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#1
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Help please, new lawn turf dying
Hi,
I'm in need of some advice re my newly laid lawn. It was laid last week by a friend who 'supposed' to know what he was doing. It was really hot when it went down but he said that I shouldn't water it until the sun goes down or else I'll scorch the grass. It was completed about 3:00pm ish and then I went out. When I came back to water it at about 7:30 when the sun had started to set, all the turf had shrunk by at least 1 inch in between all the sections. I watered it for about 1 1/2 hours that night and when I got up in the morning it was worse. I watered it again in the evening, again when the sun had gone down (as he'd told me to do) but the gaps had got bigger 2 -3 inches. He came around the next day whilst I was at work and said he'd fixed it. He'd pulled all the sections together again. But now I noticed it was going yellow in a lot of places. I would say about 30 - 35% of it now is yellow. Its quite a big plot, 110 square meters and all the joining lines have gone yellow as well as the first 3-4 runs of the longest side. I've continued to water it every evening when I've got home from work but it doesn't seem to be having any affect on it at all. Also a lot of the joins between the sections are now overlapping were he's moved them to join the gaps. I really don't know what to do next the whole lawn is just a mess. Can anyone give any advice please? Thanks in advance, Ian |
#2
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Help please, new lawn turf dying
On Jun 5, 10:33*am, ianh wrote:
Hi, I'm in need of some advice re my newly laid lawn. It was laid last week by a friend who 'supposed' to know what he was doing. It was really hot when it went down but he said that I shouldn't water it until the sun goes down or else I'll scorch the grass. That's your first clue that your friend doesn't know what he's talking about. Surely you've seen turf after a brief thunderstorm. Ever see it get scorched? There are vaild reasons for not watering ESTABLISHED turf during the day. Those would be that more water is lost due to evaporation due to heat. And wind is usually higher during the day, which increases evaporation and can also blow sprinklers off course. But that does not apply to newly laid sod, which should be thorougly watered and soaked immediately. It was completed about 3:00pm ish and then I went out. When I came back to water it at about 7:30 when the sun had started to set, all the turf had shrunk by at least 1 inch in between all the sections. I watered it for about 1 1/2 hours that night and when I got up in the morning it was worse. I watered it again in the evening, again when the sun had gone down (as he'd told me to do) but the gaps had got bigger 2 -3 inches. So now you should know for sure he doesn't have a clue. He came around the next day whilst I was at work and said he'd fixed it. He'd pulled all the sections together again. But now I noticed it was going yellow in a lot of places. I would say about 30 - 35% of it now is yellow. Its quite a big plot, 110 square meters and all the joining lines have gone yellow as well as the first 3-4 runs of the longest side. I've continued to water it every evening when I've got home from work but it doesn't seem to be having any affect on it at all. Also a lot of the joins between the sections are now overlapping were he's moved them to join the gaps. So, he thinks overlapping sod is a good idea too. I really don't know what to do next the whole lawn is just a mess. First, don't let the idiot touch it anymore or listen to his advice. Second, stop overlapping it and shifting it around. Third, water it every day for the first week. During mid-day, when it's hot is the best time, as that gives it some relief from the heat too. After the first week, you can start backing off to every other day for another 2 weeks or so, then every 3 days for another month, etc. Each time you want to put down enough water so that the soil is kept thoroughly moistened. Given that you listened to clueless, you may have other problems related to how the site was prepped too. Didn't you get instructions with the sod? If not, some googling should produce plenty. Can anyone give any advice please? Thanks in advance, Ian -- ianh |
#3
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Help please, new lawn turf dying
trader4 wrote:
ianh wrote: Hi, I'm in need of some advice re my newly laid lawn. It was laid last week by a friend who 'supposed' to know what he was doing. It was really hot when it went down but he said that I shouldn't water it until the sun goes down or else I'll scorch the grass. That's your first clue that your friend doesn't know what he's talking about. Surely you've seen turf after a brief thunderstorm. Ever see it get scorched? There are vaild reasons for not watering ESTABLISHED turf during the day. Those would be that more water is lost due to evaporation due to heat. And wind is usually higher during the day, which increases evaporation and can also blow sprinklers off course. But that does not apply to newly laid sod, which should be thorougly watered and soaked immediately. trader4 has the water recommendation completely correct when dealing with sod. It was completed about 3:00pm ish and then I went out. When I came back to water it at about 7:30 when the sun had started to set, all the turf had shrunk by at least 1 inch in between all the sections. I watered it for about 1 1/2 hours that night and when I got up in the morning it was worse. I watered it again in the evening, again when the sun had gone down (as he'd told me to do) but the gaps had got bigger 2 -3 inches. So now