sweendogg
Member
You know I'd till give the Skunk Out a try on this rug, its a general deoderizer for various types of organic waste.
Here is the procedure to give a try ( think you said the rug was relatively colorfast) Spray the rug front and back with the Anti Allergen Deoderizer from Masterblend. Let it dwell for 30 minutes then mix up a bucket of skunk out with about 32 oz to five gallons. Poor half on the back of the rug in a pit, work it over with a soft brush really quick. Then flip and poor the rest on the pile of the rug. Flood the rug with cold water. use a roller, soft brush, or glided wand head(not attached to a vac or solution line) and work the rug back and forth forcing the chemistry continually through the face fibers. Let it sit for an hour and then roll it again. If you see stuff coming out of the rug other than dye, then keep working it every hour until the water becomes over saturated or until stuff stops coming out. Then dump the water and extract it the moisture out. Rinse it until it rinses clear again and extract and dry as quick as possible.
If this doesn't take the smell away, then there is some serious rot in the rug, and it will be next to impossible to remove as the foundation and wool fibers are slowly decomposing.
Here is the procedure to give a try ( think you said the rug was relatively colorfast) Spray the rug front and back with the Anti Allergen Deoderizer from Masterblend. Let it dwell for 30 minutes then mix up a bucket of skunk out with about 32 oz to five gallons. Poor half on the back of the rug in a pit, work it over with a soft brush really quick. Then flip and poor the rest on the pile of the rug. Flood the rug with cold water. use a roller, soft brush, or glided wand head(not attached to a vac or solution line) and work the rug back and forth forcing the chemistry continually through the face fibers. Let it sit for an hour and then roll it again. If you see stuff coming out of the rug other than dye, then keep working it every hour until the water becomes over saturated or until stuff stops coming out. Then dump the water and extract it the moisture out. Rinse it until it rinses clear again and extract and dry as quick as possible.
If this doesn't take the smell away, then there is some serious rot in the rug, and it will be next to impossible to remove as the foundation and wool fibers are slowly decomposing.