Hide victors of the yard... looking for some suggestions here...

Hey while I'm at it- anybody have any experience with robot mowers? I've been looking pretty hard at 'em this year and figure it'd save me almost 3 hours a week.

I want a wireless (but also reliable) model so for an acre of ground, what I'm seeing is models at the $2K price point... does that sound reasonable?
Nope! I thought about it but figured some jackass would come steal it. I have yet to buy a zero turn mower but I need to. I’ve borrowed my neighbors before and I can literally do what used to take 4-5hrs+ in as little as an hour with one. It would be in my best interest to spend the money and buy back some time but I just haven’t felt like spending the money yet on a good one. I have an old traditional 54” cutting deck John Deere, one with a steering wheel but it doesn’t save me time because of all the crazy circle patterns and clean up I have to do afterwards, maybe great for an open field but I need the tight turn radius and speediness of a zero turn. I have a feeling robo mowers won’t be great long term even if someone doesn’t steal the damn thing. I think they are probably great for a retired gent that lives in a little garden home with a small yard but would not consider it for something the size you are talking about.
 
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Step 1 - Fix the soil. May need to bring in topsoil or heavily amend. Healthy lawn needs very healthy, living soil.

Step 2 - establish irrigation as needed.

Step 3 - Rid the area of all weeds before planting. This may take time as products to kill weeks need to dissipate before planting.

Step 4 - Grade the surface to ensure good drainage - no low spots for puddles.

step 5 - plant (or sod) , fertilize, and stay on top of weeds

Step 6 - maintain healthy soil for the lawn. Avoid Lowe’s Depot chemical fertilizers. Weed and Feed is not compatible with grass seed as it hinders germination and kills sprouting seed. This stuff is a short term band-aid at best.

If you done the above very well, you’ll have very few, if any, weeds. This time of year a few pop up occasionally. Hand pull them - I had to pull 3 weeds this week.

Don’t cut it short. Most grass blends are TALL blends, yet many try and mow short like a putting green. I keep the mower on the tallest settings as mowing short weakens the grass and opens the door for burned / dead spots and more weeds. Don’t water at night as it encourages fungus - dawn hours are best.
 
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Nope! I thought about it but figured some jackass would come steal it. I have yet to buy a zero turn mower but I need to. I’ve borrowed my neighbors before and I can literally do what used to take 4-5hrs+ in as little as an hour with one. It would be in my best interest to spend the money and buy back some time but I just haven’t felt like spending the money yet on a good one. I gave an old traditional 54” cutting deck John Deere, one with a steering wheel but it doesn’t save me time because of all the crazy circle patterns and clean up I have to do afterwards, maybe great for an open field but I need the tight turn radius and speediness if a zero turn. I have a feel robo mowers won’t be great long term even if someone doesn’t steal the damn thing. I think they probably great for a retired gent that lives in a little garden home with a small yard but would not consider it for something the size you are talking about.
So the logic I'm operating off of is trying to save about 3 hours per weekend mowing. I "could" purchase a riding mower but that would also require me to spend just as much/if not more on a shed. I do intend to purchase a shed for such things but... dang if I can delay it that'd be great.

So approximately $2K for a robot mower but a tractor would run me about $3K, a shed over $5K all said and done so I can literally run the robot mower into the proverbial ground 4x and still break even while gaining something like 12hours a month that I'm NOT mowing... seems... both lucrative and cost effective thus far...

-LD
 
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Step 1 - Fix the soil. May need to bring in topsoil or heavily amend. Healthy lawn needs very healthy, living soil.

Step 2 - establish irrigation as needed.

Step 3 - Rid the area of all weeds before planting. This may take time as products to kill weeks need to dissipate before planting.

Step 4 - Grade the surface to ensure good drainage - no low spots for puddles.

step 5 - plant (or sod) , fertilize, and stay on top of weeds

Step 6 - maintain healthy soil for the lawn. Avoid Lowe’s Depot chemical fertilizers. Weed and Feed is not compatible with grass seed as it hinders germination and kills sprouting seed. This stuff is a short term band-aid at best.

If you done the above very well, you’ll have very few, if any, weeds. This time of year a few pop up occasionally. Hand pull them - I had to pull 3 weeds this week.

Don’t cut it short. Most grass blends are TALL blends, yet many try and mow short like a putting green. I keep the mower on the tallest settings as mowing short weakens the grass and opens the door for burned / dead spots and more weeds. Don’t water at night as it encourages fungus - dawn hours are best.
This is very good advice! One thing to add, healthy lawns attract lots of critters, at least down here in the south. So once you get a healthy lawn, the battle is far from over! Down here in the south it’s a real PITA. I’ve gotten hit with grubs and army worms two years in a row and just now recovering from that mess. There is always something.

So the logic I'm operating off of is trying to save about 3 hours per weekend mowing. I "could" purchase a riding mower but that would also require me to spend just as much/if not more on a shed. I do intend to purchase a shed for such things but... dang if I can delay it that'd be great.

So approximately $2K for a robot mower but a tractor would run me about $3K, a shed over $5K all said and done so I can literally run the robot mower into the proverbial ground 4x and still break even while gaining something like 12hours a month that I'm NOT mowing... seems... both lucrative and cost effective thus far...

-LD
Yes sir, sounds familiar. I’m fighting the same battle. I got room to store mine in the 3 car garage but between the 54” mower, the pushmower, garden tools, dump trailer, etc. it easily takes up as much space as an SUV. So I too am looking at a shed of some sort. The goal when I built this place was to one day build a big garage out back and replace/restore another classic after selling my 67 Pontiac Firebird 400. However, that’s likely a pipe dream now based on what it would cost me to build a garage or even buy a remotely decent classic to restore. Hell, I haven’t even got my vault or my basement finished yet and I’ve been here 10 years. Every time I get time or money to do stuff something comes up needing fixed or replaced I.e. my 9 year old AC units they now want $30,000 to replace!!!!
 
This is very good advice! One thing to add, healthy lawns attract lots of critters, at least down here in the south. So once you get a healthy lawn, the battle is far from over! Down here in the south it’s a real PITA. I’ve gotten hit with grubs and army worms two years in a row and just now recovering from that mess. There is always something.


Yes sir, sounds familiar. I’m fighting the same battle. I got room to store mine in the 3 car garage but between the 54” mower, the pushmower, garden tools, dump trailer, etc. it easily takes up as much space as an SUV. So I too am looking at a shed of some sort. The goal when I built this place was to one day build a big garage out back and replace/restore another classic after selling my 67 Pontiac Firebird 400. However, that’s likely a pipe dream now based on what it would cost me to build a garage or even buy a remotely decent classic to restore. Hell, I haven’t even got my vault or my basement finished yet and I’ve been here 10 years. Every time I get time or money to do stuff something comes up needing fixed or replaced I.e. my 9 year old AC units they now want $30,000 to replace!!!!
Don’t get me started on AC

Two things I know:
1: it’s going to fail
2: it’s going to be expensive

Have an AC emergency fund.