Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Mr Louisa and I are considering AstroTurf in our failing garden. Despite years of hard work to defeat weeds, we have finally decided that battle has been lost and it would be far easier and more convenient for us to replace the flower beds and grass verges with a nice easy to maintain plastic lawn. Now, are there any landscaping people out there who can offer any advice on this? How much does it cost? Is it expensive to install? How long does it last? Does it need maintenance?


Ideally we would like a AstroTurf option which would be of a good quality and easily confused with the real thing. I don't want obvious plastic grass in my garden. Something easy on foot too.


Happy bank holiday everyone.


Louisa.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/104664-astroturf-advice-please/
Share on other sites

Thanks Peckhamrye, I have had a good read. Both those options sound worth investigating.


Sue we have struggled to maintain the garden for some years now and Mr Louisa's health isn't 100%, it is just no longer practical for us to regularly look after a failing lawn as well as maintain flower beds. All the surrounding gardens are in full bloom so I'm pretty sure the wildlife will not suffer.


Louisa.

Mick Mac, if only StraferJack were still walking the halls of the EDF asylum, he would give you the full back story about Mr Louisa. We had many a long PM about the subject. He isn't a figment of my imagination either (though I'm sure *Bob* would love it if he were).


Louisa.

Foxy I certainly have! In fact, I was once spotted leaving one nameless pub with him on here about three years ago and a certain beady eyed regular passed comment that it could well have been Louisa (they were right, but I didn't acknowledge the post at the time ;-) ).


Louisa.

  • 3 months later...

Hi selondon,


We put the AstroTurf on hold after doing some research. Am still up for the idea but a word of caution. There are very many different grades and qualities of AstroTurf and if you wish to have the authentic look, it won't come cheap. Even the best quote we had for out relatively small outside space that needed covering, came to in excess of 900 quid. All the usual garden centres and places like B&Q, Homebase will provide a fitting service but it does come to a fair bit more than if you did the work yourself. You could easily save yourself 300/400 quid. But then the complication comes with the sand and soak away underneath.


As a recommendation (and I will be doing this at a later date), the Polhill Garden Centre at Badgers Mount near orpington offer a great service and are very friendly, chatty and full of information to get the best out of any quote you wish to go for. I'll probably head there once we do go for it.


Louisa.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Sorry. Link wasn't working on my phone, but it is now, and I couldn't delete the post.
    • I think there's a fair number of "participating" sub offices that do passports or, at least, play the "check and send" game (£16 for glancing at your form), so some degree of cherry-picking seems to be permitted. Though it does look as if Post Offices "Indentity Services" are where it things the future lies, and "Right to Rent" (though it's more an eligibility check) looks a bit of an earner, along with DBS checks and the Age Verification services that, if the government gets its way, we'll all need to subscribe to before we're allowed on mumsnet. Those services, incidentally, seem mostly outsourced to an outfit called "Yoti", a privately-owned, loss-making "identity platform" with debts of £150m, a tardy approach to filings, and a finger in a bunch of questionable pies ("Passive Facial Liveness Recognition" sounds gloriously sinister) so what the Post Office gets out of the arrangement isn't clear, but I'm sure they think it worthwhile. That said, they once thought the same of funeral plans which, for some peculiar reason, failed to set fire to the shuffling queues, even metaphorically. For most, it seems, Post Office work is mostly a dead loss, and even the parcel-juggling is more nuisance than blessing. As a nonchalant retailer of other people's services the organisation can only survive now on the back of subsidies, and we're not even sure what they are. The taxpayer-funded subsidies from government (a £136m hand-out to keep Horizon going, £1bn for its compensation scheme, around £50m for the network, and perhaps a loan or two) are clearish, but the cross-subsidies provided by other retail activities in branches are murkier. As are the "phantom shortfalls" created by the Horizon system, which secretly lined Post Office's coffers as postmasters balanced the books with contributions from their own pockets. Those never showed up in the accounts though - because Horizon *was* the accounting system - so we can't tell how much of a subsidy that was. We might get an idea of the scale, however, from Post Office's belated Horizon Shortfall Scheme, which is handing £75k to every branch that's complained, though it's anyone's guess if that's fair or not. Still, that's all supposed to be behind us now, and Post Office's CEO-of-the-week recently promised an "extra" £250m a year for the branches (roughly enough to cover a minimum wage worker in each), which might make it worth the candle for some. Though he didn't expect that would happen before 2030 (we can only wonder when his pension will mature) and then it'd be "subject to government funding", so it might have to be a very short candle as it doesn't look like a promise that he can make. Still, I wouldn't want to discourage anyone from applying for a franchise, and it's possible that, this time, Post Office will be telling the truth. And, you never know, we might all be back in the Post Office soon, and eagerly buying stamps, if only for existence permits, rather than for our letters.
    • The situation outside Oru is far worse with their large tables immediately adjacent to badly parked bikes using the bike racks there. And the lamppost also blocking the pavement.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...