I have a GSO dob and I hear ya. I flocked mine, but....
You don't really need to flock your entire tube. 95% or more of the benefit of flocking comes from blocking stray light from what you see from the focuser drawtube, looking thru the with the turned down focuser and stretching to see where any stray light can enter the bottom of the drawtube.
Two articles from S&T - one by Gary Seronik in S&T April 2001 in particular - illustrate this really well. PM me if you don't have access to this article, I can get the key information to you.
After some trials with various lines of flat back paint (altho not the Krylon mentioned here) I would say that flocking material is measurable superior to any paint I used. That's just my experience,
If you do apply flocking, apply it in slightly overlapping strips running down the tube's long axis, no more than 5 cm wide, and use high-tack (very sticky) adhesive type if such is available. (Protostar sells some great hi-tack variety that I used
http://www.fpi-protostar.com/flock.htm) Otherwise, if you apply in one large sheet, when you are out and your metal tube contracts a bit, it'll peel off in giant spots and leave you with a mess!
I used scraps left over from a prior flock of an 18" dob for my GSO, pic below, and you can really tell the difference looking in the focuser afterwards. It's pitch black around the secondary now, whereas before you could see the "bright" (brighter) grey flat paint reflecting stray light off the tube into the focuser. You don't need to be "clean". Any untidy looking effects of patching on strips (as I did, having no large pieced left!) makes NO difference in performance.
Regards,