If it grows, it mows.We got some lawn gurus up in here... ain't dare post a pic of my "bird seed" yard![]()
i've seen an increase of this robo mower recently, it was 849 and steadily rising (means it's being bought)If it grows, it mows.
I have 2 acres of lawn, the mowing upkeep alone has me considering paying someone else to do that. Fuck the extra stuff some of you do.
Any specific composite? The stuff we saw just looked cheap.You are not full time living in this property right?
I would go with the composite "wood" for the entire deck, it will be more costly - but it will last- even the base 4x4's... or take the time to RE-TREAT all of the wood with sealant...not just the top of the deck... drive around...perhaps not in a wealthy 'burb...but look at any normal wood fence and its condition after a few years... all of that wood was "pressure treated" wood yet look how it holds up to Florida. Florida is nasty, hot, wet, strange cold times that jack up the wood to then just be hit with hot death the next day...or heck, that afternoon... you get sometimes some stupid dramatic temp changes in FL.
If you lived there full time or are willing to re-treat the deck every 6-12months then the wood will last.
Use concreat footers, wood on the ground = death... again go look at the bottom of wood fences (they should not be on the ground, but everyone does because we all know we are replacing sections in a few years anyway)
Edit: also be sure to screen, and screen well, around the deck bottom to the ground...or you will have more than that little red guy living under there.
Any specific composite? The stuff we saw just looked cheap.
Have you heard of kebony and accoya?Well, it is rubber/plastic fake wood...so it will not /look/ as good as real wood, but it looks a heck of alot better than large cracks dried up weather and rain rotten wood ;-) I have noticed a lot of parks and places replacing the "top" of wooden walkway rails with the composite... 10$ it was because someone ran their hand across the wood and got a splinter and sued...lol
I do not know much about options other than Lowes or the Depot.
Composite Decking Boards - The Home Depot
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I could have sworn I have seen composite 2x4 and 4x4's but I am not finding them... /shrug... but the "top" is what gets most weathered anyway as long as your frame is raised- they have concrete footers that have 2x4 slots in them.
oh here... yes...they exist... https://www.deckmagazine.com/products/materials-hardware/composite-2x4_o
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Have you heard of kebony and accoya?
They're like modified woods.. Can't find really any first person experience with them online but they seem to look good.
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Modified wood. Kebony is a leading producer of modified wood products. Call 833-795-8660 for info.us.kebony.com
Yeah.No, not directly. I had a friend who is an engineer that worked for Raytheon for many years until he was swiped by Draper and now is he in Boston. He was discussing block v wood frame homes - and he was talking about how this new type of infused or modified wood that is flexible and stronger than block - and that would be the preferred building material for FL homes in the future so the entire house could flex some under constant high winds and still have a strong resistance etc. etc. so best of both worlds, plus the added bonus of being an easier building project that should offset the cost. No idea where this stuff went though... I think it would be hard to convince a person building a home "I can build you a /special/ stick home for just as much as block! Theoretically it is better! Pay no attention to all these 1950's block homes that are still here throughout all the storms of the past 70 years."
But as a deck...who knows...however that seems to be their specialty overlooking their site.
Take a look at my fucking siding
Here’s some in progress pics and the final results from the chicken coop I built last month. It took longer than I thought it would because I had to move my power tools out of the shop to not freak out the baby chickens, and I had to do the assembly on site because I don’t have a way to move the finished structure. It’s probably 75% reclaimed lumber, but it still ended up costing me around $500 in materials.
Some notable features are one side panel is removable the adjacent panel is hinged to swing down so the floor can be swept, the nesting box has a hinged lid for easy access, and there’s three sliding windows (they’ll be open almost year round but in jan and feb there are some 30 degree days). I definitely put more effort into the aesthetics than necessary, but I also had a ton of free time and wanted the practice. I got a kick out of my grandmother telling me “That's too nice for chickens!”
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