Brando CalPankian
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Pine City, MN
So it finally happened. I finally had a job where we obliterated someone's yard. In all my years I've never screwed up a yard so bad.
We matted the turf, we caught every piece, we used the avant, we did everything we could. It still got ruts and damaged. 10 yards of soil and 40 lbs of seed plus straw and now a day and a half to fix it.
What more can be done? The client is bummed but understands. It's in a million dollar home area. I'm mortified. Nothing would have been in the reach of a crane under 400'. Even a backyard crane wouldn't have helped. There was a massive slope with only one tiny entrance going through the neighbors yard (luckily his daughter).
I'm at a loss. Would 50 mats help? How do you mitigate this or how do you determine when this has a high likelihood of happening? It's been dry and all the ice was off the lake. He went out and checked prior to work and gave us the go ahead.
Trying not to beat myself up but I feel bad for my crew and the customer. I was expecting some damage but not a half yard renovation.
We matted the turf, we caught every piece, we used the avant, we did everything we could. It still got ruts and damaged. 10 yards of soil and 40 lbs of seed plus straw and now a day and a half to fix it.
What more can be done? The client is bummed but understands. It's in a million dollar home area. I'm mortified. Nothing would have been in the reach of a crane under 400'. Even a backyard crane wouldn't have helped. There was a massive slope with only one tiny entrance going through the neighbors yard (luckily his daughter).
I'm at a loss. Would 50 mats help? How do you mitigate this or how do you determine when this has a high likelihood of happening? It's been dry and all the ice was off the lake. He went out and checked prior to work and gave us the go ahead.
Trying not to beat myself up but I feel bad for my crew and the customer. I was expecting some damage but not a half yard renovation.












