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turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 9:40 pm
by CrispyFishin
So, I live in residential Tallahassee. Just so happens, I have grown the most lush lawn that I have ever grown. I am all of 32 years old.

My neighbor has been a widow for roughly 8 months. Her son-in-law was over for the weekend and decided to do her a favor by mowing her lawn. I have thick St. Augustine grass that I cut with a blade raised to roughly 2 1/2" to 3". The son-in-law crosses the property line by roughly 8 feet and scalps my lawn down to near dirt in a perfect line leading out to the street.

I really don't want to make an issue of this because I want my neighbor to feel comfortable in reaching out to us in the event that she needs assistance, as she had in the past.

Should I let this one fly or should I try and generate some tactful way of reestablishing where my property ends, and where her's begins?

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 10:20 pm
by hmaadd29
I'm not confrontational, but I'd have to go discuss. That stuff is hard to maintain. Watch out for the bugs

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 10:23 pm
by Jumptrout51
You should inform the SIL of the property boundaries.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 10:38 pm
by Dubble Trubble
If you want to not be confrontational. just go and stake the property line and tie a red line between the stakes. After a couple of mowings, the line will be established, and the SIL will know where to stop.

Dubble :thumbup:

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 11:43 pm
by Barhopr
As a neighborly gesture to the grieving widow offer to mow her lawn.

1. No confrontation
2. karma points for being a good neighbor

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 28th, 2010, 11:58 pm
by Allnighter
What barhopr said that is really the best around way to go.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 5:58 am
by RHTFISH
Did he run over the OBAMA sign in your yard?

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 4:08 pm
by CSMarine
DON'T DO IT!!!! I tried to be a good neighbor to the recent widow lady next door 19 years ago. I'm still cutting her grass, trimming her hedges, working on her car, hauling her trash to the street, watering her plants, cleaning her fence line, burning her pinecombs, working on stopped up drains, pressure washing her house, taking her to the doctor, picking up her medicine, cleaning the straw off her roof, weeding her flower beds, and my wife brings her to the hair dresser every Thursday morning, and makes her supper three or four nights a week. Don't ever remember her saying thank you one time. So, DON'T DO IT!!!! :smt009

salute2

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 4:33 pm
by captkeyser
RHTFISH wrote:Did he run over the OBAMA sign in your yard?
:smt005

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 9:59 pm
by Barhopr
CSMarine wrote:DON'T DO IT!!!! I tried to be a good neighbor to the recent widow lady next door 19 years ago. I'm still cutting her grass, trimming her hedges, working on her car, hauling her trash to the street, watering her plants, cleaning her fence line, burning her pinecombs, working on stopped up drains, pressure washing her house, taking her to the doctor, picking up her medicine, cleaning the straw off her roof, weeding her flower beds, and my wife brings her to the hair dresser every Thursday morning, and makes her supper three or four nights a week. Don't ever remember her saying thank you one time. So, DON'T DO IT!!!! :smt009

salute2
Yep, you'll burn in hell for doing for doing all of that for her. ;-) Really though...if you do good deeds to be thanked...don't do them.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 10:04 pm
by Charles
a) Put in a fence, or a flower bed, or a rock garden, or a border, or something that marks the boundary.

b) Work full-time doing golf course maintenance and you'll never again care what your lawn looks like as long as you don't have to mess with it. <You want me to mow what! ? :smt005 >

At least he mowed a straight line so if your old grass doesn't come back the sod will be easier. :-D

I agree with CSMarine; help her if you want, but be careful about leaving yourself open to being taken advantage of. There's no easy way out of that, and there is a difference.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 29th, 2010, 11:39 pm
by CrispyFishin
RHTFISH: No, my Obama sign is stored now. I look at it from time to time as sort of a novelty. I often wonder if I'd vote the same way if I had it to do it again. :smt017

Now, he did come really close to my ACORN sign. Speaking of which, the local ACORN rep would like to make a presentation at the next NFGFC meeting, if that's cool. :lol: :lol:

Seriously though, one day I'm gonna move to where lawns don't matter much. Anyone know a quality realtor in South Ga. that could sell me the farm?

As always, thanks all for the wisdom. The common theme was "keep the peace", and I tend to agree.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 30th, 2010, 7:23 am
by FUTCHCAIRO
NOW CSM, YA KNOW THAT ALL GOOD JARHEADS DO THAT KIND OF THING. I TAKE ALL THE YOUNG LADIES, 65-80 , TO THE DOC. OFFICE AND ON THE WAY HOME TAKE THEM OUT FOR LUNCH, I DO NOT DO IT FOR PRAISE BUT BECAUSE I ENJOY HELPING PEOPLE.
PA THE OLD MAN OF THE SEA SEMPER FI

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 30th, 2010, 8:14 am
by Reel Cowboy
CrispyFishin wrote:Speaking of which, the local ACORN rep would like to make a presentation at the next NFGFC meeting, if that's cool. :lol: :lol:
Now that my friends, is what a stupid idea looks like.

Re: turf wars

Posted: June 30th, 2010, 8:39 am
by silverking
Reel Cowboy wrote:
CrispyFishin wrote:Speaking of which, the local ACORN rep would like to make a presentation at the next NFGFC meeting, if that's cool. :lol: :lol:
Now that my friends, is what a stupid idea looks like.

Can you say pummeled senseless with Ugly Sticks 3X real fast? :D