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Mesh in rolawn turf

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  • DovefromaboveDovefromabove Posts: 88,147
    edited July 2019
    If you used a lawn rake and some of that mesh looped up ... and then an older person got a heel caught and tripped and broke a limb ... who would be liable I wonder?

    Perhaps Rolawn need to check their public liability insurance ‘cos I think my Householder’s policy providers would hold them ultimately responsible as the turf provided was ‘not fit for purpose’. 

    Perhaps someone on Twitter would like to ask them? @rolawn



    Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.





  • LG_LG_ Posts: 4,360
    edited July 2019
    If you used a lawn rake and some of that mesh looped up ... and then an older person got a heel caught and tripped and broke a limb ... who would be liable I wonder?
    That is a scenario that could easily happen, as it's quite fine (though strong) and when bits are lifted it is not particularly visible. It was using a spring tine rake that alerted me to its presence in the first place.

    https://twitter.com/rolawn
    'If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.'
    - Cicero
  • KT53KT53 Posts: 9,016
    If you put the turf upside down in the compost heap and water it well, most of the turf will compost off. If the plastic is still a mesh you can then lift it out, but it should decompose down.
    From various reports about plastic 'decomposing' it seems that it simply ends up as microgranules, it's not like wood or plants which break down to form something useful.
  • glasgowdanglasgowdan Posts: 632
    Rolawn turf is rubbish, it just gets worse and worse over the years. You're almost always better finding a good local-ish supplier. It'll be fresher, higher quality and supplied by a firm who cares about their name in the local area. 

    They've been using mesh for years.
  • B3B3 Posts: 27,505
    I wonder why ,if they need a mesh, they don't use something like hessian.
    In London. Keen but lazy.
  • glasgowdanglasgowdan Posts: 632
    edited July 2019
    The plastic one they use is very open, large holes, and light. It's cheap, and breaks easily when they cut. Hessian is too tough, tight, heavy and expensive. 
  • We all managed for years without plastic in turf, it is obviously being used by Rolawn to benefit themselves at ours and the environments cost.
    There must be thousands of people with mesh in their lawn that are unaware it is even there.
  • HazybHazyb Posts: 336
    When I made my border deeper in March I came across lots of mesh, small squared mesh. It was still intact. 

    Been here since 2014 and it wasn’t me who laid it so I have no idea when it was laid. 
  • FairygirlFairygirl Posts: 55,117
    Nelly - have you tried the social media approach? It seems to be the way to get a response from some companies nowadays. A direct query about the mesh, and that you wouldn't have used them if you'd known about it, might open a dialogue with them. Worth pursuing. 
    Many of them don't bother to respond to emails, or if they do, read what you've written in them before responding. That's certainly been my experience.  :/
    It's a place where beautiful isn't enough of a word....



    I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
  • LG_LG_ Posts: 4,360
    KT53 said:

    The Rolawn site states that the mesh biodegrades in 2 to 5 years. 

    Actually, it doesn't say it's biodegradable, but that it is degradable, and that it is non-toxic. So I suspect we are talking about micro plastics :disappointed:
    'If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.'
    - Cicero
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