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#1
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HELP - Lawn on Clay Soil ??
Hi All
Last year a layed a new lawn in my front garden (UK) with ex quality turf, the problem is i layed it onto a thin layer topsoil and clay beneath. It does not respond much to feeding and it soggy winter/cracks up in summer. I have just started spring maintenance and have cut it back short and scarified so it now looks very sparse/muddy. I have also just aerated it leaving holes all over. How can i improve the soil structure ? Some people telling me brushing in sharp sand will make it worse !! Any ides peeps ? What about claybreaker soil conditioner or calcified seaweed ?? Cheers |
#2
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HELP - Lawn on Clay Soil ??
On Apr 11, 4:05*am, bilabonic
wrote: Hi All Last year a layed a new lawn in my front garden (UK) with ex quality turf, the problem is *i layed it onto a thin layer topsoil and clay beneath. It does not respond much to feeding and it soggy winter/cracks up in summer. I have just started spring maintenance and have cut it back short and scarified so it now looks very sparse/muddy. I have also just aerated it leaving holes all over. How can i improve the soil structure ? Some people telling me brushing in sharp sand will make it worse !! Any ides peeps ? What about claybreaker soil conditioner or calcified seaweed ?? Cheers -- bilabonic You've created a big problem with no easy solution. You should have worked on fixing the soil BEFORE putting down the new turf. The less good topsoil you have, the more problems you will have. By doing it before the grass, you could have tilled in lots of material or additonal topsoil to correct it. Now, your ability to deal with it is limited. The best you can do now is to rake in material after aerating. The choice of what to use is usually determined by what's available locally in appropriate quantities and cost. If it's a small area, then a commercially bagged product could be viable. But for larger areas, you generally need something available by the truck load. My first choice would be organic matter, like compost. Here in the states some municipalities collect leaves in the Fall and turn them into compost which is available for free. If you have anything like that available, it can be a good choice. You can also mix in some sand, but I would focus more on the compost type material. Unfortunately, you will have to do this many times before you get the soil to where you want it. And even then, the depth of the ammendment is not as deep as it would be had you tilled it in upfront. |
#3
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#4
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Buy composted cow manure but just buy a few bags at first because no all are created equal. You are doing things backwards. It will take a while for the additive to get down under so don't expect miracles at first. Do it spring and fall.
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