Pine Tar can be made easily by using glove oil and mixing it together with a little water. Then, you put it in a spray jar (crucial step) and spray it onto the desired bat/area.
If you want to make if from scratch, you are going to end up using more money then it would cost to just by pine tar, or make it from glove oil. Anyway, if you want to make your own from scratch, here are the steps (I made pine tar myself a couple years back)
This makes about two cups of pine tar.
1.) Get a pot
2.) Add 1/2 cup of food or olive oil grease (Olive oil won't be as sticky)
3.) Add 1/4 cup of water
4.) Sprinkle a little dirt. Barely any (This will add texture)
5.) Stir all of these together until chunks go away and it is smooth.
6.) Adjust oven to 450 degrees.
7.) Put the ingredients in the oven for 10 minutes.
8.) Take ingredients out and add 1/4 more grease for extra stickiness.
9.) Adjust oven to 400 degrees
10.) Put in oven for 10 more minutes
Just like that, you have yourself two cups of legal pine tar.
Sources:
Experience - I made my own.
pine tar come from a pine tree
Pine Tar Incident happened in 1983.
if a bat has more than 18 inches of pine tar from the knob its illegal search " the pine tar game"
The best type of pine tar for medicinal or therapeutic use is typically considered to be 100% pure pine tar, free from additives or fillers. Look for products that are from reputable sources and have a high concentration of pine tar for optimal effectiveness.
The best way is to spray it on with a spray jar. Put the pine star substance in a spraying container and spray it on, the more you spray, the thicker it will be. You can also get a, what people like to call, a Pine Rag, which is a rag that is covered in pine tar, then wiped on the bat. Remember! The more pine tar you add, the thicker it will be!
Pine tar is a sticky substance. Pro baseball players frequently apply pine tar to the handle of their bats because the bats are made entirely of wood, which is very slippery. Pine tar makes it possible to get a better grip on the bat. Whether applying pine tar to the barrel of a bat gives the hitter an advantage is debatable. However, some people think that applying pine tar to the barrel of a bat changes its interaction with the ball in flight. A stickier bat is more likely to make solid contact, and thus result in more hits.
North Carolina is a major producer of tobacco and pine tar.
Pine tar is very sticky and allows the batter to get a better grip of the bat when they use it on their batting gloves.
Pine tar itself, sometimes called pitch. It was used to seal the gaps between planks to make them water-tight, and to protect rope from weather damage.
Yes it is very harmful. My brother has a degree in biology and is very familiar on this subject.This is added later from another user. To better answer your question:Pine tar it self is not harmfull in any way to your skin, and the pine tar it self is one of the most effective ways to treat prosthesis. However as you said, pine tar is Harmful. Well Yes and No. The pine tar is self is not harmful, but it is the Creosote that is harmfull not the pine tar it self. Creosote is a know skin irritant / carcinogen.It depends on how the pine tar is made. if the pine tar is made and the smoke from the fire in the kiln can not mix with the pine tar, then the pine tar has no know skin irritation documented anywere. seeing as 95% of all soap companies use PINE TAR OIL FILLD WITH CREOSOTE, it is hard to get away from this fact. but there are some companies that use Creosote Free pine tar in their soaps and other products, unfortunalty the most popular brand of pine tar soap is grandpa's brand, which uses this pine tar OIL with Creosote in it. My sister tried their pine tar soap and she broke out with a rash that she had to go to the doctor for.Now here is a company that makes a Creosote free Pine tar soap. we have tried it and it is wonderful. their web-site is www.khtradingpost.com .thanks hope this helpsTo Clarify: Are we talking about psoriasis the skin condition or someone with a prosthesis (artificial limb) who has skin tenderness issuesUM, sorry but your both wrong. Unless the U.S makes soaps different from the UK.Creosote soap was A.K.A Coal Tar soap, not Pine tar.Most pine tar soaps are now 100% natural vegetable oils and perfectly safe for use, infact reccommended for people with skin problems.You can find examples on eBay. Christina may I believe.Companies no longer mix wood preservatives and oils together in the making of soap, times have changed people.Unless the U.S. still do, but in Europe Coal Tar soap and the derivatives are banned. Pine tar soap 100% natural vegetable oil .. fine for use.Thank you and goodnight.p.s. I have an honours and masters degree in Biology. JFYI
It can be, depending upon the formulation of the pine tar, the concentration, and the amount consumed by the horse. Concentrated pine tar is pretty bitter, so most horses won't eat it unless forced to. Pine sap, on the other hand, is fairly safe for horses.
Do NOT eat pine tar!However, there are many reasonable and old-time uses for it.Pine tar is a sticky material produced by the high temperature carbonization of pine wood in anoxic conditions (dry distillation or destructive distillation). The wood is rapidly decomposed by applying heat and pressure in a closed container; the primary resulting products are charcoal and pine tar.Pine tar consists primarily of aromatic hydrocarbons, tar acids and tar bases. Components of tar vary according to the pyrolytic process (e.g. method, duration, temperature) and origin of the wood (e.g. age of pine trees, type of soil and moisture conditions during tree growth). The choice of wood, design of kiln, burning and collection of the tar can vary. Only pine stumps and roots are used in the traditional production of pine tar.Pine tar has a long history as a wood preservative, as a wood sealant for maritime use, in roofing construction and maintenance, in soaps such as Packer's Pine Tar Soap and in the treatment of carbuncles and skin diseases, such as psoriasis, eczema, and rosacea.But don't eat it, please. It will make you very, very sick. I know it smells good, but put the pine tar jar away now.......