Hi. I see that video is more than one year old. How is the condition of green after one year? Any effect of snow? Any effect of Temperature change, any cracks, shrinking? Also any bumps or dips on the surface after prolonged use? Thank you
Great questions! I can’t comment specifically about this green, as I just filmed it this one day…however I also had a similar putting green installed in my backyard and used it for 3 years, the answer to everything is no…perfect turf Vancouver truly designs the best quality putting greens I’ve seen and last well through all types of weather conditions
Thank you for your reply. I am seriously considering getting one in my backyard. I have about 70-75 yards distance from potential tee box and a large area for green measuring about 100 feet by 35-40 feet and has grass with sprinklers currently. Local dealers have experience with putting greens only and not with a green which takes shots from distance. I am wondering if Perfect turf Vancouver will take up a project in Lasalle Ontario…will get in touch with them. Thanks again
I have a reel grass chipping green around 900 square feet but it’s not leveled and it rolls slow like 5.5 I want to get a big ‘ish’ artificial green that doesn’t cost too much but would be worth it
@@cyruspga oh nice, yea I work on my green and yard and practice on it any day I’m off work, Getting an artificial green would save me from having to buy a greensmower
@@cyruspga do you have to pay for labor separately to get the green installed? I’m fighting between the choice of buying a greens mower or go artificial
Question, it must be expensive to repair all the divots on the tee box areas after you hit your shots? Would it be better to have that area also artificial turf, like hitting off of a mat or something. The real grass is great but after a couple rounds it probably looks awful? Your thoughts?
It definitely would need some maintenance and care, the owner has a big enough space where he can rotate his practice sessions and as long as you are putting down seed and taking care of it, it's not that bad
@@cyruspga ok I mean they do it at golf ranges and golf courses of course, I just didn’t know if the cost of upkeep would offset itself by using artificial for teeing areas…. But for the experience of you can do it nothing beats hitting off real grass lol. Nice job that’s a pretty piece of property
@@10scoach33 for this kind of thing it is actually quite inexpensive, all you need is a bag of grass seed, which is anywhere from $10-$40 depending on brand and size, and a seed shaker which is about $40 on amazon for a good one. If you are out there every single sunny day for lets say an hour or two all through spring/summer, you would probably go through 2 maybe 3 bags of seed at MOST, and I mean like you said... sure you could get a turf matt to hit from, BUTT if you are using this backyard hole as practice, you want that practice to be as realistic and as close to golf course conditions as you can get, so real grass is just the way to go in my mind.. only downfall of real grass is the CRAZY water bans and restrictions that we get in this area (I live about 20 min from where this house is) and not to mention the crazy dry/heat spells we get in the summer time here... most peoples lawns DO NOT last and are totally dead by mid to end of July.... and maintaining a hole like this is another factor as well, you will have to be out there cutting that grass more often then you probably want to be hahaha.
geeze, I thought it was more common, I live in the middle of a town and i somehow have a 4 and a half acre yard, and I made 5 holes, there is no actual hole all you have to do is hit whatever it is with the ball, it sounds dumb but everthing you have to hit still takes skill its not like the size of a car. I would make actual holes in the ground but my parents would not let me. the holes are called; Evergreen, stump, campfire, y tree, and tiki. And from each hole you can tee off to every other hole. if you wanted a par 5 you could go from evergreen to tiki, stump to tiki, tiki to stump and tiki to evergreen. par 4s are, y to tiki, y to evergreen, tiki to y, stump to y, evergreen to campfire. par 3s are evergreen to stump, stump to evergreen, stump to camp and the same thing back. I also have a small hole in the front of my yard to practice your wedge shots and putting.