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Owen28 21-06-2012 04:51 PM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
1 Attachment(s)
Hi,

Im new to this forum and was hoping to get some tips.

My girlfriends garden was a bit of a dump when she moved in, and now its getting towards summer I thought I would have a blast at doing it up for her.
There was a massive tree in the garden thats roots are nearly up to the house, this was cut down about two months ago. Obviously the garden was covered in sawdust. Ive cleared all of this up (about 15 bags full of it), and Ive tidied up some bushes and removed chicken wire and a wire fence running down one side of the garden.

Since the photo I have also fitted bamboo to the rear fence and the new gate, this is for privacy and to stop the dogs barking at anyone that goes past.
There is a small concrete flagged / patio area at the back. I will get some pictures up when the sun comes out for five minutes.

My plan is to dig up all of the soil with a rotavator, attempt to level it iff with top soil / sand. Put a new lawn down. Put a fence up around the lawn area. Possibly make a rockery at the far left corner. Also, to trim the hedges along the fence but leave them there for privacy.
My concerns a

The roots of the tree, these branch out everywhere, will they break the rotavator? Will they soak up all of the moisture from the grass? Will they make the lawn too uneven?

The weeds, if I go over the lawn with a rotavator, will they grow back through the new lawn? What can I do to stop this?

Heres the pic I took in April whilst cleaning the all the mess:



Thanks for your time.

Matt.

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 22-06-2012 12:01 AM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
Owen28 wrote:
Hi,

Im new to this forum and was hoping to get some tips.

My girlfriends garden was a bit of a dump when she moved in, and now
its getting towards summer I thought I would have a blast at doing it
up for her.
There was a massive tree in the garden thats roots are nearly up to
the house, this was cut down about two months ago. Obviously the
garden was covered in sawdust. Ive cleared all of this up (about 15
bags full of it), and Ive tidied up some bushes and removed chicken
wire and a wire fence running down one side of the garden.

Since the photo I have also fitted bamboo to the rear fence and the
new gate, this is for privacy and to stop the dogs barking at anyone
that goes past.
There is a small concrete flagged / patio area at the back. I will get
some pictures up when the sun comes out for five minutes.

My plan is to dig up all of the soil with a rotavator, attempt to
level it iff with top soil / sand. Put a new lawn down. Put a fence
up around the lawn area. Possibly make a rockery at the far left
corner. Also, to trim the hedges along the fence but leave them there
for privacy.
My concerns a

The roots of the tree, these branch out everywhere, will they break
the rotavator?


Possibly, or stall it. It will not chop them up if any size, by the picture
they are.

Will they soak up all of the moisture from the grass?


While alive yes, they have been doing so for years. If they die they will
rot and eventually collapse leaving a hole which can be noticeable if they
are large. How long this takes depends. Digging them out by hand will save
you a gym subscription and the price of the rotavator.

Will they make the lawn too uneven?


Too uneven for what? Think about what you want to do on the area of the
lawn and why you need one. Lawns are good for little kids to play on and
for sports, is that you?


The weeds, if I go over the lawn with a rotavator, will they grow back
through the new lawn?


Yes. You may even make it worse. Choose you method of dealing with weeds
according to the situation.

What can I do to stop this?


Learn a lot about the time consuming and resource intensive business of
growing lawns. In general bare dirt and disturbed dirt grows weeds. A
strong healthy lawn that is dense growing tends to exclude weeds. Unless
the conditions are right maintaining a strong lawn can be a real battle,
even then it is a chore that never goes away. Consider the options before
deciding.

David


songbird[_2_] 22-06-2012 12:34 AM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
David Hare-Scott wrote:
....
Learn a lot about the time consuming and resource intensive business of
growing lawns. In general bare dirt and disturbed dirt grows weeds. A
strong healthy lawn that is dense growing tends to exclude weeds. Unless
the conditions are right maintaining a strong lawn can be a real battle,
even then it is a chore that never goes away. Consider the options before
deciding.


very few dogs are good with being kept shut
up in a back yard, so whatever efforts you do
should be kept to the minimum until you know
how destructive they are.


songbird

Kay Lancaster 22-06-2012 03:01 AM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
On Thu, 21 Jun 2012 15:51:51 +0000, Owen28 wrote:


The roots of the tree, these branch out everywhere, will they break the
rotavator? Will they soak up all of the moisture from the grass? Will
they make the lawn too uneven?


Possibly. Worse yet, it can cause the tiller to jump and hit your foot or
leg. Wear safety boots.

The roots won't disturb the grass, nor will they steal water; however, there
will probably be nice crops of mushrooms of various sorts in the coming
years, and if there are large roots left, they'll eventually decay and cause
a local soil collapse -- that's pretty easy to repair.


The weeds, if I go over the lawn with a rotavator, will they grow back
through the new lawn? What can I do to stop this?


Yup. If it's a small area, then I'd probably use cardboard or other light-
occlusive mulch to kill the vegetation in the lawn areas (it'll take several
months). Then, late this summer/early fall, when growing conditions are good
for germinating grass, I'd till and amend and seed. Try to keep foot traffic
off the newly seeded areas until the grasses are well established, probably
late next spring (put down some temporary stepping stones if you need to get
from point A to point B, and reseed those areas the following fall.)

