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Astro turf

fishonjazz

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Anyone know of anyone that has astro turf lawns instead of grass at their home?..... If so, how much does anyone know how expensive it is?

I was just in Wendover and one of the casinos (peppermill I think) has all astro turf around their property (a lot of property) and I though it looked awesome and you couldn't really tell it was astro turf unless you were pretty close.
Plus I think that they used cheaper, older, worse quality astro turf than some of the stuff available (some of the football field astro turf is way better/realistic looking)

It would be nice to not have to water, weed, mow, fertilize ect etc my lawn anymore.
 
It's not cheap, btw. Decent looking stuff will run around $5/sqft.

Ya I figured it would be kinda pricey, but I spend so much time and money on my lawn right now..... and the damn thing still has dead (yellow) spots and crabgrass, trees, dandelions, morning glory, mushrooms etc etc growing in it.
I have a very good sprinkler system and spend lots on fertilizers and it seems that no matter I what I do I cant get it perfect (for most part my lawn looks pretty damn good, better than all my neighbors, but still)

It would be nice to have astro turf and not have to water, mow, fertilize ect..... Seems like the only thing you would have to do is clean it once in a while. (maybe vacuum it, or put some dish soap on the astro turf and spray with a hose. Idk)

Would be pretty funny if people were driving by and I was out vacuuming my lawn..... Neighbors would begin to suspect a serious meth problem lol
 
I have a small backyard and was going to try and get around to puting in a lawn this fall or next spring. I currently don't have a sprinkling system in the back so not having to install that would offset some of that cost for me. Does anybody know if $5/ft is the real cost or is there some special underlayment/crazy amount of prep involved?
 
I have a small backyard and was going to try and get around to puting in a lawn this fall or next spring. I currently don't have a sprinkling system in the back so not having to install that would offset some of that cost for me. Does anybody know if $5/ft is the real cost or is there some special underlayment/crazy amount of prep involved?

Good question
 
I have a small backyard and was going to try and get around to puting in a lawn this fall or next spring. I currently don't have a sprinkling system in the back so not having to install that would offset some of that cost for me. Does anybody know if $5/ft is the real cost or is there some special underlayment/crazy amount of prep involved?

I have put in a couple lawns at different houses. I am by no stretch an expert, but I can tell you what we did. Cost-wise the $5 is likely just the sod. You may need to rent equipment to prep the yard, but there is really nothing crazy you have to do to prep.

We had very rocky soil at both homes, and in one of them we just put sod on a small-ish section in the front yard and, as the soil compact with watering, we ended up with a lumpy lawn. It was weird to walk on and to sit on. So when we did the back yard, which was much larger, we rented a tiller and tilled it to remove the bigger rocks. We dug them out and used them for surrounding the yard in the flower areas and such, looked good. This was when we had the sprinklers installed. Then we borrowed a grading rake from my friend and graded the yard so it sloped away from the house. Even just a very slight slope is preferred. We just eyeballed it really. Then we watered the dirt pretty heavy and let it dry and settle for a couple of weeks, graded it again, then watered and let it settle again. Not sure if this part is necessary for a lawn, but I know you should do this when putting down concrete to minimize cracking, so I figured for a flat smooth lawn it couldn't hurt. I got some nice topsoil from a neighbor who had extra after putting in some flower beds and a garden area and we spread that over the dirt in an even, but thin, layer. Again, don't know if that is necessary but it seemed to help the lawn take and grow better than the front yard that had none.

The next day the sod came and we laid it down in a cross-hatch/parquet pattern that minimizes lines and grooves in the lawn. Then we watered it solidly every other day (long watering less frequently is generally better than short watering a lot, at least that is what our lawn guy told us). After about 3-4 weeks, to let the lawn get set, we hit it with fertilizer/weed killer. The finished lawn was flat and smooth as a golf green. We have put in 2 other lawns since then, and I helped a neighbor, using this same method and it worked great.

