How do I turn a 25ft by 25ft space of pure weeds into a great lawn?
10 years ago
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How much time do you spend weeding?
Comments (24)All mulch provides an attractive place for slugs:dark, cool, moist. However, healthy plants will fend off all but the worst damage. If you're really worried about it, sow crushed egg shells around the perimeters of your plants. They are said to cut the slugs' bodies. Honest. If your (organic) garden is in a healthy balance, frogs and other small critters will come and eat the slugs and keep them from getting out of hand. (The exception to this might be the Pacific Northwest. I have read that they have monster slugs...) If there are perennial (or annual) weeds growing in the mulch, they will work their way up to the sunlight. When you see them first appear, pull them. The thicker your mulch the fewer will be the weeds. Since your paths are grassy, you will definitely have to fight grass encroachment. You might try a cut edge around your beds like perennial gardeners use. Personally, I have mulched paths with nothing growing in them. You should not mulch right up to the stem of the plants. Leave a couple of inches of bare space around each one to avoid rot problems....See MoreHow do I turn old farmland into a healthy lawn?
Comments (12)I agree with most of what has been said. However, RoundUp will not work against any of the remaining soybean plants. Unless your previous owner was stuck in the stone age, all the soybean seed sold now is RoundUp-Ready. That means you can spray RU on it all day long and nothing will happen. Does your builder have anything in the contract where he has to prepare the surrounding land for a garden? If so then you don't have to worry about anything. If not, then... The only tool necessary is a box blade on the back of a real tractor. You will definitely be able to find someone with that rig. It will take him about 2 hours to run your entire property unless you have lots of obstacles like trees, buried electrical or piping. BE ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN TO MAP THE LOCATIONS OF ANYTHING YOUR CONTRACTOR BURIES. And DO NOT let him bury construction material. Almost all of them will do that to some extent or other. Get a trash trailer onsite and make sure everything is cleaned up at the end of the day. Painters will want to clean up their brushes and rollers in the yard. Go ahead and let them do that. It really does not seem to harm the soil or plants. I also agree that 2.5 acres of grass is too much. I have a 1-acre lot out in the country and having half of that in grass is a LOT of grass. Start shopping now for riding mowers. If there is a guy in town who repairs them, ask him for advice on which ones need the fewest repairs. What are the garden restrictions you have to adhere to? Does the entire place need to be landscaped? Can you have a small orchard of citrus or nut trees? A rose garden? A statue garden? A gazebo? I have a long list of garden alternatives to grass but need to see the restrictions. Where are you located? Easton, MD (wild guess) Assuming you are in MD, then I would start researching Kentucky bluegrass as an ultimate turf type. I like it because it is very dense, spreads by itself, and never needs to be reseeded. It takes very well to organic fertilizer and does not need copious amounts. Still, if you want it to be extraordinarily nice, copious amounts or organics will do that for you. The drawback to KBG is that it will turn brown during the winter if it gets too cold. That can be minimized to a few weeks with some effort on your part, but it can be done by normal people without special equipment. The other popular grass for your area is fescue. These do not spread quickly and should be reseeded in the thin spots every fall. The fescues do remain green throughout the year so many people mix fescue with KBG to get the best of both grass types. It sounds like you will be moving in and doing grass no earlier than next summer. That could be perfect. If you will be putting sod down, that is good timing (not great but good). If you are going to seed, then the heat of summer is a really bad time to do that. I would propose waiting until late August for seed. For a first step in seeding, once the land was prepped with the box blade, cover the (small??) area you want in grass with a load of mulch until late August. If your construction goes like most, you might not be moving in until then anyway. Then you won't be needing the mulch and can go straight to seed. What an adventure! Glad you wrote in now rather than writing in July to say you just seeded and nothing happened. I would suggest keeping an eye on this forum and others during the spring and getting a feel for the general nature of the issues. Lawn care is very easy if you simply water and mow correctly. With proper watering and mowing you should not need herbicides, preemergents, insecticides, or fungicides. Watch and learn. Repetition helps you learn....See MoreAdvice on aerating lawn - should I hire? Can I do it? Should I buy?