You'll likely have a little hand weeding to do, but if you get good grass
establishment (and follow up with fertilizer as needed -- get a soil test
before you start), you should have very little trouble. Mow the lawn as
needed -- be diligent about not letting it get too long and then scalping it
for a year or two at least -- and you should be well on your way to having
a nice lawn.

Do you know how to do a soil shake test? That will tell you a lot about what
amendments you might want for the soil. When I hear someone saying they're
going to add something to the soil without saying what problem they're trying
to correct, I start getting a little nervous.

I don't know if you can get this book easily over there, and it's a bit old,
but it's the title I give to beginning gardeners. There's a very nice
set of chapters on soil, water, light, weeds, etc., as well as one on lawns.
As you can guess from the name, it's geared to organic gardening; even if you
prefer to use, say, synthetic fertilizers, it's a good foundation for
understanding the basics of gardening and why certain factors are important.
http://www.worldcat.org/title/rodales-chemical-free-yard-garden-the-ultimate-authority-on-successful-organic-gardening/oclc/22810546&referer=brief_results

Looks like you can pick up a copy from amazon.co.uk for about 1.5 quid.



Owen28 22-06-2012 12:25 PM

Thanks for all of your help. It looks like ive got some research To be doing regarding soil, weeding and lawns in general. I will wear safety boots when using the rotavator and will avoid areas near the large roots, and do this part by hand.

I am going to look in to soil tests etc.

The dogs will be fine, they can go in the front garden until the garden is sorted. They are never left outside for longer than ten minutes anyways unless we are with them in the garden.

It seems this is going to be more work than I first anticipated. The weeds / bits of grass have grown considerably in the last month. I will start work on it next month when my broken ankle is full healed.

Thanks.

Matt.

Brooklyn1 22-06-2012 04:26 PM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
Owen28@gardenbanana wrote:

What a slimey method for attempting to impress folks that you have a
girlfriend when obviously you don't. WTF does whose garden it is have
to do with anything?!?!?


Kay Lancaster 23-06-2012 03:01 AM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 11:25:07 +0000, Owen28 wrote:
It seems this is going to be more work than I first anticipated. The
weeds / bits of grass have grown considerably in the last month. I will
start work on it next month when my broken ankle is full healed.


In that case, do yourself a favor and start smothering the grass and weeds
with cardboard or the like (old carpet is good, too, if you happen to be
ripping that out of the house). The less long, live stuff you have to
till through, the happier both you and the tiller will be.

Kay


Owen28 23-06-2012 08:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brooklyn1 (Post 962616)
Owen28@gardenbanana wrote:

What a slimey method for attempting to impress folks that you have a
girlfriend when obviously you don't. WTF does whose garden it is have
to do with anything?!?!?

Haha if you say so you absolute pube.

O.k sorry, i need help with a garden. thanks for your help Brooklyn you weapon.

Get a life.

Brooklyn1 23-06-2012 11:33 PM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
Owen28 wrote:
Brooklyn1 wrote:
Owen28@gardenbanana wrote:-

What a slimey method for attempting to impress folks that you have a
girlfriend when obviously you don't. WTF does whose garden it is have
to do with anything?!?!?


Haha if you say so you absolute pube.

O.k sorry, i need help with a garden. thanks for your help Brooklyn you
weapon.

Get a life.


Don't you realize that those who have on their mind to tell people to
get a life it's only because they themselves don't have a life.

Why don't you start over, just ask for help with *a* garden... no one
cares that it's your girlfriend's garden unless you are going to post
nude pictures of your girlfriend... this Newgroup is not about
girlfriends... for that you want Jerry Springer and Dr. Phil. Simply
describe the garden; where/climate, size, terrain, soil type, sun
exposure, any existing plants/trees... all the vital statistics you
can think of to do with gardening. It also helps to know your budget
and whether this garden is owned or rented.. it'd be silly to spend
much improving the property of a landlord unless one can bargain for a
rent reduction, and also get permission (in writing) to make any
alterations. And obviously some decent photos of the space in
question would be invaluable.



David Hare-Scott[_2_] 23-06-2012 11:35 PM

Help with my girlfriends garden...
 
Brooklyn1 wrote:
Owen28 wrote:
Brooklyn1 wrote:
Owen28@gardenbanana wrote:-

What a slimey method for attempting to impress folks that you have a
girlfriend when obviously you don't. WTF does whose garden it is
have to do with anything?!?!?


Haha if you say so you absolute pube.

O.k sorry, i need help with a garden. thanks for your help Brooklyn
you weapon.

Get a life.


Don't you realize that those who have on their mind to tell people to
get a life it's only because they themselves don't have a life.

Why don't you start over, just ask for help with *a* garden... no one
cares that it's your girlfriend's garden unless you are going to post
nude pictures of your girlfriend... this Newgroup is not about
girlfriends... for that you want Jerry Springer and Dr. Phil. Simply
describe the garden; where/climate, size, terrain, soil type, sun
exposure, any existing plants/trees... all the vital statistics you
can think of to do with gardening. It also helps to know your budget
and whether this garden is owned or rented.. it'd be silly to spend
much improving the property of a landlord unless one can bargain for a
rent reduction, and also get permission (in writing) to make any
alterations. And obviously some decent photos of the space in
question would be invaluable.


What! Is this you sober and reasonable? Why don't you try staying that
way.

D



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