I am sure you don't have to go to the trouble of tilling and getting a grading rake. You could probably remove large stones with a shovel and rake it relatively smooth with a regular rake and I am sure it would be fine.

Not sure if that is what you were looking for, but there you go.
 
I have put in a couple lawns at different houses. I am by no stretch an expert, but I can tell you what we did. Cost-wise the $5 is likely just the sod. You may need to rent equipment to prep the yard, but there is really nothing crazy you have to do to prep.

We had very rocky soil at both homes, and in one of them we just put sod on a small-ish section in the front yard and, as the soil compact with watering, we ended up with a lumpy lawn. It was weird to walk on and to sit on. So when we did the back yard, which was much larger, we rented a tiller and tilled it to remove the bigger rocks. We dug them out and used them for surrounding the yard in the flower areas and such, looked good. This was when we had the sprinklers installed. Then we borrowed a grading rake from my friend and graded the yard so it sloped away from the house. Even just a very slight slope is preferred. We just eyeballed it really. Then we watered the dirt pretty heavy and let it dry and settle for a couple of weeks, graded it again, then watered and let it settle again. Not sure if this part is necessary for a lawn, but I know you should do this when putting down concrete to minimize cracking, so I figured for a flat smooth lawn it couldn't hurt. I got some nice topsoil from a neighbor who had extra after putting in some flower beds and a garden area and we spread that over the dirt in an even, but thin, layer. Again, don't know if that is necessary but it seemed to help the lawn take and grow better than the front yard that had none.

The next day the sod came and we laid it down in a cross-hatch/parquet pattern that minimizes lines and grooves in the lawn. Then we watered it solidly every other day (long watering less frequently is generally better than short watering a lot, at least that is what our lawn guy told us). After about 3-4 weeks, to let the lawn get set, we hit it with fertilizer/weed killer. The finished lawn was flat and smooth as a golf green. We have put in 2 other lawns since then, and I helped a neighbor, using this same method and it worked great.

I am sure you don't have to go to the trouble of tilling and getting a grading rake. You could probably remove large stones with a shovel and rake it relatively smooth with a regular rake and I am sure it would be fine.

Not sure if that is what you were looking for, but there you go.

Pkm said that ASTRO TURF is like 5 dollars per square foot.
Then heyhey was wondering if astro turf is really that price or if there is a lot of prep for astro turf.

So do you know what kinda prep work is needed for astro turf?
 
Ya I figured it would be kinda pricey, but I spend so much time and money on my lawn right now..... and the damn thing still has dead (yellow) spots and crabgrass, trees, dandelions, morning glory, mushrooms etc etc growing in it.
I have a very good sprinkler system and spend lots on fertilizers and it seems that no matter I what I do I cant get it perfect (for most part my lawn looks pretty damn good, better than all my neighbors, but still)

It would be nice to have astro turf and not have to water, mow, fertilize ect..... Seems like the only thing you would have to do is clean it once in a while. (maybe vacuum it, or put some dish soap on the astro turf and spray with a hose. Idk)

Would be pretty funny if people were driving by and I was out vacuuming my lawn..... Neighbors would begin to suspect a serious meth problem lol

Nothing to do for crab/sheep/offspring grass other than shovels, but get the 2-4-d hose sprayers from Lowes or Home Department and get concentrate from IFA to bump it up a notch. Kick it on early and keep it going for 3-4 weeks. Five-10 minutes per week for weed control isn't bad.

Only real downside as I see it is with kids... it hurts.

Why are they putting ten gazillion dollar astro in all the high school fields then? Don't get me sharted...

I have a small backyard and was going to try and get around to puting in a lawn this fall or next spring. I currently don't have a sprinkling system in the back so not having to install that would offset some of that cost for me. Does anybody know if $5/ft is the real cost or is there some special underlayment/crazy amount of prep involved?

Sand and rubber chips. Crazy like LSD.
 
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