where the grass is always greenerwhere the grass is always greenerwhere the grass is always greener
Burlington\'s use of artificial lawns on these trees seems like a big deal.
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
3388 Burlington using artificial lawns on these trees seems like a big deal
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
3388 Burlington using artificial lawns on these trees seems like a big deal
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
3388 Burlington using artificial lawns on these trees seems like a big deal
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
3388 Burlington using artificial lawns on these trees seems like a big deal
Both sides of the boulevard-
Adjacent to residential area.
There is an increasing interest in installing artificial grass in Burlington House front yard, prompting city planners to arrange an open house on this issue.
Burlington planner Dave Marriott says the Burlington people are allowed to install artificial grass in the backyard, but 1999 of the zoning regulations prohibit the installation of artificial grass in the front yard.
This may change.
The Burlington public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, January.
26 in Room 247, City Hall.
Community Development Committee chairman Burlington MP Jack Denison will wait for the staff report before commenting.
But he said he knocked a door during the last campaign to ask if the lady would post a lawn sign.
The woman said she couldn\'t because she had artificial grass.
\"I was surprised,\" said Denison.
Half the supporters.
A dozen companies that are converting in Southern Ontario say the product is now very realistic and the business is booming.
It\'s too fast. Few people bother to advertise.
\"More and more American companies are trying to rise here, and this is becoming more and more important.
That\'s how active it is here, \"says Robert hodick, senior sales manager at Stoney Creek --
Artificial grass and landscaping.
Hodichak says his company does about 100 conversions a year, half of them in Hamilton.
The company has completed 30 to 40 conversions in Burlington, including several front yards despite the city\'s charter.
Burlington public meetings are expected to stimulate greater interest in local landscaping trends.
According to Debbie Spencer, a spokesman for the planning department, Hamilton allows artificial lawns and at least half of the relevant areas to be made up of natural materials such as shrubs, flowers, trees, soil or rocks.
There are many benefits of using mod turf.
The mower is out of date.
The same is true of lawn sprinklers.
And lawn hangers.
More than half of the customers are dog owners and they find it much easier to clean after Fido.
The product is recyclable for about 25 years.
It looks real.
\"We brought in two.
The shade of the blade is colored and our latest product has a brown thatch, so it\'s even a little dry
Look at it, \"said hodick.
The product has improved a lot, he says, and even if you install it, it\'s easy to go wrong.
Just like when he drove past a facility in Burlington.
\"I know we made one on the street and I\'m going to see it and I think I can pick it out but I can\'t pick it out.
This is how realistic it becomes.
Looks good-groomed grass.
\"But it takes some money to go with fake bluegrass.
Hodick and Robert Misland are both in Toronto.
The homeowner said that based on the multi-function grass, the homeowner can expect to pay $5,000 for the front lawn renovation, which is twice the size of the plot, according to the backyard.
\"My phone rang,\" Mislan said . \".
\"But it burps at the price.
It\'s not a low
The person who earns the salary, it\'s touching and going to the middle-class folks.
\"But the grass looks beautiful and I asked people to try and trim it.
It no longer sticks out like a thumb pain.
Artificial grass-no one in the industry uses the word \"fake\"-attracts homeowners who enjoy low maintenance, Mislan said.
\"Look at people\'s homes.
None of them were repaired.
All the sofas and fascia. All the siding.
Fencing is not maintained.
There is no maintenance throughout the construction industry.
Why would people say, \"it works for the side of my house and under the roof, but not for my play area \"?
\"Kpeters @ thespec. com905-526-
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