bitethebullet
Registered User
- Messages
- 113
Patio slabs could be an option? I just had a quick look on Adverts.ie and there are patio slabs available for free or very little money. Sometimes people buy more than they need for a project.Some great post and suggestions here so thanks. To answer some of the questions:
- I'm planning to do the work myself over the summer, hopefully with a bit of help from here and youtube I'll get it to a stage I'm happy with.
- The house is east facing so the garden would be west facing. The sun rises at the front, at midday it's just starting to come around to the back garden (to the left as you stand at the back door) and in the evening it sets at the end of the garden (about 2 o'clock on a clock face) as you look out the back. I start to lose sun around 5 pm due to the tall trees down the end, and this area is always in shade so nothing much grows there.
- Re budget I don't want to spend too much, maybe around the 1,000 mark max.
- Re auto-mowers can anyone recommend a decently priced one? @Jazz01 I'm not seeing that one for 200 euro on the Lidl website.
Agreed that the decking is the first thing that needs to be sorted but not sure what to replace it with. Patio slabs would be nice but I'm guessing would cost thousands which I can't afford. As far as I can tell the foundation / frame underneath is still sound. A cheap option would be to replace the rotten boards with pvc ones (as I say I don't really care how it looks), but does anyone know if they'd slot into place and could be screwed in if I got ones with the same dimensions (2430mm length x 140mm width x 30mm depth)? Can pvc boards be cut to size easily?
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.I'm so glad we went with the patio slabs though.
No issues at all.How are they in the frost? We have porcelain tiling and absolutely love it but it can be lethal in the frost. Otherwise essentially care free.
In my case it was around 2 hours each time, up to three times a week during periods of fast growth if I was mulching. The lawn is healthier now after a year of the robot.Mowing the lawn is good outdoor exercise, I don't get the fad of Robot mowers. How much time does one actually spend mowing a lawn? This coming from someone who just bought a Roomba and doesn't often hoover, so very much coming from a position of hypocrisy.
Other cheaper options are to drill holes in the stump and either (1) fill them with salt & cover them and wait a few months or (2) fill them with petrol and burn them (have a bucket of water nearby just in case). After both options it would be easy to then break up the stumps.I didn’t realise we could rent a tree-stump grinder. The rental is expensive
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