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#1
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Level a lawn with topsoil
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble
stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. |
#2
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On 20/06/2013 20:09, Bob H wrote:
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. A ton of what? is it "as dug" or is it sieved and weed free? |
#3
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On Thu, 20 Jun 2013 20:09:14 +0100, Bob H wrote:
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. As Dave indicates, there's soil and there's soil. But I'm more concerned about what you plan to do. How big is your lawn to start with? If it's just uneven, ok-ish but if the "walking on cobbles" is because the ground surface is stoney, tipping soil on the top is going to be a waste of time unless you want to raise the lawn level by about 6 inches. You will simply end up with dead grass over any stones. Then having covered the existing lawn, what do you intend to do? If you smother the grass with soil, then you need to grow new grass. It's a bit late now to seed unless you are happy to accept the need to water all the time. Turfing will be expensive. And simply tipping soil is not the best solution. When I've levelled in the past, I've used a mix of soil, sand and loam. Overall, I think you're tackling a problem from the wrong angle. -- Cheers, Jake ======================================= URGling from the other end of Swansea Bay where it's unusually just like Dave's end, only better |
#4
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On 20/06/2013 20:09, Bob H wrote:
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. Is this because the ground is baked hard clay or very stoney? I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. You probably want the wrong thing! A sand/peat/topsoil mixture applied in the autumn is the traditional top dressing method to smooth out lawn irregularities in combination with a traditional roller. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#5
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On Thursday, June 20, 2013 8:09:14 PM UTC+1, Bob H wrote:
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want.. A roller would be much better imho. I wouldnt pay £65 for a tonne of subsoil. NT |
#6
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Level a lawn with topsoil
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#7
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Level a lawn with topsoil
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#8
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On Saturday, June 22, 2013 9:52:11 AM UTC+1, Dave Hill wrote:
Using a roller to try to level a lawn is the worst thing you can do if there is any amount of irregularity in the surface level. Everything you learn about turf care says "Don't compact" Yes, I thought the idea of rolling lawns was discredited years ago. Certainly the last time I rolled a lawn must have been over 40 years ago - it didn't do any good then, it won't now. It's a lazy attempt at a quick cheap solution to a bumpy lawn. For quick and cheap on not particularly good lawns I have filled obvious low patches with soil and sown seed but remember the seeded patch will have different grasses from the rest and will always look a bit different, but I am talking here of lawns that are mediocre or worse anyway. For better lawns then gradually improving the levels by top-dressing as already advised or lifting turf from low patches, bringing up the level and then re-laying the turf is the way to go. Rod |
#9
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On 22/06/2013 18:53, Rod wrote:
On Saturday, June 22, 2013 9:52:11 AM UTC+1, Dave Hill wrote: Using a roller to try to level a lawn is the worst thing you can do if there is any amount of irregularity in the surface level. Everything you learn about turf care says "Don't compact" Yes, I thought the idea of rolling lawns was discredited years ago. Certainly the last time I rolled a lawn must have been over 40 years ago - it didn't do any good then, it won't now. It's a lazy attempt at a quick cheap solution to a bumpy lawn. For quick and cheap on not particularly good lawns I have filled obvious low patches with soil and sown seed but remember the seeded patch will have different grasses from the rest and will always look a bit different, but I am talking here of lawns that are mediocre or worse anyway. For better lawns then gradually improving the levels by top-dressing as already advised or lifting turf from low patches, bringing up the level and then re-laying the turf is the way to go. Rod What you should do is to put an X cut the turf in the hollows, then fold back add soil to bring up the level then put the turf back, a slow method but you do keep all the grass the same, and you do the reverse for any high points. |
#10
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On 22/06/13 18:53, Rod wrote:
On Saturday, June 22, 2013 9:52:11 AM UTC+1, Dave Hill wrote: Using a roller to try to level a lawn is the worst thing you can do if there is any amount of irregularity in the surface level. Everything you learn about turf care says "Don't compact" Yes, I thought the idea of rolling lawns was discredited years ago. Certainly the last time I rolled a lawn must have been over 40 years ago - it didn't do any good then, it won't now. It's a lazy attempt at a quick cheap solution to a bumpy lawn. For quick and cheap on not particularly good lawns I have filled obvious low patches with soil and sown seed but remember the seeded patch will have different grasses from the rest and will always look a bit different, but I am talking here of lawns that are mediocre or worse anyway. For better lawns then gradually improving the levels by top-dressing as already advised or lifting turf from low patches, bringing up the level and then re-laying the turf is the way to go. I've rolled a lot of lawn not so long ago - heavy ground, infested with pure-bred Arab horses... -- Rusty Hinge |
#11
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On Saturday, June 22, 2013 9:52:11 AM UTC+1, Dave Hill wrote:
On 22/06/2013 00:15, wrote: On Thursday, June 20, 2013 8:09:14 PM UTC+1, Bob H wrote: Who said anything about subsoil? my bad Using a roller to try to level a lawn is the worst thing you can do if there is any amount of irregularity in the surface level. Everything you learn about turf care says "Don't compact" It was a long time ago. It did flatten numerous dings though. Rollers can be home made fairly easily. A similarly long time ago I levelled a lumpy meadow with a mower. I just used the spinning metal blade to rip into the high points. A bit crude but it worked. You don't need to sow anything afterwards, nearby grass takes over as long as the bare bits are mowed. Of course there are other options, but the above does work. NT |
#12
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On Thu, 20 Jun 2013 20:09:14 +0100, Bob H wrote:
I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. Just to not that according to my news reader this is the only post by the OP and we have seen no response. So our united wisdom may be failing to aid the poser of the original question. Cheers Dave R |
#13
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Level a lawn with topsoil
On 24 Jun 2013 15:42:21 GMT, "David.WE.Roberts"
wrote: On Thu, 20 Jun 2013 20:09:14 +0100, Bob H wrote: I want to level my cobbly feeling lawn. It feels like walking on cobble stones. I am looking for someone who can deliver a ton or ton and half of topsoil to my home in Leeds. I found a place about 8 miles away who would deliver 1 ton for £65, and I don't know if that is a reasonable price or not. Does anyone know of anyone more locally who would/can deliver what I want. Just to not that according to my news reader this is the only post by the OP and we have seen no response. So our united wisdom may be failing to aid the poser of the original question. Cheers Dave R There are lots of responses. I can't comment on there content. Steve -- EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. http://www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. http://www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. http://www.justnn.com |
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