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#1
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Hi,
We moved in to our house just over a year ago. Parts of the garden were overgrown including 2 bushed which had overgrown on to the lawn and killed it. I added some soil and grass seed and it grew back nicely. However, after all the recent rain the patches seem to have sunken by about half an inch. Can I just whack some topsoil on top and hope the grass will grow through it or should I dig it up and put topsoil underneath (then replace the turf of course)? Thanks, Kroma |
#2
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Kroma wrote:
We moved in to our house just over a year ago. Parts of the garden were overgrown including 2 bushed which had overgrown on to the lawn and killed it. I added some soil and grass seed and it grew back nicely. However, after all the recent rain the patches seem to have sunken by about half an inch. Can I just whack some topsoil on top and hope the grass will grow through it or should I dig it up and put topsoil underneath (then replace the turf of course)? Putting topsoil on it is not a great idea, unless you add some grass seed to the mix. I'd get a bag of silver sand, and some compost, mix that up, add some seed, then distribute it over the depression, then run a roller over it. It is also possible to peel back a sod, and put a bit of soil undernetah, but that is too much hard work for a dip of half an inch. Alan. -- To reply by e-mail, change the ' + ' to 'plus'. |
#3
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On May 20, 3:28 pm, "Kroma" wrote:
Hi, We moved in to our house just over a year ago. Parts of the garden were overgrown including 2 bushed which had overgrown on to the lawn and killed I added some soil and grass seed and it grew back nicely. However, after all the recent rain the patches seem to have sunken by about half an inch. For a small amount like that over a smallish area you can probably get away with adding an equal mix of topsoil and sharp sand at almost any time of year. Anything more than about 1cm is best done in autumn or early spring. I am gradually levelling out my lawn where a big tree root is rotting away underneath this way. Can I just whack some topsoil on top and hope the grass will grow through it or should I dig it up and put topsoil underneath (then replace the turf of course)? If it really is only a half inch then you can probably get away with it at almost any time of year, but if it is any thicker than that you may well kill the grass by smothering it. Especially if it is a fine grass. I reckon upto 1cm deep you can top dress and then leave the grass to grow through again. A bit of feed mixed in may help boost its growth provided you don't minf having a greener patch for a while. Regards, Martin Brown |
#4
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In article , A.Lee
writes Putting topsoil on it is not a great idea, unless you add some grass seed to the mix. I'd get a bag of silver sand, and some compost, mix that up, add some seed, then distribute it over the depression, then run a roller over it. It is also possible to peel back a sod, and put a bit of soil undernetah, but that is too much hard work for a dip of half an inch. Alan. Putting soil on top Alan, does work as long as you rake over the grass afterwards so that you can see the tips. I did it with a patch of lawn at the back of one of my borders. It just raises the level a bit at a time but better than whacking down a load of compost and pressing the new seeds into it. Even sand etc will do as long as you let the grass come through just a bit. -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#5
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Putting topsoil on it is not a great idea, unless you add some grass
seed to the mix. I'd get a bag of silver sand, and some compost, mix that up, add some seed, then distribute it over the depression, then run a roller over it. It is also possible to peel back a sod, and put a bit of soil undernetah, but that is too much hard work for a dip of half an inch. Alan. Putting soil on top Alan, does work as long as you rake over the grass afterwards so that you can see the tips. I am half way through levelling a couple of dips in one of our lawns by this very method. Every time I have some spare sand/soil/compost I rake it into the dips. A couple more sessions and I shall have a flat (ish) lawn. Mike |
#6
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Muddymike wrote:
I am half way through levelling a couple of dips in one of our lawns by this very method. Every time I have some spare sand/soil/compost I rake it into the dips. A couple more sessions and I shall have a flat (ish) lawn. Mike There are so many sunken patches in my lawn, I'm not sure whether it would just be easier to flatten the peaks. :-) Regards -- Alan Johnson, Geotr@ns www.geotrans-online.de German-English, Geosciences/Technical http://geotransblog.blogspot.com/ Terminus Est |
#7
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I am half way through levelling a couple of dips in one of our lawns by
this very method. Every time I have some spare sand/soil/compost I rake it into the dips. A couple more sessions and I shall have a flat (ish) lawn. Mike There are so many sunken patches in my lawn, I'm not sure whether it would just be easier to flatten the peaks. :-) At our last house the very large (over half an acre) rear lawn was so lumpy and bumpy the 42 inch cutter I used kept scalping bits. I borrowed a great big vibrating road roller from a roadwork's gang who wanted somewhere safe to store it over the weekend. It probably over compacted the soil but I had a nice smooth lawn after a weekend running that up and down. Never really noticed any growth problems afterwards. Mike |
#8
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Thanks for your help everyone. I will add topsoil a bit at a time and rake
it over so that the grass tips poke through. Thanks again! |
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