you should know for sure he doesn't have a clue. He came around the next day whilst I was at work and said he'd fixed it. He'd pulled all the sections together again. But now I noticed it was going yellow in a lot of places. I would say about 30 - 35% of it now is yellow. Its quite a big plot, 110 square meters and all the joining lines have gone yellow as well as the first 3-4 runs of the longest side. I've continued to water it every evening when I've got home from work but it doesn't seem to be having any affect on it at all. Also a lot of the joins between the sections are now overlapping were he's moved them to join the gaps. So, he thinks overlapping sod is a good idea too. I really don't know what to do next the whole lawn is just a mess. First, don't let the idiot touch it anymore or listen to his advice. Second, stop overlapping it and shifting it around. Third, water it every day for the first week. During mid-day, when it's hot is the best time, as that gives it some relief from the heat too. After the first week, you can start backing off to every other day for another 2 weeks or so, then every 3 days for another month, etc. Each time you want to put down enough water so that the soil is kept thoroughly moistened. Given that you listened to clueless, you may have other problems related to how the site was prepped too. Didn't you get instructions with the sod? If not, some googling should produce plenty. I'd wager the site preparation was totally incorrect and the roots are going to be trying in vain to punch through a hard pan which is nearly impossible. Can anyone give any advice please? Thanks in advance, Ian -- ianh |
#4
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Help please, new lawn turf dying
"ianh" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm in need of some advice re my newly laid lawn. It was laid last week by a friend who 'supposed' to know what he was doing. It was really hot when it went down but he said that I shouldn't water it until the sun goes down or else I'll scorch the grass. It was completed about 3:00pm ish and then I went out. When I came back to water it at about 7:30 when the sun had started to set, all the turf had shrunk by at least 1 inch in between all the sections. I watered it for about 1 1/2 hours that night and when I got up in the morning it was worse. I watered it again in the evening, again when the sun had gone down (as he'd told me to do) but the gaps had got bigger 2 -3 inches. He came around the next day whilst I was at work and said he'd fixed it. He'd pulled all the sections together again. But now I noticed it was going yellow in a lot of places. I would say about 30 - 35% of it now is yellow. Its quite a big plot, 110 square meters and all the joining lines have gone yellow as well as the first 3-4 runs of the longest side. I've continued to water it every evening when I've got home from work but it doesn't seem to be having any affect on it at all. Also a lot of the joins between the sections are now overlapping were he's moved them to join the gaps. I really don't know what to do next the whole lawn is just a mess. Can anyone give any advice please? Thanks in advance, Ian -- ianh Ian - you've given us enough information to know that things are going badly, and some clues that there may be other problems -- There are a couple of things you didn't mention that may make the situation worse: 1. Was anything done to improve the site before the sod went down? (e.g., is it on a prepared bed of good soil or was it just laid on top of an existing weedy area? 2. Was it a good quality sod from a professional source or was it something that was taken out by hand from another area using amateur tools? Watering -- New sod must be kept from drying out - especially the roots. Rather than drenching it for hours 1-2X a day, it's better to put down about 1/2" of water several times during the day until the root system can take hold, keeping it moist but not saturated.. I have trouble thinking of a place in the UK where it would be so hot that the sod would dry out as fast as you've described. You may have more than one problem -- if sections are turning brown, it may be because it's dried out - but if it's turning yellow it could be because it's gotten too much water and the roots can't take up oxygen and nutrients. You need to find the intermediate point where the sod doesn't dry out but also does not stay flooded. If the site wasn't prepared properly there isn't much you can do now except try to keep this grass growing - the grass blades are reacting to the lack of a supporting root structure to provide nutrients. If you can keep the sod from drying out, the roots will eventually become strong enough to support new blade growth. In the meantime it'll look bad. Typically in poorly laid sod the edge of each piece will dry out first resulting in a checkerboard appearance, which is amplified if the pieces have shrunk and left gaps. One thing you can do is fill in gaps between sod pieces with compost which will help hold water and keep the edges from drying out. The compost will also take up standing moisture and stabilize the situation if you're using too much water. For the first couple of weeks it's going to look bad - worse because of the advice you were given about watering. With good sping season rains and supplemental watering when needed to keep things from drying out, in a couple of weeks it will start to take hold and look better. So the two things I think you should be careful of a -- Don't flood it, but don't let it completely dry out, and -- Fill in gaps between the sod to help hold in moisture. Right now, it probably looks about as bad as it's going to get -- |
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