A lawn in the making....

Chat about anything here
User avatar

Topic author
JenniC
Ex Team Member
Posts: 968
Joined: January 2013
Location: Surrey

A lawn in the making....

Unread post by JenniC »

Trees all felled, light at last and hard landscaping materials in skip. Now after eight years without grass I am preparing for a lawn .. So to all you keen gardeners out there any tips on when to lay turf (Internet has so many different opinions :thumbdown: ), do's and dont's and tips for a nice lawn to be proud of would be really welcomed :D
Jenni


Boris+
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 3367
Joined: February 2013

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Boris+ »

No tips on the lawn itself - but what about a letter to Santa for one of those robo-mowers?

em :relaxed: :relaxed:

User avatar

Jan Rosser
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 2554
Joined: January 2013
Location: South Wales

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Jan Rosser »

Perhaps the Garden Doctor (qbman1) could help you out Jenni :wave:
Janis

User avatar

Topic author
JenniC
Ex Team Member
Posts: 968
Joined: January 2013
Location: Surrey

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by JenniC »

Boris+ wrote:
No tips on the lawn itself - but what about a letter to Santa for one of those robo-mowers?

em :relaxed: :relaxed:
Good idea but got one already...... called Steve.. My OH :lol:
Jenni

User avatar

david63
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 10936
Joined: January 2012
Location: Lancashire

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by david63 »

How about Astraturf??

User avatar

GillD46
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 3364
Joined: January 2013
Location: Gower Peninsula, South Wales

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by GillD46 »

We pay a company to come every three months to feed appropriate to the season, apply weed killer, scarify and aerate our front and back lawns. It's not a lot of money and keeps them in excellent condition - still have to do the mowing though!
Gill

User avatar

Topic author
JenniC
Ex Team Member
Posts: 968
Joined: January 2013
Location: Surrey

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by JenniC »

david63 wrote:
How about Astraturf??
This is a serious topic boss... No hi-jacking please :sarcasm: :sarcasm: :crazy:
Jenni

User avatar

david63
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 10936
Joined: January 2012
Location: Lancashire

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by david63 »

JenniC wrote:
david63 wrote:
How about Astraturf??
This is a serious topic boss... No hi-jacking please :sarcasm: :sarcasm: :crazy:
That was a serious answer :lol:

User avatar

Cockers43
Cadet
Cadet
Posts: 63
Joined: March 2013
Location: Worthing, West Sussex

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Cockers43 »

Back to the original subject.....

I don't think it matters when you lay it.

39 years and 11 months ago (2 weeks after my daughter was born) I laid a lawn in icy conditions. Every turf was frozen as were my hands. It turned out to be one of the best lawns I've ever had!

Just get good quality (this means green) turf and start with a flat surface. Make sure all the turfs are very close to one another.

Its not the laying though its the looking after. ;)
Ian
Booby Boogie Boarder

User avatar

Jan Rosser
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 2554
Joined: January 2013
Location: South Wales

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Jan Rosser »

GillD46 wrote:
We pay a company to come every three months to feed appropriate to the season, apply weed killer, scarify and aerate our front and back lawns. It's not a lot of money and keeps them in excellent condition - still have to do the mowing though!
Same here Gill - a firm comes to carry out weeding and feeding and any other necessary treatment about four times a year but mowing is down to me - certainly helps to keep me fit :roll:

As for that AstroTurf - I should imagine there is maintenance with that too - probably have to vacuum it :crazy:
Janis


Quizzical Bob
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 3951
Joined: January 2013

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Quizzical Bob »

The most important thing is... drainage!


Quizzical Bob
Senior First Officer
Senior First Officer
Posts: 3951
Joined: January 2013

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Quizzical Bob »


User avatar

Stephen
Commodore
Commodore
Posts: 17762
Joined: January 2013
Location: Down South - The civilised end of the country :)

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Stephen »

JenniC wrote:
Trees all felled, light at last and hard landscaping materials in skip. Now after eight years without grass I am preparing for a lawn .. So to all you keen gardeners out there any tips on when to lay turf (Internet has so many different opinions :thumbdown: ), do's and dont's and tips for a nice lawn to be proud of would be really welcomed :D

If it were me I would now wait until the spring to lay turf, when any frosts have passed and the ground is starting to warm up which will encourage root growth. Don't skimp on cheap turf from your local D.I.Y store either, buy quality turf from a reputable local turf farm. Once the turf is laid make sure you water it regularly, and once established which will be after it's first year feed the lawn twice a year. I feed ours in March and September using J R Bowers lawn sand which greens the lawn up lovely and kills of any moss. I spread this thinly by hand but you can get spreaders to do the job as well, depending on your lawn size. Of course there are several other weed and feed products out there for you to choose from.


rita17
Third Officer
Third Officer
Posts: 117
Joined: January 2013

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by rita17 »

We have recently had a new lawn after having our drive relaid. My husband seeded it and after just 6 weeks it was looking great. Don't know how this would work at this time of year though.

User avatar

Manoverboard
Ex Team Member
Posts: 13014
Joined: January 2013
Location: Dorset

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Manoverboard »

Springtime is best ... and after it has been laid it is important to water and roller it daily for a compact and level lawn.

