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Old 09-07-2006, 12:43 PM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
The Other Funk
 
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Default Type of Zoysia & Mulch to Use



wrote in message
oups.com...
"shirly"
David Anderson wrote:
wrote:

I'm going to have zoysia sod put in at my new house in Raleigh, NC. The
landscaping company is asking me which type of zoysia I want. Does
anyone know the best types for my area and have any preferences?

I live in North Dakota and was thinking about putting zoysia grass in my
yard here and have a few questions for those of you who might know more
about this topic. There is also farm land (i.e., many acres of wheat
fields) near my house. What type of border do I need to put down so that
the zoysia does not invade the crop spaces?

Is there a specific type of zoysia that would be best for the northern
climate here? I know the grasses originated in Korea and should be
somewhat cold hardy, but does anyone know what the coldest temperature
they
can endure is? I was also wondering how warm the ground temperature
needs
to get prior to the zoysia greening again in the spring.


IMO, zoysia is a poor choice for northern climates, even if it will
survive the winter. A neighbor has it here in coastal NJ. It goes
brown in Oct and looks like dead straw all winter. It doesn't return
to green until mid May. My bluegrass/fescue will stay a nice green
most of the winter, only going off color Feb, and quickly greening up
again in early April. Zoysia performance in ND has to be worse.

Trader4, I am not question your experiances with Zoysia but here in north
Jersey, my Zoysia stays green until I stop watering it and greens up in
about a week after I start watering. The previous owner put it in so I don't
know which variety it is.
What I can't answer, is David's question about howto stop it from spreading.
Even 4" deep edging only slows it down.
Bob

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