Browse Forums Landscape & Garden Design Re: Synthetic Grass? 24Nov 25, 2009 7:59 am mmm....donuts Homer Simpson 1956- Links: Site Costs Ready Reckoner | H1 Addiction Medical Advice | Château TDL: The Backyard Re: Synthetic Grass? 29Nov 27, 2009 4:53 pm Blog: http://bluemistkids.blogspot.com "Never be afraid to try something new. Remember, amateurs built the ark, and professionals built the Titanic." Re: Synthetic Grass? 34Dec 03, 2009 10:49 pm yep I was just laughing because the OzBreed folks haven't gone to that extent of information with the Zoysia web site Other than that it is a very good summary of what a few others and myself have been saying. How often do you see syn turf used for areas mentioned, more often than not it is for front verges, front lawns, back lawns. Such is peoples reception of the product. I do agree there is a time and a place for it and that shows it right on the money. Thanks for the links Grasshopper. Re: Synthetic Grass? 35Dec 04, 2009 9:27 pm glad you liked them, I think they cover alot of what's been posted lately Re: Synthetic Grass? 36Dec 06, 2009 9:19 am The eco-movement is full of ironies: "I care about the environment, so I'm going to cover my yard in huge sheets of complex plastics." Do the hard jobs first. The easy jobs will take care of themselves. - Dale Carnegie Re: Synthetic Grass? 37Dec 06, 2009 5:51 pm Cabinfever The eco-movement is full of ironies: "I care about the environment, so I'm going to cover my yard in huge sheets of complex plastics." I think I want that as my new signature! My tac-home-ter: Been in 8 months! Re: Synthetic Grass? 39Aug 08, 2012 8:20 am Lots of bowling greens are synthetic turf too - thats not a new thing. I dont have any myself but I think it can have a place in home gardens - in small shaded areas where lawn would not be practical. I wouldnt do a large area myself because of the heat factor - and I like gardening and enjoy my living growing garden - but not everyone is into that, and thats fair enough too. Re: Synthetic Grass? 40Aug 16, 2012 11:29 pm A lot of bowling greens are removing it. They need to wet them to make them more playable. So after installation they have increased water use dramatically. The water used to produce it is huge. Be very aware that what you perceive to be saving in water is superficial. When it comes to your domestic budget, this stuff hides a bite. What you save on your water utility will be well and truly eaten away by the increase on your electricity bill. The increase in electricity costs, on a whole, is going to hurt far more in the long term than the water utility costs. The additional heat this stores through the day means that the area around your home gets hotter. Far hotter. Close to the same as a road surface. That heats the walls of your home and you run your AC for longer and harder to cool the home. Hotter nights are also going to happen as the enormous surface areas they have release that stored heat all night. To reduce this, they really should be well shaded, by shade sails or better still is well chosen trees which do far more than cool a landscape. Then we look at how that latent heat affects your neighbours electricity bill. One neighbour with this is contributing to a hotter environment. Then next door is running their AC more or having a reduced comfort of living. I know if one of my neighbours wanted it, I'd object to it formally. If they installed it, I'd also paying for it by them making my house hotter than it was and me having to offset that. How many people have thought of that before? Gardens need to be a homes passive air conditioner. Cooling the home, reducing utility costs, making a more valuable property and a property that adds value to other homes near it. they will also contribute to cooling our cities. Cooling a city is of great importance to governments, councils and residents. Instead we are making landscapes heat our homes, increasing utility costs and complaining about how big the electricity bill is. Perth is an excellent example of what a hot city does to reducing rainfall. As more and more people make their little patch of land hotter, (bit by bit, house by house) we are making the city hotter. On a hot day, thunderstorms often move in from the North or NE with an active west coast trough. As that rainfall moves over the city, more often than not, the water simply evaporates before hitting the ground. On the BoM radar we can see the outline of the city with rain all around it. Saving water? The hotter we make a city, the less of that vital summer rainfall we are getting and that amounts to a huge amount of water not being saved. Of course many other things contribute to this as well such as landscapes with out trees, dark roofs, unshaded carparks, unshaded roads, dark hard surfaces. Overall there is far too much of that and nowhere near the wonderful, cheap cooling gardens we need to cool homes, reduce utility costs, cool the city, reduce carbon footprints, slow winds, reduce evaporation and increase precipitation. Every landscape counts. DIY, Home Maintenance & Repair Please help me to answer this question , it will help me a lot as i can go to buy confidently with your recommendation: I want to put synthetic turf in our backyard for… 0 10293 Help!! I’m meant to start building soon and have only really just learnt about orientation. Im reading so much that no grass will grow on the heavily shaded south… 0 13722 |