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Improving my dilapidated lawn grass

2,622 Views | 40 Replies | Last: 21 days ago by chickencoupe16
ATX_AG_08
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AG
Lawn care is expensive and time consuming. Why would you do this for a house you do not own?

Save the money and put it into your new home.
chickencoupe16
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AG
ATX_AG_08 said:

Lawn care is expensive and time consuming. Why would you do this for a house you do not own?

Save the money and put it into your new home.
The most important steps for lawncare are mowing and watering, both of which are almost guaranteed to be required by the landlord and HOA if applicable. Neither is that expensive per unit but let's call it $40 in gas, oil, filters, and blades a year for mowing and an average of $30 per month of water for $360. Mowing does take a decent bit of time, but I enjoy it, especially with ear muffs and a good podcast or audiobook.

Fertilizer is not required but helpful and not all that expensive. I probably spend $75/year fertilizing my 6000 square feet of lawn.

Preemergent applications would cost me about $120 a year but OP doesn't need to worry about that anytime soon.

Aeration costs $76 for a 4 hour rental from Home Depot and the time to do it once a year.

Antifungals cost me about $30 per application IF I need it. Last year, for example, I have battled TARR and spent roughly $60 on antifungals and $120 on peat moss.

Pesticides might cost $10 a treatment for things like sod web worms or chinch bugs.

So for me, my most expensive year of lawncare with 4 antifungal treatments, peat moss, preemergent, and 2 pest treatments would be around $871. But the mowing and watering are required and I have gotten away from pre-emergents, so down to $351. Congrats, OP may be able to buy the sink faucets in his new home if he neglects the rental lawn for 2 years. All the while, he will have a crappy lawn that he can't enjoy for 2 years.
SteveBott
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Coupe I won't doubt your numbers but won't verify. But you forgot the cost of time in your math. All the maintenance you describe, if done by the renter, costs time.

And time can be very valuable if wasted on a rent house.

OP thin the trees in the front or don't bother. Set up the back yard enough to have a BBQ with friends.
ATX_AG_08
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What kind of quality slow release fertilizer are you getting for $76 per year and how many times are you fertilizing?

It's pointless putting money into a lawn you don't own, period.
chickencoupe16
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Time certainly is important, so let's look at it.

Mowing is going to take the most time. At the height of summer, I spend around 1 hour every 4 days mowing my 6000 sq ft with a push mower and 15 minutes weed eating. There are times it's a chore that takes away but if I schedule it correctly, it's an enjoyable task that allows me to get outside, get some sun, and listen to entertainment during times my family is otherwise ocupied. In total, I probably spend 50-60 hours mowing and weed eating a year. I could extend my mowing interval to once a week if I had to and get it down to 35-45 hours or so. But I still have to mow according to my HOA and if a rental, my landlord so let's call it 30 hours of extra mowing/weedeating.

The next longest task is the aeration which takes less 4 hours including pick up and drop off. Each chemical application takes 30 minutes. So 2 hours for fertilizer, 2 hours for antifungals, 1.5 for preemergents. The peat moss takes 1 hour. Add in 2 hours to go to the store plus 1.5 to make the math easier and for miscellaneous. That plus mowing puts me at 44 hours more than necessary.

But I enjoy the work, kids and dogs can play outside without tracking in mud, we can have picnics with the neighbors and their kids, the waterslide can be set up for 24+ hours every weekend without ruing the lawn or popping the slide, my family and I can lay in the grass comfortably, the house looks better, and, and, and. OP likely won't spend enough time in the rental to get his lawn up to the level of mine, but it'll get significantly better and he'll be able to enjoy it.

Maybe he looks at my numbers and decides it's not worth it. Maybe it is. Who knows? But it's not necessarily a waste even if the house is a rental.
chickencoupe16
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I buy from Producer's Coop. I haven't had to in a while because their bags last me so long, so I can't give up to date pricing but I want to say it was around $40 a bag. I fertilize with a quick release around March, again with a slow release in April and July, and a winterizer in October. I probably use a bag each of the quick release and winterizer every 3 years and a bag of the slow release every 1-1.5 years.
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