Chairhead wrote:
Snuffy \Hub Cap\ McKinney;1019268 Wrote:
"Chairhead" wrote in message
...-
Thanks for the reply
But a rake would be lost in the divots caused by the horses,,the
grass is really churned up and it's a huge area to rake
😳😳-
If these are photos, where did you post them?
😳😳?
Whose property is the fence on?
I posted the pics on #6 but here they are again, the fence splits the
property boundaries and unless there is a party agreement ( which
there isn't) it's nobody's responsibility, I'm really not interested
in who's at fault as I know he is responsible in part at least but he
hasn't the balls to cough,
What I am interested in is how to repair the lawn, what methods will I
have to use, a rake would be out of the question, looking at the grass
do I rotavate, roll, relay, reseed?, is now the time to repair or put
new lawn down.
'[image:
http://i1104.photobucket.com/albums/h337/pripri11/1261CDD1-82AD-4A35-9D3C-3AC207D5C504_zpsgny6ect0.jpg]'
(http://tinyurl.com/jlmgsro)
'[image:
http://i1104.photobucket.com/albums/h337/pripri11/E5216E80-55C2-4973-8A67-47504D06A6F8_zpsceynjelm.jpg]'
(http://tinyurl.com/gteeuf7)
I'm no expert, but I would be tempted to roll it on a really rainy day, then
rake/roll/rake ..... topsoil over it to even the level, then overseed if it
doesn't grow back over the filled holes over a season. And I would certainly put
the neighbor on notice that he is responsible for damage done by his horses.