Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
worms and lawns
In message , ®óñ© © ²°¹°
writes On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 18:23:21 +0100, Gordon H wrote: In message , Janet Tweedy writes I know the chemicals that you once could use to discourage worm casts have now been 'struck off' but is there nay other way that you can deter them? I have to cut a very large lawn and there's an immense amount of womcasts on the surface at the moment. Funnily enough the front lawn which i scarified way back in the spring has few cats on it but the back looks terrible with splodges of squashed soil all over it and which are now killing the grass in patches. Yes i know that worms are good esp3cially the ones in the compost but just wanted to know if you have found anything that deters them from the surface of lawns/ Janet Not a direct answer, but there is a bowling green behind our houses, and the greenkeeper[1] used to have a long, whippy flexible cane which he swiped back and forth across the green to remove worm casts. It scattered them rather than leave blotches where they had been trodden down. Have you got a whip? Are you sure he was removing worm casts? The green keepers prevent these happening on bowling greens and golf greens. He was probably whipping the surface to remove the dew. That did occur to me just as I posted! :-) The green now gets the cursory visits from a contracted company, although it is still in fair condition. -- Gordon H Remove "invalid" to reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
worms and lawns | Lawns | |||
Dog Worms: Understand Dog Worms Symptoms and Infestation | Gardening | |||
"Army Worms", "Bag Worms", ?? | Texas | |||
Peroxide use and Lawns and Gardens | Lawns | |||
Lawns - Mind your own business - and it does | United Kingdom |