You seem unusually triggered by other people’s yards not meeting with your approval. Seems like the sort of thing you might want to speak to a therapist about. |
Thank goodness you are a troll. I was concerned a person sincerely thought this. Enjoy eating your plastic turf. |
No lawns are barren wasteland. There is no benefit to any with a lawn. |
| astroturf can just as easily become a weed haven. eventually organic material from falling leaves, etc comes in and settles. weeds fly in from above. |
Ugh. I cannot believe this is a thing. AstroTurf belongs on the porch, like God intended.
Seriously though, impermeable surfaces aren’t that great for the local aquifer. Are these plastic lawns permeable? |
Hell yeah! DCAF!!!! |
Rocks are typically made of various complex inorganic silica-oxide compounds combined with a host of other elemental substances ranging from carbon, calcium, zirconium, and gasses like oxygen, nitrogen and chlorine, and various metallic elements like iron, nickel, aluminum and other metals, along with various geologically accumulated or processed biological materials (coal, limestone, coral rock). So yes, rocks are indeed made of chemicals. Largely the same chemicals that artificial turf is made of, in fact. It’s too bad whatever liberal arts school you attended didn’t expose you to middle school level chemistry. |
Then where, pray tell, is your turf mined? |
The silica sand underlayment of the turf fabric comes from naturally occurring deposits of sand that were deposited through sedimentary or wind processes. Gravel pits mine sand and gravel from deposits like this. The fabric and turf itself is made from a combination of petroleum and soy based chemicals. The petroleum is extracted by wells from oil deposits that were created by prehistoric microfauna and phytoplankton accumulating in shallow inland seas. The soy based chemical components come from the processing of soybean oil into other finished products. But the common thread in all of materials natural and manufactured alike, are the elements carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, silicon, calcium, and other common elements, combining to form the chemical compounds that rocks, grass and turf, are all made of. |