Comments (37)morpheouspa. Gloves down here for a moment. What claims are you referring to that I have made about mechanical aeration? Granted, I do claim that there are purposes for which the employment of mechanical aeration can be useful and it irritates me to no end that people peremptorily discount mechanical aeration as being without any use. (in the past couple of months, I've seen were you have suggested? that plug aeration might be an aid in pursuing some outcome.) Are you saying that I have advocated mechanical aeration as a necessary continued lawn care practice? (Do you advocate the application of a surfactant as a necessary continuing lawn care practice?) Is it necessary to spam this site with links to hundreds of university turf programs that recommend home owner lawn aeration not only as a continuing lawn care practice, but for the prevention of disease, thatch LDS etc.? For what purpose? They are just conclusory statements, No more valid than anything you or anyone else can produce. What you linked to, rather than belittle you, look at the facts: First some of what they call aeration is plowing (bad for me) but anyway I counted 13 studies and of those, the majority showed some improvement to crop yield, none showed a decline. They do,make a conclusory statement that aeration will cause increased weeds. OK fine. Based on what? No ancillary evidence even? Did they atleast credit dchall for the quote or maybe daniel? So even though your site actually supports that aeration results in slightly greater % crop production than non aeration, I say irrelevant and useless for any support for either of us. This argument has been going on forever, but if you take the time to understand and observe, there are logical conclusions you can come to and when applied either work or don't. If X then Y, put it to the test, and if it repeats, then continue, whether it is surfacants, aeration, corn meal or Bayer. So recommend on your experience and give your rational when challenged. Caveat emptor. My goal for my lawn, and for those I give advice to, is to obtain a turf that in the shortest time possible will only require mowing, watering and fertilization. I endeavor to employ the least expensive, least labor intensive, but most effective methods for a healthy turf AND soil and those are the ones I promote. My questions were for the reader and therefor need no response from you . I will no longer joust this windmill with you or anyone else, but I will call out anyone who "make [an unsupportable} claim... or [spew} any other blatant lie"...See MoreLawn turning yellow - caused by alkaline soil? (pH 7.4)
Comments (9)Do you happen to live to the northeast of Springfield...sort of near that gigantic limestone quarry? I have a feeling that you could apply 1,000 pounds of sulfur per square inch from now on and never change your pH enough to make a difference. First you would have to dissolve all the limestone. Which means you'll have to adjust your expectations a little - but not much. When iron hits calcium at high pH numbers, the iron binds to the calcium and will not release to the plants. When the pH drops a little the iron is released and available to the grass. I'm an organic kind of guy so the first thing I look at is what the soil microbes can do for you. When they are well fed they can acidify the soil right at the root zone. That's where you need it. But when you get a gully washer of a rain storm, the excess water will wash that acidity out leaving you with something like what you have. We get that in Texas (limestone quarries everywhere). If you have something like we have then in the spring you will never know it was yellow. Something happens in the soil over the winter to release the iron. My belief is the microbes are busy acidifying the soil. It happens every year, so it's nothing I've done. One product we use down here to counteract the effect of the rain washing through is to apply green sand. Green sand is a complex assortment of minerals that has the consistency of sand and a dark olive drab color - hence the name. At a rate of 40 pounds per 1,000 square feet it will correct the soil and green up the grass. I would not use it at this time of year, because I'm certain your lawn will look great in April regardless of anything you try now. But keep that in the back of your mind. Your normal fertilizer schedule should be once in May, once in September, and once after the grass stops growing in the fall. Keep that in mind when talking to lawn maintenance companies. Weeding should be done on an individual basis. That means they spot spray the weeds and DO NOT apply a broadcast type of herbicide over the entire lawn. In addition to what the company applies, I would encourage you to apply at lease one dose of an organic fertilizer. On this and many other forums we use raw animal feed like soybean meal, corn meal, alfalfa pellets (rabbit sized), cottonseed meal, or whatever kind of ground up nut, bean, or seed you can find at your local feed store. The application rate is 15 - 20 pounds per 1,000 square feet. What this does is feed the microbes living in your soil. If they are not happy, then you will not be happy with your lawn. Once a year is enough, but I use it exclusively about 5 times per year. You can do what you want with that. Most of the serious grass gurus in the forums are 90-100% organic with fertilizer. You said you did not over or under water. Since you were just establishing a new lawn I'll let that go. As the weather warms up in the spring, you should water approximately once in March and April. In May, as the temps get into the 70s go to once every 3 weeks. When the temps get into the 80s go to once every 2 weeks. When it's in the 90s all week, go to once per week. When you water apply a full inch all at one time. Set out some tuna or cat food cans and time how long it takes your sprinklers to fill all the cans. That is your watering time. Mine takes 8 hours but my neighbor's high flow system takes only 20 minutes. Your time likely will be between those extremes. That time will be how long you water EVERY time you water from now on. That's the secret to infrequent watering and infrequent watering is the secret to having very few weeds. DO NOT LET ANYONE TALK YOU INTO WATERING A LITTLE BIT EVERY DAY. Here's an incentive picture for you on that topic. The picture was taken in July. Most everyone waters once a day except one....See MoreRelated Professionals
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