Thread: Lawn question
View Single Post
  #4   Report Post  
Old 31-10-2007, 12:27 PM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
[email protected] trader4@optonline.net is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 431
Default Lawn question

On Oct 31, 6:13 am, Eggs Zachtly wrote:
SteveB said:

[...]



I have since removed all Rain Bird Maxi Paw sprinklers. I have sprayed with
Roundup, and got the big concentrate bottle so I can spray more during this
winter. At the end, I will burn it again, and have my BIL come in with his
tractor rototiller to turn it over so I can rake out the roots. Maybe some
of the eight billion cockleburs will bury in the soil and not germinate due
to the Roundup.


Is this the logical approach?


No. Glyphosate kills by contact *only*. It has no residual herbicidal
properties, or pre-emergent properties, whatsoever.

And, churning up the ground with a tiller will probably just bring more
seeds to the surface, where they can germinate. "Cockleburr" is a common
name, usually describing Xanthium spinosum L. It's an annual, so 'raking
out the roots' would be a waste of time.

[rest snipped]

--

Eggs

-A man walks into a bar with a slab of asphalt under his arm and says: "A
beer please, and one for the road."



Also, Roundup has to be applied at higher concentrations to kill tough
weeds. 2% will kill the easy ones, 6% is much more effective. And it
may take 2 applications in some cases. It will kill the whole plant,
so no need to dig out roots of anything.

If you're trying to establish a lawn in a sand dune, you're going to
need topsoil to either mix in or cover the sand. If you cover it with
topsoil, that should keep most of the weed seeds from sprouting. I
guess the real question here is if a traditional lawn is what you
really want for that type of environment, or if you'r better of
landscaping with plants that are suited to what's already there.