Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would kindly suggest to him that he should speak to his lawn service, because they apparently aren't doing the job properly if they aren't preventing/killing off the weeds in his yard. What is he paying all that money for?
As long as your yard is mowed, it seems very reasonable to me. I'd probably change flower beds to require little/no weeding in the future.
Any suggestions on how to make it look decent with little/no weeding? Sounds perfect!
Landscape fabric.
Anonymous wrote:From an old article:
Nancy and Walter Stewart of Potomac, Maryland, discovered this truth in 1986. That was the spring their tractor mower broke down one time too many, and they decided to let most of their seven-acre yard grow. Soon shaggy meadow grasses and wildflowers overtook the lawn. The Stewarts loved the natural look and the low maintenance—twice-a-year mowing and no watering or pesticides. But in their posh Washington, D.C., suburb the meadow garden stuck out like a jalopy up on blocks. The neighbors were furious. One sent an anonymous note calling the yard “a disgrace to the entire neighborhood.” Someone started a fire in it. The county cited the couple under its weed ordinance. After the Stewarts threatened a legal challenge- Nancy is a U.S. Justice Department attorney—the county finally amended its weed law to permit meadow gardens with a mowed strip surrounding them.
OP, grow a meadow lawn. I want to, but my wife will not let me.
Anonymous wrote:The truth is - if your yard is full of weeds it will just get worse and will spread around the whole neighborhood. We use NO toxins on our lawn. We dig out dandelions after the rain - it takes 10 minutes. We dig out weeds - another ten minutes. We fertilize naturally. We also have a mulching mower which puts the nutrients back in the soil. We edge our gardens - takes about 20 minutes. If the wind blows down sticks from the tree - we pick them up - about 5 minutes. Our lawn is perfect because we like it that way and we want the neighborhood to look good. In fact, a well kept neighborhood (and yes, that includes your lawn, increases the value of your home. Your home is probably your largest asset. People who let the lawn go to weeds are lazy and rude and the rest of us have to tolerate it. Ugh. Ten chances to one the exercise will do you good. Go outside and take care of your yard for crying' out loud
Anonymous wrote:The truth is - if your yard is full of weeds it will just get worse and will spread around the whole neighborhood. We use NO toxins on our lawn. We dig out dandelions after the rain - it takes 10 minutes. We dig out weeds - another ten minutes. We fertilize naturally. We also have a mulching mower which puts the nutrients back in the soil. We edge our gardens - takes about 20 minutes. If the wind blows down sticks from the tree - we pick them up - about 5 minutes. Our lawn is perfect because we like it that way and we want the neighborhood to look good. In fact, a well kept neighborhood (and yes, that includes your lawn, increases the value of your home. Your home is probably your largest asset. People who let the lawn go to weeds are lazy and rude and the rest of us have to tolerate it. Ugh. Ten chances to one the exercise will do you good. Go outside and take care of your yard for crying' out loud
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FBO wrote:Your lawn, your rules. Tell him to get lost and mind his own business.
HOA? Check the rules because you may be held to that standard.
OP here. No, definitely no HOA. Part of the reason we bought in this neighborhood!
I'd love to tell him to mind his own business, but we live next door, so I'm trying to do the 'right'/civil thing.
OP, just keep it clean and that's it. As long as it is not out of control, you're fine. Just tell your neighbor - we will address it at some point, our prioritries are just different now - but you DONT have to explain yourself.
Anonymous wrote:FBO wrote:Your lawn, your rules. Tell him to get lost and mind his own business.
HOA? Check the rules because you may be held to that standard.
OP here. No, definitely no HOA. Part of the reason we bought in this neighborhood!
I'd love to tell him to mind his own business, but we live next door, so I'm trying to do the 'right'/civil thing.