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#1
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Rejuvinate a lawn
After having an extension built three years ago my enclosed back garden was
turfed and everything seemed perfect until about a year ago when the grass became very patchy and seemed to recede to be replaced by large areas of clay. It's even more galling that prior to the turfing the lawn had always been fine. The open plan west facing front lawn was also done slightly later but is not suffering the same conditions. Can anyone please suggest simple straightforward steps to return the lawn to the grassy area it once was that my children can play on. A local small bedding plant seller has suggested Canadian Grass Seed & sprinkling top soil on it but the national chain round here doesn't stock it the grass seed and has not proved to be very helpful. Any suggestions please would be kindly received |
#2
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Peter Noone wrote:
After having an extension built three years ago my enclosed back garden was turfed and everything seemed perfect until about a year ago when the grass became very patchy and seemed to recede to be replaced by large areas of clay. It's even more galling that prior to the turfing the lawn had always been fine. The open plan west facing front lawn was also done slightly later but is not suffering the same conditions. Can anyone please suggest simple straightforward steps to return the lawn to the grassy area it once was that my children can play on. A local small bedding plant seller has suggested Canadian Grass Seed & sprinkling top soil on it but the national chain round here doesn't stock it the grass seed and has not proved to be very helpful. Any suggestions please would be kindly received I don't know how soon after the turfing you started getting the bare patches; but if the turf went on top of the old lawn it may have died because it didn't have properly prepared soil to root into. I suggest scratching up the bare patches to see what's underneath: if you find a serious layer of dead plant matter, tell the turfing contractor to come round and do it properly this time, or at least go round and smash his windows. Otherwise, the clay you mention suggests the soil may be difficult to keep moist in dry weather. You could fork and rake in some organic material and sow some more seed, and nurture the result rather carefully for a year or so. For a play lawn, the cheapest seed is usually the best, as it's likely to contain the tougher grasses. Don't listen to anybody trying to flog the Canadian stuff: it's a great country, but this isn't Canada. -- Mike. |
#3
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I know that the company used machinery to take the top layer of grass off
and then churn up the soil underneath cos I saw the ploughed garden & cos my wife reported what they had been doing - so I have started to wonder whether they took the top soil layer off & brought the clay from below. This effect has only started in the past year before that we were perfectly happy with the turfed lawn. It has always been really sodden in the winter and was supposed to have been improved by the use of a soakaway that they out in underneath the edge of the loan nearest the house. Now it has a strange spongey feel to the ground when you walk on it even though it is bone dry at the moment and large cracks have appeared cos of the weather this summer. I take your point re the turfers but surely its too late to go back to them now & they were not the prettiest bunch of knuckle trailers. "Mike Lyle" wrote in message ... Peter Noone wrote: After having an extension built three years ago my enclosed back garden was turfed and everything seemed perfect until about a year ago when the grass became very patchy and seemed to recede to be replaced by large areas of clay. It's even more galling that prior to the turfing the lawn had always been fine. The open plan west facing front lawn was also done slightly later but is not suffering the same conditions. Can anyone please suggest simple straightforward steps to return the lawn to the grassy area it once was that my children can play on. A local small bedding plant seller has suggested Canadian Grass Seed & sprinkling top soil on it but the national chain round here doesn't stock it the grass seed and has not proved to be very helpful. Any suggestions please would be kindly received I don't know how soon after the turfing you started getting the bare patches; but if the turf went on top of the old lawn it may have died because it didn't have properly prepared soil to root into. I suggest scratching up the bare patches to see what's underneath: if you find a serious layer of dead plant matter, tell the turfing contractor to come round and do it properly this time, or at least go round and smash his windows. Otherwise, the clay you mention suggests the soil may be difficult to keep moist in dry weather. You could fork and rake in some organic material and sow some more seed, and nurture the result rather carefully for a year or so. For a play lawn, the cheapest seed is usually the best, as it's likely to contain the tougher grasses. Don't listen to anybody trying to flog the Canadian stuff: it's a great country, but this isn't Canada. -- Mike. |
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