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Old 23-03-2012, 02:48 PM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
[email protected][_2_] trader4@optonline.net[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2011
Posts: 237
Default Not Another Lawn ?

On Mar 22, 1:55*pm, Another_Lawn? Another_Lawn.
wrote:
In 2010 we got a lovely wee lab (bitch). *Over the period she was peeing
on the grass in the back garden and we ended up with dead grass
patches.

Then the winter hit .... ouch it was a bad one.

We ended up with pretty much no lawn at all after that .... just dirt.

In summer of 2011, I resolved myself to sorting the back garden. *I
halved it in two (horizontal) with the back section now being bark and
the play area for the kids and the front re-turfed.

RE-TURFING - There wasnt much grass left .... in fact sod all (excuse
the pun). *The ground looked a little compacted so I thought grass roots
would struggle to penetrate. *I got myself a rotavator and went over the
area a few times. *On doing this it churned up all the crap that had
obviously been burried during the building of the house back in the 60's
so I spent 3 nights on my hands and knees picking out all the debris.

I rolled it and then got on with laying the lawn. *Was easier than I
thought.

It looked spectacular. *Lush green grass and the lovely smelling bark
enhancing my enjoyment on the garden swing chair. *It was like this for
a few months. *I watered it, cut it .... treated it like one of the
family.

At one point we had a lot of rain up here (aberdeen) and I just never
got a chance to go out and cut the grass so it grew and grew.
Eventually we started seeing some mushrooms so I thought sod it (again
with the pun) got the flymo out and cut the grass down. *The grass was
wettish and it was long enough to be a bit of a struggle to cut. *After
that it was down hill.


It's never a good idea to remove too much grass at one
time. Best practice is to remove no more than 1/3 of
what's there. So, when you cut it after letting it get
overgrown you should have set the mower as high as
possible.




Large patches started discolouring so I put down some of the grass
restorer etc but to no avail.


I don't know what "grass restorer etc" means, but it's almost
always a mistake to put down fertilizer when you suddenly
have trouble like this. If it was growing fine and then within
a few weeks it turns to crap, it's NOT fertilizer. Another
common mistake is to over water it at the first sign of trouble. Some
water is good, too much can make matters
worse. Most likely you shocked the new grass by letting
it get very long, then cutting back too much. That could have
made it more susceptible to disease or insects which
could have then finished it off.

Also, the worst conditions for disease are the heat of
summer combined with being wet and having fertilizer
with nitrogen present. Those conditions can
enable turf disease to finish off a lawn in a matter of days.



*It gradually all died. *There is a wee
bit of grass returning but I dont see it getting better See below.

I have considered astro turff but I got alot of enjoyment from my the
real stuff so would like to have another go. *But before I do I need to
understand why my grass died and to ensure that it doesnt happen again.

I should add that my dog now only pees on the bark and didnt actually
pee on the new turff although the garden slopes a little from the bark
area down to the grass. *I wondered if the pee was running down but I
very much doubt it.

Anyway please let me know what you think or if you need more
information.


You should have re-seeded or sodded it early last Fall. That is the
optimum time to establish new turf. I would
also test the soil for at least PH prior to proceeding and
adjust if needed. Also, when you were having the problems,
did you take a sample back to the sod supplier and ask
them what was wrong? It's virtually impossible to diagnose
something like this without actually seeing it. Many times
even the experts aren't 100% sure without running actual
tests.