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revert 01-03-2006 07:32 PM

Starting a new lawn?
 
1 Attachment(s)
Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience. We moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc? Thanks.

Scott Sexton 01-03-2006 11:33 PM

Starting a new lawn?
 
In article , revert.2409z8
@gardenbanter.co.uk says...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience. We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden.jpg |
|Download: http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2896|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

--
revert

I would suggest talking to a LOCAL nursery or gardening shop. They will
know what grows in your area.

*************************************************
Scott H. Sexton help@
www.sexton.com sexton.com
Eeyore's Birthday Party http://eeyores.sexton.com
*************************************************

David Wright 01-03-2006 11:44 PM

Starting a new lawn?
 

"revert" wrote in message
...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience. We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.
revert


You didn't say where you live in west Texas, but anywhere out there is going
to present a challenge, in both water usage and labor, to maintain a lawn.
Alternatively, there are perennial native plants that are beautiful, drought
hardy, and attractive to hummingbirds and butterflies. Esperanza (also
called Yellow Bells) and Desert Willow are two from west Texas that I have
in my yard. There are more.

Please don't succumb to the idea that you must have a lawn no matter where
you live. What a waste of precious water to try to make grass grow where it
doesn't want to!

David



Jim Marrs 02-03-2006 12:22 AM

Starting a new lawn?
 
As a native born West Texan, I strongly suggest you plant a good
Bermuda. Bermuda is very drought tolerant, uses less water than most grasses
(like St Augustine). The cons: some times hard to control from invading
flower beds and goes dormant and looks dead in the winter. Some ( myself
included) do not mind a dead looking winter lawn.

Good Luck and have fun

JEM
"revert" wrote in message
...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience. We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden.jpg |
|Download: http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2896|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

--
revert




revert 02-03-2006 03:15 AM

Thanks for the reply's, i'm in El Paso. We alread have some seed, given to us. Pennington Bermuda, Sahara. It's my wife that really wants a lawn and i'm not going to argue with her. I figured with the Bermuda i might get away with watering twice a week and i may only seed part of the back yard.

I guess what i need to know is whether or not i should hire a tiller and start fresh, there's patches of grass as you can see in the pictures. I'm also guessing it's a little early to be seeding right now?

Thanks again.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim Marrs
As a native born West Texan, I strongly suggest you plant a good
Bermuda. Bermuda is very drought tolerant, uses less water than most grasses
(like St Augustine). The cons: some times hard to control from invading
flower beds and goes dormant and looks dead in the winter. Some ( myself
included) do not mind a dead looking winter lawn.

Good Luck and have fun

JEM
"revert" wrote in message
...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience. We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden.jpg |
|Download: http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2896|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

--
revert


Bud Stein 02-03-2006 10:31 AM

Starting a new lawn?
 
revert wrote:
Thanks for the reply's, i'm in El Paso. We alread have some seed, given
to us. Pennington Bermuda, Sahara. It's my wife that really wants a
lawn and i'm not going to argue with her. I figured with the Bermuda i
might get away with watering twice a week and i may only seed part of
the back yard.


Revert,

I am not from West Texas but when traveling through El Paso, I only see
green lawns and trees where irrigation canals flooded with water exist.

Bud Stein

revert 03-03-2006 12:24 AM

Bud, you'd be surprised, there's a lot of green lawn around here. Our next door niegbours is beautiful though dormant right now. In El Paso a lot of people don't care for their gardens but the ones who have great grass.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bud Stein
revert wrote:
Thanks for the reply's, i'm in El Paso. We alread have some seed, given
to us. Pennington Bermuda, Sahara. It's my wife that really wants a
lawn and i'm not going to argue with her. I figured with the Bermuda i
might get away with watering twice a week and i may only seed part of
the back yard.


Revert,

I am not from West Texas but when traveling through El Paso, I only see
green lawns and trees where irrigation canals flooded with water exist.

Bud Stein


Latosha Washington 07-03-2006 04:32 AM

Starting a new lawn?
 
The seed is going to take some work - rack it in with good dirt, water
often, and fertilize. I use the Greensense 6-2-4 natural lawn and garden
fertilizer (you can get this at Casa Verde Nursery I think and also AAFES
usually). Also, the seeds need the day temps to be in the 80s to germinate
properly, and not tool cold at night so you might want to wait a few weeks.
Make sure you treat for fungus if you water often, and don't forget to treat
for grubs around May.

The baby seedlings will die in the sun if not watered often (like every day
for several weeks).




"revert" wrote in message
...

Thanks for the reply's, i'm in El Paso. We alread have some seed, given
to us. Pennington Bermuda, Sahara. It's my wife that really wants a
lawn and i'm not going to argue with her. I figured with the Bermuda i
might get away with watering twice a week and i may only seed part of
the back yard.

I guess what i need to know is whether or not i should hire a tiller
and start fresh, there's patches of grass as you can see in the
pictures. I'm also guessing it's a little early to be seeding right
now?

Thanks again.

Jim Marrs Wrote:
As a native born West Texan, I strongly suggest you plant a good
Bermuda. Bermuda is very drought tolerant, uses less water than most
grasses
(like St Augustine). The cons: some times hard to control from
invading
flower beds and goes dormant and looks dead in the winter. Some (
myself
included) do not mind a dead looking winter lawn.

Good Luck and have fun

JEM
"revert" wrote in message
...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience.
We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden.jpg |
|Download:
http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2896|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

--
revert



--
revert




revert 10-03-2006 08:40 PM

Thanks for the tips Latosha. I'll keep them in mind. Probably going to start seeding in a months time.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Latosha Washington
The seed is going to take some work - rack it in with good dirt, water
often, and fertilize. I use the Greensense 6-2-4 natural lawn and garden
fertilizer (you can get this at Casa Verde Nursery I think and also AAFES
usually). Also, the seeds need the day temps to be in the 80s to germinate
properly, and not tool cold at night so you might want to wait a few weeks.
Make sure you treat for fungus if you water often, and don't forget to treat
for grubs around May.

The baby seedlings will die in the sun if not watered often (like every day
for several weeks).




"revert" wrote in message
...

Thanks for the reply's, i'm in El Paso. We alread have some seed, given
to us. Pennington Bermuda, Sahara. It's my wife that really wants a
lawn and i'm not going to argue with her. I figured with the Bermuda i
might get away with watering twice a week and i may only seed part of
the back yard.

I guess what i need to know is whether or not i should hire a tiller
and start fresh, there's patches of grass as you can see in the
pictures. I'm also guessing it's a little early to be seeding right
now?

Thanks again.

Jim Marrs Wrote:
As a native born West Texan, I strongly suggest you plant a good
Bermuda. Bermuda is very drought tolerant, uses less water than most
grasses
(like St Augustine). The cons: some times hard to control from
invading
flower beds and goes dormant and looks dead in the winter. Some (
myself
included) do not mind a dead looking winter lawn.

Good Luck and have fun

JEM
"revert"
wrote in message
...

Looking for some advice about my lawn has i have little experience.
We
moved into this house recently and would like to have a nice lawn. We
live in west texas, so it's hot and dry. The garden receives very
little shade as we're south facing.

I'm attaching an image to show it's current condition. Apparantly the
soil is pretty decent for this area. All i've really done so far is
kill off most of the weeds. Should we be starting anew, tilling etc?
Thanks.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden.jpg |
|Download:
http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2896|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

--
revert



--
revert



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