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Ignoramus24949 01-04-2004 02:02 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
i have some bald spots in grass. What is the proper procedure to
re-seed them.

They appeared due to two causes, either one of another:

1. too much walking

2. Some areas are shady and somewhat arid due to a hill.

Any ideas on how I can get a good grass going. Should I rent a power
rake, any fertiliser to buy, etc?

i

v 01-04-2004 02:52 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.

v 01-04-2004 02:52 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.

Sporkman 01-04-2004 03:18 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.

Mark 'Sporky' Stapleton
Watermark Design, LLC
http://www.h2omarkdesign.com

v wrote:

On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.


Sporkman 01-04-2004 03:18 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.

Mark 'Sporky' Stapleton
Watermark Design, LLC
http://www.h2omarkdesign.com

v wrote:

On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.


v 01-04-2004 03:57 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.

Sporkman 01-04-2004 04:19 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.

Mark 'Sporky' Stapleton
Watermark Design, LLC
http://www.h2omarkdesign.com

v wrote:

On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.


v 01-04-2004 04:19 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.

v 01-04-2004 04:54 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.

Sporkman 01-04-2004 05:25 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.

Mark 'Sporky' Stapleton
Watermark Design, LLC
http://www.h2omarkdesign.com

v wrote:

On 31 Mar 2004 20:38:36 GMT, someone wrote:

1. too much walking

Stop walking on it, to start with. You can seed it day after day but
if it is still being walked on it will not do any good. Of course
deflecting the walkers may just move a new bare spot elsewhere.

If you can't stop walking there, maybe you can't have grass in that
spot, that's what various types of pavers or paving is for.

-v.


shinypenny 01-04-2004 06:47 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Sporkman wrote in message ...
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.


And hopefully it's not grubs.

jen

shinypenny 01-04-2004 06:47 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Sporkman wrote in message ...
Dig up the earth there and discard the top two or three inches. Replace
with good topsoil. You may have something else going on. Sometimes a
pet's urine will spoil an area for growth for quite a while, or someone
having spilled gasoline on an area can prevent it from growing anything
for a couple of geologic epochs.


And hopefully it's not grubs.

jen

Dan Hartung 08-04-2004 02:32 PM

Seeding bald spots in grass
 
Ignoramus24949 wrote:
i have some bald spots in grass. What is the proper procedure to
re-seed them.

They appeared due to two causes, either one of another:

1. too much walking


You need to break up the soil. Core aerators are preferred but
expensive. A spike aerator or in a pinch a garden fork or rake could be
used. Get some air and water in there, fertilize, seed, water, hope.

Meanwhile, reroute the walking. (Or reason that it isn't possible and
put in some flagstone or something.) If you really can't, consider an
"overtime" seed mix that will give you a tougher, wider-blade grass
similar to what you might find on an athletic field.

There are lawn "patch" kits you can get that include seed, fertilizer
and peat moss to help but I've had only partial success with this method.

In any case as long as you moderate your expectations -- you may see 50%
improvement in coverage of the bald spot, for instance -- you should be
able to do OK.

2. Some areas are shady and somewhat arid due to a hill.

Any ideas on how I can get a good grass going. Should I rent a power
rake, any fertiliser to buy, etc?


Scotts has a four-step system which is probably a basic first step here.
(You can often get a generic alternative for a little less, e.g. at
Ace.) Basically spring, early summer, late summer, and fall, they're
different fertilizers for different growth seasons. Just try to go
through a full year doing all the right things on schedule and see if
that comes through for you -- because trying to fix a broken lawn can be
a lot of work that doesn't go anywhere. So try the easy route first.

For the shady areas, overseed with a shade-happy grass mix. Over a
couple of years that should improve things.



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