I can understand people choosing it so they don't have to bother cutting the grass...but in summers like this I think it looks odd...maybe they should develop one that changes colour so that it matches their neighbours or the weather conditions
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Merkins? Never heard of them before - had to google. Wonder when they'll crop up on Countdown? Can't wait to see Susie trying to explain.......................
Can't stand them.
Terrible for the environment, look shit and serve no real purpose other than saving lazy people a few minutes work every few days.
Can't stand them.
Terrible for the environment, look shit and serve no real purpose other than saving lazy people a few minutes work every few days.
Takes a good hour to mow ours, using a petrol powered lawn mower. The lawn takes A pile of fertiliser, weed killer and moss killer every year, and then that takes hours of raking out (scarifying) for which I’m thinking of buying an electric machine to do.
Would that still be terrible for the environment if I put one in with a 20 year lifespan? It would certainly save us loads of time, and fuel, and chemicals.
Traditionally, peoples' front gardens usually consist of a square of grass with a one metre wide mixed border of a mish-mash of plants all around the perimeter. Very few people use their front lawn for anything. It's only there because it is. Mown lawns offer very little if anything at all in the way of helping nature and artificial grass offers nothing at all.
I've always suggested that front lawns are put over to permanent planting with ground cover plants. There are plenty of lists of such plants on-line. With good soil preparation and bit of maintenance for the first year, you'll have a very nice looking garden. No lawn mowing. Lovely looking garden, and with good plant selection, lots of goodies for bees, butterflies and other pollinating insects.
The cost to do this would be comparable with artificial grass.
I've always suggested that front lawns are put over to permanent planting with ground cover plants. No lawn mowing.
Merkins? Never heard of them before - had to google. Wonder when they'll crop up on Countdown? Can't wait to see Susie trying to explain.......................
my lawn is a whole 5m x 4m. having tendered it for 9 years & relaid it twice, each year it turned into a bare dust bowl worn by kids playing & in winter a mud pit. put astro in at the start of the year - i love it. dries quick, no mud, soft all year round for playi ng on- what's not to like
even my mrs who hates the stuff has come round to it as it's so practical
I've installed it not because it's maintenance free (it is) but because grass just wouldn't grow
if i had a large lawn i wouldn't use it - as it looks unnaturally naff, but in a small space it works a treat
If you have a dog beware. My friend had one laid and it smells to high heaven. You have to continually spray it to stop the smell with a special solution and the drainage holes get blocked so that doesnt help.Takes a good hour to mow ours, using a petrol powered lawn mower. The lawn takes A pile of fertiliser, weed killer and moss killer every year, and then that takes hours of raking out (scarifying) for which I’m thinking of buying an electric machine to do.
Would that still be terrible for the environment if I put one in with a 20 year lifespan? It would certainly save us loads of time, and fuel, and chemicals.
I have one and love it. Always looks good, soft to sit on , flat, no ants and I like the way the odd weed comes through. Very realistic cost £1500 4 years ago. Paying for itself daily. I have well stocked beds for wildlife. Can't recommend highly enough
But extra weeding, hoeing, deadheading, pruning, watering....
something for serious gardeners who have the available time I would suggest