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#1
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No, they didn't. The reason is to let the soil settle. At the moment we have just stones, soil and weeds. So turning it over, levelling it and letting more weeds grow would actually be an improvement. I know more weeds will grow, my reason for killing these is because the whole area is thick with weeds that have had years to establish before we built our house. It just means removing less weeds later (ones that aren't as well established and deeply rooted) before laying turf. It's just saving a bit of time later so the majority of the hard work is done (levelling). I understand that some might advise kiling all the weeds at once.
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#2
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First lawn, first post. In need of advice....
TeaBag wrote:
[_2_ Wrote: ;983851'] That's a bad strategy. What's the point to killing weeds now and turning over the soil so that new weeds will grow all summer? I don't think anyone here ever told you to do that. No, they didn't. The reason is to let the soil settle. At the moment we have just stones, soil and weeds. So turning it over, levelling it and letting more weeds grow would actually be an improvement. I know more weeds will grow, my reason for killing these is because the whole area is thick with weeds that have had years to establish before we built our house. It just means removing less weeds later (ones that aren't as well established and deeply rooted) before laying turf. It's just saving a bit of time later so the majority of the hard work is done (levelling). I understand that some might advise kiling all the weeds at once. I did have good results once ridding an area of weeds by rototilling them under, then rototilling again a few more times during the summer to turn under any weeds that sprouted, before they went to seed. If you have a tiller, you could try this. Billy would tell you that tilling destroys the "soil structure", so take that into consideration. |
#3
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First lawn, first post. In need of advice....
On Jun 5, 3:10*am, TeaBag wrote:
[_2_ Wrote: ;983851'] That's a bad strategy. *What's the point to killing weeds now and turning over the soil so that new weeds will grow all summer? *I don't think anyone here ever told you to do that. No, they didn't. The reason is to let the soil settle. At the moment we have just stones, soil and weeds. So turning it over, levelling it and letting more weeds grow would actually be an improvement. I know more weeds will grow, my reason for killing these is because the whole area is thick with weeds that have had years to establish before we built our house. It just means removing less weeds later (ones that aren't as well established and deeply rooted) before laying turf. Removing weeds multiple times over months prior to putting down turf is just more work. But whatever floats your boat. It's just saving a bit of time later Spending 10 hours over months to make 2 hours less work later doesn't compute for me. so the majority of the hard work is done (levelling). I understand that some might advise kiling all the weeds at once. -- TeaBag |
#4
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Bob F: Thanks for your continued comments; always constructive and helpful.
Trader 4: I don't like the tone in your replies. Maybe that could be addressed. Thanks to all who have contributed. My time here is done. |
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