Hello everyone,
I want to keep it simple and ask if anyone has already looked into the topic of turf in enough detail to recommend a good and affordable supplier or online shop! My landscaping contractor is going to shape the garden in the next few days. The landscaper suggests I should consider sowing the lawn in March. However, if I feel like it, I could also lay turf in early September, right?
I want to keep it simple and ask if anyone has already looked into the topic of turf in enough detail to recommend a good and affordable supplier or online shop! My landscaping contractor is going to shape the garden in the next few days. The landscaper suggests I should consider sowing the lawn in March. However, if I feel like it, I could also lay turf in early September, right?
rick2018 schrieb:
@Lumpi_LE You can also use rainwater and don’t have to use potable water...only with a cistern as big as yours...The standard homebuilder’s 5–10 m³ (13,200–26,400 gallons) cistern is enough for toilets and plants, if you’re lucky.
Lumpi_LE schrieb:
Only with a cistern as large as yours...
The standard homebuilders’ 5-10m³ (1300-2600 gallons) cistern is enough for bushes and flowers, if you’re lucky. What speaks against a well with a pump?
opalau schrieb:
What is the downside of having a well with a pump?For us, a well doesn’t make sense because a) the permit or approval can be revoked at any time and the water volume is limited, and b) my neighbor has a well and the total cost was around 6-7k euros. By the time it pays off, I’ll be retired.Zaba12 schrieb:
A well doesn’t make sense for us because a) the permit can be revoked at any time and the water volume is limited, and b) my neighbor has a well and the total cost was around 6,000–7,000 euros. By the time it pays off, I’ll be retired. That’s a pity, those are indeed valid reasons against it. However, my point was more about @Lumpi_LE’s claim that wasting drinking water or installing a 78 m² (840 sq ft) cistern are the only options.
For us, the (admittedly not ideal) driven well cost about 1,000 euros and didn’t require a permit. That pays off quite quickly.
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Octrineddy10 Aug 2020 16:25This can especially be done when others have to watch their plants dry out due to water shortages in the drinking water system.
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