Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Some turf became embedded in the skin of my kid’s foot. Hard to get it out.
Is your kid a goalie? It’s the worst for them since they dive into the turf.
He sometimes plays goalie. He slide tackles a lot.![]()
-OP
Is he a barefoot goalie? I thought they had to wear shoes on their feet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Some turf became embedded in the skin of my kid’s foot. Hard to get it out.
Is your kid a goalie? It’s the worst for them since they dive into the turf.
He sometimes plays goalie. He slide tackles a lot.![]()
-OP
Anonymous wrote:The pros of turf far, far outweigh any cons. Real or imagined.
I'm especially amused by the Staph infection theory.
Anonymous wrote:Ya'll need to get involved when the school boards makes their decisions to replace the fields. Tell the school boards you want to go back to natural grass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid always comes home with cleats full of those bits. Are they made from used tires? I am sure they off gas with all the impact, never mind the hot days. Our turf at home doesn't use that stuff but maybe it's necessary for extreme use areas.
They are recycled tires and they are full of heavy metals. There is one non-toxic field that I know of in the area, Nike Park. You can tell by looking at the pellets, the black ones are tires and toxic, the non-toxic ones are bluish green.
were is that located?
Anonymous wrote:Living causes cancer. Choose your risks, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid always comes home with cleats full of those bits. Are they made from used tires? I am sure they off gas with all the impact, never mind the hot days. Our turf at home doesn't use that stuff but maybe it's necessary for extreme use areas.
They are recycled tires and they are full of heavy metals. There is one non-toxic field that I know of in the area, Nike Park. You can tell by looking at the pellets, the black ones are tires and toxic, the non-toxic ones are bluish green.
Anonymous wrote:My kid always comes home with cleats full of those bits. Are they made from used tires? I am sure they off gas with all the impact, never mind the hot days. Our turf at home doesn't use that stuff but maybe it's necessary for extreme use areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my kid wants to play travel soccer but I am scared about the toxic chemicals he will be exposed to from the turf fields 3-4 times/per week at practice. anyone else have these concerns?
Good grief. Get a real problem.
Anonymous wrote:Lol. No