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#1
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Lawn spiking gizmo
I have a very mossy lawn, which I gather needs (amongst other things) a
good working over with a fork to provide better drainage. I have acquired a gadget which purports to perform this rather onerous task with minimal effort - think it came from the mailorder firm Coopers or somewhere? It has two 6" wheels and a long handle, with lots of spikes on springs attached to a 15"-wide frame which spans the wheels; the spikes prod the ground to a depth of approx 2" as you roll this contraption along the lawn. (It looks a bit like one of those old-fashioned manually-powered cylinder mowers with no grass box. Is this spiking deep enough to do any good, or are we talking chocolate teapots here? Thanks David |
#2
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X-posting this to uk.d-i-y: I bet someone *there* will have an answer!! :-P
Lobster wrote: I have a very mossy lawn, which I gather needs (amongst other things) a good working over with a fork to provide better drainage. I have acquired a gadget which purports to perform this rather onerous task with minimal effort - think it came from the mail-order firm Coopers or somewhere? It has two 6" wheels and a long handle, with lots of spikes on springs attached to a 15"-wide frame which spans the wheels; the spikes prod the ground to a depth of approx 2" as you roll this contraption along the lawn. (It looks a bit like one of those old-fashioned manually-powered cylinder mowers with no grass box). Is this spiking deep enough to do any good, or are we talking chocolate teapots here? Thanks David |
#3
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Lobster wrote:
X-posting this to uk.d-i-y: I bet someone *there* will have an answer!! :-P Lobster wrote: I have a very mossy lawn, which I gather needs (amongst other things) a good working over with a fork to provide better drainage. I have acquired a gadget which purports to perform this rather onerous task with minimal effort - think it came from the mail-order firm Coopers or somewhere? It has two 6" wheels and a long handle, with lots of spikes on springs attached to a 15"-wide frame which spans the wheels; the spikes prod the ground to a depth of approx 2" as you roll this contraption along the lawn. (It looks a bit like one of those old-fashioned manually-powered cylinder mowers with no grass box). Is this spiking deep enough to do any good, or are we talking chocolate teapots here? I speculate about all this lawn-aeration business that most of the time it won't make any difference, be the holes two inches or twenty inches deep. A good population of earthworms and other friends -- and, indeed, some enemies -- will do the job. What punching holes in the lawn _will_ do is let you brush in some sharp sand, which will make the soil texture more open at root level, especially if you keep it up for fifty years. Roots themselves do the same sort of thing as they penetrate and get eaten. I suspect the two-inch-prong machine may not make holes big enough in diameter to get the sand in there. But it's bound to loosen things up a bit after a season's family football or ferocious earth-flattening love-making, so it can't be a bad thing. But absolutely no surface treatment can help with poor underlying drainage. -- Mike. |
#4
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"Lobster" wrote in message ... X-posting this to uk.d-i-y: I bet someone *there* will have an answer!! :-P Lobster wrote: I have a very mossy lawn, which I gather needs (amongst other things) a good working over with a fork to provide better drainage. Improved drainage will stop it becoming mossy again but you will need to remove the moss first - either by scraping it off or with a moss killer and then scraping it off :-( |
#5
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"Mike Lyle" wrote in message ... Lobster wrote: X-posting this to uk.d-i-y: I bet someone *there* will have an answer!! :-P Lobster wrote: I have a very mossy lawn, which I gather needs (amongst other things) a good working over with a fork to provide better drainage. I have acquired a gadget which purports to perform this rather onerous task with minimal effort - think it came from the mail-order firm Coopers or somewhere? It has two 6" wheels and a long handle, with lots of spikes on springs attached to a 15"-wide frame which spans the wheels; the spikes prod the ground to a depth of approx 2" as you roll this contraption along the lawn. (It looks a bit like one of those old-fashioned manually-powered cylinder mowers with no grass box). Is this spiking deep enough to do any good, or are we talking chocolate teapots here? I speculate about all this lawn-aeration business that most of the time it won't make any difference, be the holes two inches or twenty inches deep. A good population of earthworms and other friends -- and, indeed, some enemies -- will do the job. What punching holes in the lawn _will_ do is let you brush in some sharp sand, which will make the soil texture more open at root level, especially if you keep it up for fifty years. Roots themselves do the same sort of thing as they penetrate and get eaten. I suspect the two-inch-prong machine may not make holes big enough in diameter to get the sand in there. But it's bound to loosen things up a bit after a season's family football or ferocious earth-flattening love-making, so it can't be a bad thing. But absolutely no surface treatment can help with poor underlying drainage. -- Mike. slitting is better 2 inches is not deep enough and spiking at the same depth will cause a pan and a root break leading to other problems. Forget the idiotic idea of sharp or builders sand if u have a clay soil this will make little diference as the soil particles will not combine. spray with a moss killer scarify slit tine then brush some seed in and feed, |
#6
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I have finally come up with a spectacular idea which will, at a stroke, solve the problem of compacted lawns, not to mention instant slug disposal, general drainage and the tricky issue of glamour in the garden.
Are you ready? My solution is.......stiletto wellies! Form an orderly queue please people. |
#7
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"undergroundbob" wrote in message ... I have finally come up with a spectacular idea which will, at a stroke, solve the problem of compacted lawns, not to mention instant slug disposal, general drainage and the tricky issue of glamour in the garden. Are you ready? My solution is.......stiletto wellies! Form an orderly queue please people. -- undergroundbob Are they patented?:-) Chris S |
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