Thread: reseeding lawns
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Old 19-05-2016, 01:39 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Nick Maclaren[_5_] Nick Maclaren[_5_] is offline
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Default reseeding lawns

In article ,
Janet wrote:

On 19/05/2016 07:15, Mark wrote:
I live in Blaine - Washington state. Weather here is prety much like
Devon. I joined this group awhile back and apprecitate all the information
I've read.
A question though - my lawn here is terrible and I'm hoping someone can
give some information on how to improve it. Like Devon (I lived there for
a few years) the lawn is subjected to periods of drought during the summer
- but lot's of rain the rest of the year.


Are you sure that Washington/US lawns use the same varieties of grass
as the ones available in UK? Differences are why US lawn care is so
different from UK.

http://lawngrass.com/states/washington.html

"Recommended Grass For Washington Lawns

Kentucky Bluegrass, Bentgrass and Fine Fescues are commonly found
throughout Washington. Turf-Type perennial Rye grasses are also commonly
used as a component of a mixture. Sometimes perennial ryegrass is used
as a stand alone lawn grass in western portions of Washington. All of
these grasses have good performance records throughout the state.".

Unless you know what kind of grass you have (and it's a kind grown in
UK lawns) it's unlikely any UK advice will help.


All of those except bluegrass are normal parts of UK lawn mixtures,
and even that is used on occasion. However, Devon has periods of
drought only in dry years - try Cambridge for somewhere that has
them more often. Most UK advice will be reasonably accurate.

However, the first question is WHY is it terrible? Until that has
been answered, attempting to fix the problem is a waste of time,
money and effort. If it is because you are getting anything like
drought in the summer on a regular basis, you are shafted; that
is why so many transpondians use an obscene amount of water on
their lawns. Lawns are not viable if the soil dries out badly at
any time, because all lawn grasses will die; the only ones that
can take drying out are clump-forming. Note that it's not just
the rainfall that matters, but how much hot sunlight (and hence
evaporation), which is why almost all UK 'droughts' are such jokes.
The following page may be useful:

http://www.thegrassseedstore.co.uk/l...-lawn-mix.html

Note the cutting height, and that even those won't take real drought.
However, that's extremely rare in the UK, though I have seen it in
Cambridge - and it was only a minor drought by the standards of most
of the world.



Regards,
Nick Maclaren.