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Old 01-11-2010, 09:02 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
FarmI FarmI is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,358
Default Sweet corn grown in lawn

"chris French" wrote in message
...
In message , Martin
writes
On Sat, 30 Oct 2010 22:18:47 +1300, "George" wrote:


"shazzbat" wrote in message
...

"George" wrote in message
...
An amazing and audacious experiement, growing sweet corn in lawn.

My neighbour, who has the run off where I plant a crop of sweet corn
every season, has finally decided at 93 that it is time he moved in to
a
rest home. The house is going on the market. No growing in his garden
this year.

My existing raised gardens are fully at present.

So, I have grown sweet corn seedlings and planted them into the lawn.

First I scalped the grass with the lawn mower. I dug a slit into the
soil, like planters do when planting pine trees, and placed the SC
seedlings into the slit and then closed it back up.

The soil is loamy and because it was undisturbed lawn, has good
structure. The soil should be fertile and have enough nutrients in it.

It may need to be irrigated more regularly than in a garden but I can
take care of that.

Anyone have any comments or advice?


I think the new owners might have an opinion, especially if/when it's
ready to harvest.

There are no new owners. It is my lawn on my property and my crop. There
may
be new owners when I depart the mortal coil. By then this season sweet
corn
crop will be a distant memory of decades past.


"The house is going on the market. No growing in his garden this year."

Is the house being sold, but not the garden?


The neighbours house is being sold, so George can't grow his Sweetcorn
there anymore. so he is planting them in his lawn.


No. (George's) [aka] Rob's neighbour who has had the benefit of the run off
from where (George) [aka] Rob has grown his sweet corn in the past. Now,
that neighbour who is elderly is going into care and won't be getting the
benefit of the run off because he (the neighbour) won't be gardening there
any more.