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#1
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Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the
crappy lawn. Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Questions: 1. My thought is to use a slit-seeder rented from home depot since previous attempts by just chucking down seed and watering has failed. Make sense? Other ideas? 2. Is now a good time to seed or should I wait 2 weeks or a month? Thanks for your guidance! |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ... Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the crappy lawn. Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Questions: 1. My thought is to use a slit-seeder rented from home depot since previous attempts by just chucking down seed and watering has failed. Make sense? Other ideas? 2. Is now a good time to seed or should I wait 2 weeks or a month? Thanks for your guidance! Early Fall late Summer is the proper time to plant so that the grass grows roots not top growth. If you seed now you can not use a crabicide. If I were in your place I would treat for crabgrass, feed it well and hope it fills in some, kill weeds all summer a seed heavy in the fall. You need 8-10 weeks of growing before the heavy frost to get established. -- Colbyt Please come visit www.househomerepair.com |
#3
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#4
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First thing is a soil test.
You especially want to adjust the pH towards neutral as soils tend towards acid in the northeast. Look in your phone book government pages for a cooperative extension service, most will test your soil for a nominal fee. As for seeding, seed tends to rot in the spring as the soil temps are low. Adjust your pH and fertility issues first and in the interim set your mower to cut as high as you can, the existing turfgrass can choke out the weeds if you let it grow a bit higher. |
#5
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On Apr 7, 6:21*pm, beecrofter wrote:
First thing is a soil test. You especially want to adjust the pH towards neutral as soils tend towards acid in the northeast. Look in your phone book government pages for a cooperative extension service, most will test your soil for a nominal fee. As for seeding, seed tends to rot in the spring as the soil temps are low. Adjust your pH and fertility issues first and in the interim set your mower to cut as high as you can, the existing turfgrass can choke out the weeds if you let it grow a bit higher. You can seed in Spring and the seed isn't going to rot. If seed rotted that easy, grass wouldn't survive on it's own. It takes soil temps in the 50s to germinate, which roughly translates into daytime temps in the 60's. But as another poster pointed out, Sept is the optimum time to seed. Then you have cooler weather, it's usually rainy, competition from weeds is greatly reduced, and you have 10 months for the grass to get established before it gets hit with the high temps and stress of Summer, which is particularly important if you have limited ability to water. If you seed in Spring, you need to be able to apply a lot of water to keep it wet to germinate and also during the hot summer months if there is no rain. You also can't use a conventional pre-emergent crabgrass control. There are others available, like Tupersan, but they do cost more. I'd probably do with the advice to apply pre-emergent and fertilizer now, then follow up with weed conrol. Usually spot treatment with a tank sprayer minimizes the use of herbicide and delivers it on target. Then, in Sept, you can use the slice seeder, Depending on how much good grass there is, you may also want to just kill the whole thing then with Roundup and re-seed with a quality grass of the appropriate type. If the lawn is a wreck, that approach can be more effective, than trying to salvage a lawn with some half-ass grass that may be of pure texture, color, disease prone, etc. Also, as suggested, check and adjust the PH as needed. And make sure you have 6+" of decent topsoil. |
#6
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On Apr 7, 3:16*pm, wrote:
Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the crappy lawn. *Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. *I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Lots of good advice in the posts here, but lets get down to the basics: 1) Most of the soil in NE is absolutely terrible. 2) Too many new houses (and likely yours) are built on graded subdivision land where the already pitiful topsoil is carted away since it interferes with getting the structure built. 3) Weeds will grow on almost anything that isn't impermeable rock and that's what you now have. Given these conditions, you first need to truck in some decent topsoil, like something from an ancient woodlot that has been clearcut. Lawn services will siphon off your money for years dumping chemicals on your sterile surface, and a decade hence you will still not have a stable topsoil. If the budget is slim, buy topsoil annually to improve selected areas and let it build up to a nice 6" over time. Then check prices on sod at the box store and put it down quickly to protect the precious topsoil. Feed it. weed it, trim it high and expect to spend three or more years getting it in the shape you want. It will be an exercise in persistence, so good luck. Joe |
#7
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#8
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On Apr 8, 10:16*am, TomC wrote:
