safe running surface.

Fallen Branches, Litter Hide Shelters

Some family picnic shelters located close to a playground may have a roof and no walls. During the winter, wind funnels broken branches, fast food bags, drink caps, and broken glass into the shelter. It snows and snows for months. 

Once it thaws, litter accumulates in places between the slats of picnic tables and beneath bench seats. A family takes their lunch out in the spring and discovers the tabletop is clean, but they’re lacking a rusted bottle cap in the crack. A toddler is running on the shelter steps and presses that cap. 

Ice splits cracked plastic slides

Although plastic slides appear waterproof, there are minute seams between the two halves of the mold. It’s before winter that rain infiltrates those seams. As the temperature falls, the water freezes and expands. The seam is forced open with the help of ice. The split may be just as thin as a fingernail initially. 

However, a child slides down and gets caught up in his clothes or skin on that crack. The development of cracks is due to multiple freezing and thawing cycles, and by the spring, the cracks are wider. 

Conclusion

Algae, mud, moss, and road salt, which have hardened to concrete during the winter months, will not clean up easily with a garden hose after the winter. Scrubbing brushes will remove the top layer but will leave the pores filled with slime. That’s where concrete cleaning pressure washing Riverview comes in handy.