I think you've got to be born here to understand that!Stonehead wrote: I've never understood the British obsession with striped lawns.

Hey I was born here and I don't understand it either...accept for running up and down the stripes when I was a child making my dad mad because it upset the striping effectStonehead wrote:
I've never understood the British obsession with striped lawns.
I think you've got to be born here to understand that!
See - that's a good enough reason for having stripes!baldowrie wrote: Hey I was born here and I don't understand it either...accept for running up and down the stripes when I was a child making my dad mad because it upset the striping effect
Ah - that explains it... or not.MKG wrote:Stripey lawns (apart from the fact that they are the real reason for the invention of Agent Orange - or even napalm, for which I believe we can blame the US) are not British!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
They are based upon a 1980s concept of Yuppyism, these idiotic numpties believing that if it was so at Lords or Wimbledon, it must be so in the garden at the back.
Oooh ide love a long an involved post, or even a threadStonehead wrote:I use a scythe. For a lawn, you need a hook-nosed or oriental blade, at least 70cm long and preferably longer. The advantage of a scythe is that the same snath can be used with different blades for different jobs—lawns, meadows, topping, brush, ditch clearing, hay making, harvesting spinach etc. It replaces both lawnmowers and brushcutters/strimmers.
Stoney
I've never understood the British obsession with striped lawns