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Old 09-04-2003, 02:44 AM
Terry
 
Posts: n/a
Default Ridding a lawn of moss

a wrote:

Hmmm, not sure what is under the lawn itself. We have a lot of clay in our
soil, but I dont know about under the lawn - it tends to get very 'crisp' in
a dry summer.

It could be though that you have sandy soil on a gravel subbase
these kind of areas are like a bog in the winter due to rising water

levels
but parched in the summer because its hard to keep adequate levels of

humous
in the soil


"a" wrote in message
...
Our back garden is riddled with moss at the moment - it is like

walking
on a
sponge! Is it worth persevering with moss killer and raking it all

out
(which wont leave much grass behind) or is it really a re-lay job

(about
50
square metres at a guess)?

Unless you do something about the conditions which are making your

lawn
a nice place for moss to grow then you're really wasting your time and
effort killing it with chemicals. It will always come back sooner or
later.

It may not be necessary to re-lay it. You mostly just need to improve
the drainage. You could try spiking the lawn and brushing grit into

the
holes for a start. Is it over-shaded - can you give it more light? Is
your lawn at the bottom of a slope such that water tends to drain onto
it - perhaps providing a drainage channel for that water is an option?

If all else fails, moss is quite pleasant to look at and the

sponginess
could be viewed as an asset ;-)


It is not overshaded, and is sloped maybe 10 degrees with a small patio

at
the top - I wouldnt have thought too much water would drain into the

lawn.
I
think maybe aerating might help though - you can rent electric ones I

think
from the hire shops? What sort of grit would you put in - where do you

buy
such stuff?


Any ideas how much a re-lay would cost? I saw a
neighbours lawn get relaid last year, and they just put down loads of

top
soil over the existing grass and laid the new turf on top - that

seemed
an
odd way to do it?

I can't see how that will have improved the drainage unless they added

a
significant height.


It just looked a bit odd as their lawn wasnt too bad before, perhaps a
little bare in a couple of patches. I would guess anything growing in

the
old lawn would eventually grow through into the new one on top though.


cheers

dave.





AFIK advice here seems to be; a) Lime if acid soil. b) Proper
drainage. c) Sufficient sunlight, cut back over hanging trees?
Dosing it up with chemicals should surely be an absolute last
resort, if used at all and won't result in a permanent solution
anyway?
Terry.