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StupidBoyPike 29-01-2011 01:57 PM

Advice about planting on previously covered land
 
Hi everyone,

Glad to have found this forum with lots of helpful advice.

We have just moved into a place with a back garden which is paved and covered in gravel. Beneath the gravel is a liner, placed there to prevent protrusion of weeds.

Are there any precautions of special preparations we should take before planting this area (as lawn, or for vegetable) once we've removed the gravel and lining?

Many thanks,

Pike.

Bob Hobden 29-01-2011 04:56 PM

Advice about planting on previously covered land
 


"StupidBoyPike" wrote...


Hi everyone,

Glad to have found this forum with lots of helpful advice.

Forum? FORUM? How dare you! It's a Newsgroup on Usenet. Look those up
on Wiki. :-)

We have just moved into a place with a back garden which is paved and
covered in gravel. Beneath the gravel is a liner, placed there to
prevent protrusion of weeds.

Are there any precautions of special preparations we should take before
planting this area (as lawn, or for vegetable) once we've removed the
gravel and lining?

You need to ensure the soil has not compacted over time before you
lay a lawn especially if it contains any clay or you will have constant
problems with mud and moss. Time spent now getting it right will be repaid
100 fold. You might be able to use some of the gravel, dug in to improve
drainage, if that is the case.

With veg you need to check the pH of the soil as it often turns acid under
fabric, easily remedied with Garden Lime, aim for a pH of just under pH7.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden


Jake 29-01-2011 06:20 PM

Advice about planting on previously covered land
 
On Sat, 29 Jan 2011 16:56:10 -0000, "Bob Hobden"
wrote:



"StupidBoyPike" wrote...


Hi everyone,

Glad to have found this forum with lots of helpful advice.

Forum? FORUM? How dare you! It's a Newsgroup on Usenet. Look those up
on Wiki. :-)

We have just moved into a place with a back garden which is paved and
covered in gravel. Beneath the gravel is a liner, placed there to
prevent protrusion of weeds.

Are there any precautions of special preparations we should take before
planting this area (as lawn, or for vegetable) once we've removed the
gravel and lining?

You need to ensure the soil has not compacted over time before you
lay a lawn especially if it contains any clay or you will have constant
problems with mud and moss. Time spent now getting it right will be repaid
100 fold. You might be able to use some of the gravel, dug in to improve
drainage, if that is the case.

With veg you need to check the pH of the soil as it often turns acid under
fabric, easily remedied with Garden Lime, aim for a pH of just under pH7.


If I may tweak Bob's advice just a bit - if the underlying soil is
heavy clay, digging the gravel in will probably not really help as the
gravel will be too big. You need to intriduce something much smaller,
such as coarse grit, to provide drainage, particularly if you're going
to lay a lawn.

It's a fair bet that the soil will have compacted so hiring (and
*using* before some clever spark chips in!) a rotavator for a day
will pay dividends whether for lawn or veg.


redruthgardener 29-01-2011 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StupidBoyPike (Post 911405)
Hi everyone,

Glad to have found this forum with lots of helpful advice.

We have just moved into a place with a back garden which is paved and covered in gravel. Beneath the gravel is a liner, placed there to prevent protrusion of weeds.

Are there any precautions of special preparations we should take before planting this area (as lawn, or for vegetable) once we've removed the gravel and lining?

Many thanks,

Pike.

hi, I should imagine ground is pretty compacted ,digging over or rotivating would be essential before planting or laying a lawn.

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 30-01-2011 12:28 PM

Advice about planting on previously covered land
 
In article ,
says...

Hi everyone,

Glad to have found this forum with lots of helpful advice.

We have just moved into a place with a back garden which is paved and
covered in gravel. Beneath the gravel is a liner, placed there to
prevent protrusion of weeds.

Are there any precautions of special preparations we should take before
planting this area (as lawn, or for vegetable) once we've removed the
gravel and lining?

Many thanks,

Pike.




--
StupidBoyPike

The two main problems with ground covered like this are compaction and
lack of humus (organic matter) I would include plenty of bulky organic
matter when rotatavating as others have suggested
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea


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