If you are thinking of using Green Thumb then forget it, they used to be excellent but their products have gone downhill ... comment based on several properties over a 20 year period.
Keep smiling, it's good for your well being

User avatar

Jean W
Senior Second Officer
Senior Second Officer
Posts: 526
Joined: January 2013
Location: Derbyshire

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Jean W »

MOB - I second that about Greenthumb :thumbdown:

User avatar

david63
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 10936
Joined: January 2012
Location: Lancashire

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by david63 »

Sorry but I have to disagree about GreenThumb - never known lawns look as good

User avatar

Not so ancient mariner
First Officer
First Officer
Posts: 1806
Joined: February 2013
Location: Cumbria

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Not so ancient mariner »

JenniC wrote:
Trees all felled, light at last and hard landscaping materials in skip. Now after eight years without grass I am preparing for a lawn .. So to all you keen gardeners out there any tips on when to lay turf (Internet has so many different opinions :thumbdown: ), do's and dont's and tips for a nice lawn to be proud of would be really welcomed :D

I agree with Stephen. Frosts could occur at any time now, so waiting until spring before starting would be my plan.

I have no experience of GreenThumb, so can't comment there, but would stress the importance of 'Green side up' when laying the turf!
:thumbup: :thumbup:

User avatar

Manoverboard
Ex Team Member
Posts: 13014
Joined: January 2013
Location: Dorset

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Manoverboard »

david63 wrote:
Sorry but I have to disagree about GreenThumb - never known lawns look as good
After nearly 10 years of treatments our lawns still looked ' before ' in any advert ... :thumbdown:

The umpteen operatives that came and went over the years seemed to dash about as fast as possible and after the first year or two their results were very poor in spite of me requesting politely from time to time that I would very much like my lawns to look as good as my neighbour's given that he does sod all to his.

I do my own now and after a couple of treatments, and whizzabouts with my new scarifier, the lawns look fantastic again ... so how come they couldn't do the same ?

It presumably depends on the Franchisee but that shouldn't be the case.
Keep smiling, it's good for your well being

User avatar

Stephen
Commodore
Commodore
Posts: 17762
Joined: January 2013
Location: Down South - The civilised end of the country :)

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Stephen »

Not so ancient mariner wrote:
JenniC wrote:
Trees all felled, light at last and hard landscaping materials in skip. Now after eight years without grass I am preparing for a lawn .. So to all you keen gardeners out there any tips on when to lay turf (Internet has so many different opinions :thumbdown: ), do's and dont's and tips for a nice lawn to be proud of would be really welcomed :D

I agree with Stephen. Frosts could occur at any time now, so waiting until spring before starting would be my plan.

I have no experience of GreenThumb, so can't comment there, but would stress the importance of 'Green side up' when laying the turf!
:thumbup: :thumbup:

LOL :D

User avatar

Stephen
Commodore
Commodore
Posts: 17762
Joined: January 2013
Location: Down South - The civilised end of the country :)

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Stephen »

Manoverboard wrote:
david63 wrote:
Sorry but I have to disagree about GreenThumb - never known lawns look as good
After nearly 10 years of treatments our lawns still looked ' before ' in any advert ... :thumbdown:

The umpteen operatives that came and went over the years seemed to dash about as fast as possible and after the first year or two their results were very poor in spite of me requesting politely from time to time that I would very much like my lawns to look as good as my neighbour's given that he does sod all to his.

I do my own now and after a couple of treatments, and whizzabouts with my new scarifier, the lawns look fantastic again ... so how come they couldn't do the same ?

It presumably depends on the Franchisee but that shouldn't be the case.

I wouldn't have waited that long Moby to give them the elbow if I hadn't got good results. if things had not improved after three or four treatments then my thought would be 'they're taking the pi**' and would be told politely not to return.

I have always treated my own lawn. I don't use over priced treatments either. I weed it by hand and treat it with a lawn sand (J Arthur Bowers) which I get from B&Q.

User avatar

Topic author
JenniC
Ex Team Member
Posts: 968
Joined: January 2013
Location: Surrey

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by JenniC »

Glad you all stressed the importance of "green side up" as may have got that wrong ;) Will read through all the tips - thanks all :thumbup:
Jenni

User avatar

Onelife
Captain
Captain
Posts: 14169
Joined: January 2013

Re: A lawn in the making....

Unread post by Onelife »

Hi jenni,

I’m presuming you’re laying the turf yourselves? If this is the case you will probably have to wait until early May before you can lay turf as they don’t start lifting turf until about this time of the year.

Not sure how much area we are talking about here but make sure you “heel in” the soil before raking over the surface. If you have a larger area to cover it might be a good idea to hire a roller “and a strong man to pull it”. Make sure you leave a couple of inches of raked topsoil before laying turf.

Keep it well watered and shoot any dogs/cats you find leaving their business on it ;) :)

............

You could consider seeding it...far cheaper and you can choose the right type of seed/grass that is suited to your soil type... and location.

Regards

Keith

Return to “General Chat”