The MGS Forum
Gardening in mediterranean climates => General Cultivation => Topic started by: John J on August 24, 2015, 07:24:53 AM
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The following photo was taken outside one of the houses in a complex being built by contractors for sale as, mainly, holiday homes. Any comments?
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Looks like the work of Spodoptera littoralis.
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A very poor attempt at an outdoor chessboard?
???
cheers
fermi
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You may well be correct, Oron, but personally I think it looks more like the work of Gardna pseudoexperta. Even if it were a good idea to create a lawn under the circumstances the way it has been carried out is very amateurish. The quality of the turf looks to be poor and no-one who knew what they were doing would lay it out in the checkerboard design as pointed out by Fermi. It would not have taken a lot of imagination to create a far more attractive area using drought tolerant planting that would have required less water to maintain.
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I hope the contractors' building skills are better than their attempt at gardening, what a waste!
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...Gardna pseudoexperta....
;D ;D ;D
Most likely, John,
and as one of my friends liks to say "x" is an unknown quantity and a "spurt" is a drip under pressure!
If they are selling this as a holiday house they obviously have chosen to provide a "quick and easy" lawn regardless of how difficult it would be to maintain in the future and how much better it would've been to put in a xeric or low-water requirement garden of interesting plants,
cheers
fermi
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An architect here suggested that it would be a good idea to cover our very sloped plot with lawn, and be so much cheaper than re-terracing it. He wasn't best pleased when, having realised he was serious, I told him he had a lot to learn about gardening.
He did manage to persuade our poor neighbours, novice gardeners who installed a (fortunately) small area of lawn complete with automatic watering system. It was on the north side of the house so I suppose it stood a chance. He neglected, however, to tell them how very often it would need cutting. It lasted a year or two, I think.