My kids have a really heavy duty playground with swings and a slide. I really want to enclose the whole thing with a border and fill it with something like sand or woodchips. Has anybody else done this? Is sand the best thing to use, or should we do chips or some other material? Also what do you use to enclose it? If I do sand, should I leave it open on the bottom so it can drain easier, or put a plastic liner under the bottom to keep the grass and weeds from growing up through it?One other option would be rubber mulch. Has anybody bought this and put it in their yard? I have only seen it really used with playgrounds in parks and not really in backyards.[Edited on March 7, 2009 at 8:13 AM. Reason : ]
3/7/2009 8:04:25 AM
I have never done this, so I cannot be of much help. But as a person who has spent *alot* of time with kids at parks, I have just a small thing that you may want to consider: sand will be used by cats and other animals as a litter box. Even with a fence, it's going to be difficult to keep animals away. Believe it or not, the county actually has someone who comes out weekly or more to keep up the playgrounds and one of their jobs is scooping and raking the sandbox. I would be hesitant to use sand.
3/7/2009 8:25:32 AM
Well the one reason I am not concerned is I have a large outdoor dog with her own dog run that is directly adjacent to the kids swingset. She keeps things from coming around the backyard, and we have a full 6' tall privacy fence. Its pretty much impossible for cats and other dogs to come into the backyard, and if they do my dog scares them off with her barking. Hell she has killed two possums that have come into her enclosure trying to eat her dog food at night. Normally though I understand that this would be a big deal with a sandbox.[Edited on March 7, 2009 at 8:48 AM. Reason : ]
3/7/2009 8:42:02 AM
This article goes into great detail about backyard playgrounds. Pay attention to Part 2 in particular for advice on choosing a proper surface.http://www.backyardcity.com/articles/Playing-It-Safe-Part1.htmhttp://www.backyardcity.com/articles/Playing-It-Safe-Part2.htmhttp://www.backyardcity.com/articles/Playing-It-Safe-Part3.htm
3/7/2009 8:49:59 AM
I would say go with rubber mulch. Your kids would avoid splinters, and it's really low maintenance. Plus it's really soft for when they do take a fall. When I went to boot camp, that's what they had layed down on a lot of the obstacle courses.
3/7/2009 10:03:58 AM
Rubber mulch is nice, but expensive by comparison. Bags of wood chips are pretty cheap at Lowes. Just keep in mind that you will need to add a few bags a year as some of it will blow away or get crushed.For the base I'd just clear an appropriately sized area and put down landscaping fabric. You can buy it in rolls at Lowes. It is more durable in the long run than plastic and it won't let things grow through it.I'd stake the border down by drilling holes in it and hammering in some rebar that goes at least a foot in the ground.
3/7/2009 11:50:26 AM
3/7/2009 12:55:59 PM
FYI, snakes are attracted to wood chips.For the borders, I would use something substantial like crossties or 6"x6"s. It requires you to buy more filling, but what you do buy will last longer, especially if you do not fill it full.If you are in the North Chatham, Alamance, Orange County area, you can get Chapel Hill Gravel which is decomposed pink granite. It is a VERY coarse sand, but it packs well and does not track in shoes.Another option would be washed screenings. Again, this would not offer much cushion for falls, but is better than pea gravel (#78M). It is similar to Chapel Hill Gravel.[Edited on March 7, 2009 at 11:25 PM. Reason : .]
3/7/2009 11:22:17 PM
rubber mulch is the shit
3/7/2009 11:25:32 PM
there was a recall on rubber mulch a while back due to the lead in the paint, i would suggest looking into that before you decide on that option
3/8/2009 3:34:13 AM
sand, (doesn't need to be the really fine play sand) or rubber mulchwe had sand for ours when i was a kid.had this huge 2 story (10-15 feet high total) fort/house/triple swing set/5 ft wide 12 high slide with 2 ladders and a bridge (holding the swings) going from the fort part to the slide. only 2 people ever got hurt, one was my brother who fell out the firemans pole opening and broke his wrist, and my neighbor who, while swinging off of a set of monkey bars (the old metal ones with the big T ends) broke his arm somehow. (i still don't know how he managed to do that)
3/9/2009 10:58:09 AM