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zoysiasod

Winterkill and trench composting

ZoysiaSod
12 years ago

Winterkill can happen even before winter and before any snowfall. My next door neighbor who spent $500 to

machine-aerate and seed his front lawn with a cool-season

mixture has a lot of winterkill showing right now.

He left lots of leaves on his lawn for a long time, and

a couple weeks ago he noticed grass was dying underneath

the big, matted leaves. I volunteered to rake his front

lawn free-of-charge last week since he's an older man who

is retired and his wife died several years ago of cancer.

He's also a really nice guy.

Wow, his lawn has about 30 spots of dead grass, each

spot roughly 4 inches by 3 inches (some a bit smaller,

some bigger).

I raked the leaves off my own lawn a day or two later.

This was the second time this season I raked leaves off

my lawn. A couple other times, I mulch-mowed the

leaves into the lawn. No winterkill here.

After raking, I dumped all the leaves in my veggie garden, and went to the nearby library to bag-mow part of its

cool-season, green lawn in order to dump the nitrogen-rich

green clippings onto my leaves in the veggie garden, so

the carbon-rich leaves will decompose faster, enriching

the soil for next season. My zoysia is all brown now, so

I had no choice but to get the green clippings from the

library's lawn.

It's been cold lately, like 40's and 30's. But on leaf-raking and bag-mowing days, the temp was 55 and 56* F. Good stroke of luck.

I then used a pitchfork to mix the leaves and grass

clippings into the garden's soil. I guess this qualifies

as "tilling"--though not roto-tilling. What do you

think of tilling that stuff into the garden soil? Should

I have just left it on top of the soil without

pitchfork-tilling it?

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