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Old 02-11-2003, 07:12 PM
Andrew Ostrander
 
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Default HELP...grass seeding

I agree with Pam. I had a very heavy clay patch to rototill once. I was
able to chop up about 2 inches of the clay on each pass, with passes being a
couple of weeks apart. Eventually I loosened it deep enough to plant.

"Pam - gardengal" wrote in message
news:YMcnb.32576$9E1.122154@attbi_s52...

"Peter" wrote in message

...
The intention was to spread the manure over existing dirt/clay and then

till
it all together. I'm no expert but the land had wild grass and weeds

growing
on it before I started the project. It all went south once the machinery
packed the top layer too hard (approx 50% of the area) so the tiller

could
not mix the manure with the dirt anymore. Even when the tiller managed

to
break some test areas the chunks are very hard. Will I have any luck
breaking up the hard shell in the spring once the ground is more moist

of
will watering help?


To develop and maintain a healthy lawn, you need a seed bed of at least 6
inches of loose, rich soil. If a rototiller cannot break through the
compacted clay, new grass roots certainly cannot. I'd spread as much aged
compost/manure as you can manage - 6-8 inches - leave it overwinter and

then
till it into the clay in spring. Between the activity of the worms and

other
soil organisms overwinter and rainfall, you should be able to till it in
well next spring.

pam - gardengal