Last year I tried to take care of my lawn with manual mower and rake. This led to half the backyard still having leaf piles on it all winter and splotches of grass dying. So now I need to reseed and I've never done anything like that before.
Last year I tried to take care of my lawn with manual mower and rake. This led to half the backyard still having leaf piles on it all winter and splotches of grass dying. So now I need to reseed and I've never done anything like that before.
Just curious, but why not just get some squares of new sod and let it fill in the dead spots?
I don’t know anything about this stuff.
https://www.greenviewfertilizer.com/articles/how-to-fix-dead-patches-in-lawn/
btw, it works if you have a spade, a shovel a strong back. You will also need grass-seed that will grow in your area.
Otherwise you will have to bring in some pros That will pick your pocket.![]()
The last time I used an automatic text function was about 20 years ago. I was to issue a permit for building a carp pond and the auto correct /spell check ignored the fact that I had swapped the position of two letters...
In English that's actually a good deal worse than in my native German where the carps (Karpfen) simply became donuts (Krapfen).
So, dig out the dead patches, replace with topsoil and grass seed, water a fertilize?
Also worth noting, my back yard has a lot of tree cover and the far back part of it gets really saturated after rain. Not the friendliest yard to grass.
Donut ponds should totally be a thing!![]()
As we Germans say: turn an adversity into a virtue. Or as the Americans recommend: if life hands you a lemon make lemonade, (and lemon curd, lemon pie and lemon jamAlso worth noting, my back yard has a lot of tree cover and the far back part of it gets really saturated after rain. Not the friendliest yard to grass.
As we Germans say: turn an adversity into a virtue. Or as the Americans recommend: if life hands you a lemon make lemonade, (and lemon curd, lemon pie and lemon jam)
That wet patch would be the ideal place for rhododendrons or azaleas. They love moist and slightly acidic soil. Or try Iris sibirica, or (if it's extremely wet) Iris pseudacorus.
You could also try planting a birch tree - they look pretty, suck up a lot of water and therefore are ideal for wet places. However, many people are allergic to birch pollen and the gazillions of tiny seeds are difficult to clean up (birds love them, though).
Alternatively, you could dig out a tiny pond into which the surrounding patch's water can drain. That would make that corner of your yard dryer and at the same time you'd have a big bird bath. With a few swamp flowers (e.g. Caltha palustris) at the edges it can become an eye catcher and teh envy of your neighbours.
Scientists?Finn, Hyraxes are indeed awesome! And adorable! Everyone should look up videos of them right now. And scientists figured out a connection between them and elephants early on, I think even before Darwin and Wallace's papers on evolution, because they both have incisors in the sides of their mouths, different number of toes on their front and hind feet (which do indeed have those funny nails), and nipples in their armpits. I also find it interesting that the Bible translates hyrax as "rock badger". Makes me picture badgers made of rock!
Captain, thanks for pointing out that about elephant shrews. I had plum forgot that weird fact. It just goes to show that the broad evolutionary relationships of mammals defies all common sense.
Mosses and sedges are trending for more environmentally friendly lawn covers https://www.thespruce.com/create-low-maintenance-moss-lawn-2152704So, dig out the dead patches, replace with topsoil and grass seed, water a fertilize?
Also worth noting, my back yard has a lot of tree cover and the far back part of it gets really saturated after rain. Not the friendliest yard to grass.
Mosses and sedges are trending for more environmentally friendly lawn covers https://www.thespruce.com/create-low-maintenance-moss-lawn-2152704
I didn't know that! That's pretty cool!Scientists?If I remember right, the local bushmen noticed the relationship between hyraxes and elephants....
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