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MVD 18-10-2007 08:34 PM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


JoeSpareBedroom 18-10-2007 08:37 PM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
"MVD" wrote in message
oups.com...
I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


That's great stuff for the purpose you mentioned. If the soil's loose
enough, you really don't have to spade it in. Use a straight rake to blend
it with the top 2-4" of soil.



sherwindu 19-10-2007 06:40 AM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
I do the same, and even collect grass/leave clippings from my neighbors.
However,
I put them into a mulch pile for one year. Putting the leaves/grass directly on
the
beds could be messy and there may be some issues of the mix pulling nitrogen
from
the ground as it decomposes.

Sherwin

MVD wrote:

I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.



MVD 19-10-2007 05:08 PM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
On Oct 18, 2:37 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"MVD" wrote in message

oups.com...

I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


That's great stuff for the purpose you mentioned. If the soil's loose
enough, you really don't have to spade it in. Use a straight rake to blend
it with the top 2-4" of soil.


The ground here is pretty heavy clay. So based on what you said I
think I'll try to spade it into the top 4-6" of soil.


William Wagner[_2_] 19-10-2007 05:11 PM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
In article . com,
MVD wrote:

On Oct 18, 2:37 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"MVD" wrote in message

oups.com...

I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


That's great stuff for the purpose you mentioned. If the soil's loose
enough, you really don't have to spade it in. Use a straight rake to blend
it with the top 2-4" of soil.


The ground here is pretty heavy clay. So based on what you said I
think I'll try to spade it into the top 4-6" of soil.


Look into adding sand.

Bill

--

S Jersey USA Zone 5 Shade

This article is posted under fair use rules in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and is strictly for the educational
and informative purposes. This material is distributed without profit.

http://www.ocutech.com/ High tech Vison aid


JoeSpareBedroom 19-10-2007 05:14 PM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
"MVD" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Oct 18, 2:37 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"MVD" wrote in message

oups.com...

I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


That's great stuff for the purpose you mentioned. If the soil's loose
enough, you really don't have to spade it in. Use a straight rake to
blend
it with the top 2-4" of soil.


The ground here is pretty heavy clay. So based on what you said I
think I'll try to spade it into the top 4-6" of soil.


There's also something else that'll help with clay. Gypsum, I think, but
someone else can correct me if I'm wrong. A friend of mine used it and it
worked wonders.



Phisherman[_1_] 20-10-2007 03:16 AM

Grass clipings, etc.
 
On 19 Oct 2007 09:08:38 -0700, MVD wrote:

On Oct 18, 2:37 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"MVD" wrote in message

oups.com...

I live in northeastern Illinois. So if I was to put the bagger on my
lawn mower this time of year I would end up with a mix of grass
clippings and ground up leaves and twigs. I have some bare spots in a
few areas planted with small hostas and geraniums. Would it be
beneficial for me to collect the grass clippings/leaf mix and either
spread on top of or spade it into this bare areas? Usually I just set
the mower to "mulch" and just let the remnants lay where they fall,
but I thought this might be beneficial. Thanks for your advice.


That's great stuff for the purpose you mentioned. If the soil's loose
enough, you really don't have to spade it in. Use a straight rake to blend
it with the top 2-4" of soil.


The ground here is pretty heavy clay. So based on what you said I
think I'll try to spade it into the top 4-6" of soil.



Compost, tilled into the soil will help clay soil.


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