Thread: Overseeding
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Old 09-09-2006, 04:38 AM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
Steveo Steveo is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 443
Default Overseeding

This is probably late for your shopping trip but at any rate, Jay. I use
Lesco 50/50 for most general sunlight applications. I pay less than $2 a
pound for it and it produces a steady product. (how much less than $2
depends on how many pounds I buy)

I'm surprised you're in the market for that much seed. Your op sounded like
a diy homeowner question. Should I tell you how much to charge for it too?

"jaygreg" wrote:
Steveo... I live in NEO also. What mix lawn seed do you use for an
average residential preestablished lawn and how much do you pay? I've
been buying a mix from a local grain elivator in Seville that I thought
was fair. I'd have to look up my records for the exact price but I
remember at the time doing a comparison and they won the race.

I'm taking a drive into Holms county today and will probably come across
a few places to buy seed and fertilizer. I'd like to have a benchmark.
What ferilizer composition do you use on lawns now and what's a fair
price to pay?

"Steveo" wrote in message
...
"jaygreg" wrote:
I'm considering thatching and resseding my lawn. A local equipment
rental showed me a machine by Classen
(http://littlewonder.com/turf-seeder-self-propelled.asp) called a turf
seeder (he called it an overseeder) that he thinks I should use. When
I saw the arrangement of the blades - considering the machine drops
seed first then lets the 24 or so blades roll over them, my eyebrows
rose; it seems to me a lot of seed will simply fall on top of the
grass and those blades will miss them. It doesn't look like there's
enough vibration to shake the seeds down through the existing lawn and
onto the furrows the blades create.

Is this a recommended way to get seed into a mature lawn that needs to
thicken to prevent unwanted weeds? Or should I rent a thatcher then
this machine to plant the seed when all the thatch is gone. The guy at
the rental agency says the machine will thach as well but not as much
as a stand-alone type.

Lesco sells a machine that operates on the same principal as the one
you're
looking at, and I've heard they work OK as long as you stay within the
limitations of a slice seeder. We have a couple of the Ryan mataway's
that drop the seed behind the slice and they work very well on level
soil away from tree roots. Be sure to criss cross your job and go heavy
with the seed. I run 10 lbs/1000sg ft here in Ohio. (perfect time of
the year to do that here right now)