wrote in news:793bb731-b47b-47b2-b427-b4b282adc093 @y21g2000hsf.googlegroups.com: Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the crappy lawn. *Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. *I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Questions: 1. My thought is to use a slit-seeder rented from home depot since previous attempts by just chucking down seed and watering has failed. Make sense? *Other ideas? 2. Is now a good time to seed or should I wait 2 weeks or a month? Thanks for your guidance! I went throught a similar experience in my new house in south central Pa. just three years ago . The top soil was basically turned under during the building process. So, the real problem is lack of fertile soil for the grass seed to get off to a good start. I had a soil test done at the local extension office. They recommended the type of grass seed (Kentucky Bluegrass) for my locale, and they said to use a starter fertilizer when I seeded, and to follow up with continued use of the starter fertilizer over the next three years, during the early spring, early summer, and late fall. Worked out great. Important steps a Get the right grass seed for your area; Use the correct starter fertilizer and apply it when you seed (expensive step, but if you don't do it the grass seed won't germinate in the poor soil); What's supposed to be expensive about applying starter fertilizer? It's about the same price as any other fertilizer. You can do a 10,000 sq ft lawn for $20 Insure good seed and soil contact; e.g. rake, cultivate, or use a slit seeder, etc.; Continue to fertilize poor soil for several years; To make most lawns look good and like the typical lawn people want, you'll need to fertilize every year. Kentucky bluegrass is one of the high maintenance lawns that requires more nitrogen. Be patient; it will grow and then you can spend a lot of time cutting it :-) If you seed in the spring and don't get enough rain to get that instant lush lawn, don't fret about it over the summer. It will grow in the fall. When you seed, you're surely not going to get a lush lawn for many months, with or without rain. And if you don't get enough rain when seeded, it will die, either right then, or later in the heat of summer because it doesn't have an established root system to sustain it through dry spells. When seeded, it needs to be kept constantly moist, which is nearly impossible if you're relying on rain. In short, if you can't irrigate a lawn, you're likely wasting a lot of time trying to establish a lawn from seed in Spring. In Fall, your chances are much better. Oh yea, about the weeds; I wasn't to concerned with them. For the most part they are green and will help to keep down erosion untill the lawn is established, then you can attack the weed problems. But, if weeds do really bother you and the current lawn isn't worth saving, spray the whole area with roundup and start over. Good luck! |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... On Apr 8, 10:16 am, TomC wrote: wrote in news:793bb731-b47b-47b2-b427-b4b282adc093 @y21g2000hsf.googlegroups.com: Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the crappy lawn. Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Questions: 1. My thought is to use a slit-seeder rented from home depot since previous attempts by just chucking down seed and watering has failed. Make sense? Other ideas? 2. Is now a good time to seed or should I wait 2 weeks or a month? Thanks for your guidance! I went throught a similar experience in my new house in south central Pa. just three years ago . The top soil was basically turned under during the building process. So, the real problem is lack of fertile soil for the grass seed to get off to a good start. I had a soil test done at the local extension office. They recommended the type of grass seed (Kentucky Bluegrass) for my locale, and they said to use a starter fertilizer when I seeded, and to follow up with continued use of the starter fertilizer over the next three years, during the early spring, early summer, and late fall. Worked out great. Important steps a Get the right grass seed for your area; Use the correct starter fertilizer and apply it when you seed (expensive step, but if you don't do it the grass seed won't germinate in the poor soil); What's supposed to be expensive about applying starter fertilizer? It's about the same price as any other fertilizer. You can do a 10,000 sq ft lawn for $20 Insure good seed and soil contact; e.g. rake, cultivate, or use a slit seeder, etc.; Continue to fertilize poor soil for several years; To make most lawns look good and like the typical lawn people want, you'll need to fertilize every year. Kentucky bluegrass is one of the high maintenance lawns that requires more nitrogen. Be patient; it will grow and then you can spend a lot of time cutting it :-) If you seed in the spring and don't get enough rain to get that instant lush lawn, don't fret about it over the summer. It will grow in the fall. When you seed, you're surely not going to get a lush lawn for many months, with or without rain. And if you don't get enough rain when seeded, it will die, either right then, or later in the heat of summer because it doesn't have an established root system to sustain it through dry spells. When seeded, it needs to be kept constantly moist, which is nearly impossible if you're relying on rain. In short, if you can't irrigate a lawn, you're likely wasting a lot of time trying to establish a lawn from seed in Spring. In Fall, your chances are much better. I set up a sprinkler on a hose with an electricic timer that allows me to have it turn on for 5-10 minutes 3 times a day to keep it damp (not soaked)until the seed sprouts. This has worked very well for me. |
#10
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I would get the soil analyzed. I suspect you don't have good top
soil. The site may have been a parking lot, a waste dump, or a fill site. Find out what your soil requires before spending more money on chemicals, seed, and water. -- ______________________________ Keep the whole world singing . . . . DanG (remove the sevens) wrote in message ... Ok, year #2 in the beautiful newly built house in the NE with the crappy lawn. Builder half-assed it and the lawn is sparse with a lot of crabgrass. I don't need a "home and garden" lawn but I'd like some grass ! Questions: 1. My thought is to use a slit-seeder rented from home depot since previous attempts by just chucking down seed and watering has failed. Make sense? Other ideas? 2. Is now a good time to seed or should I wait 2 weeks or a month? Thanks for your guidance! |
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