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Care & Repair for Rejuvenating your Lawn
Wrapped
up in our day-to-day work, family and leisure activities,
it's easy to delay doing anything about the increasingly
worn or dead spots that sometimes appear in your otherwise
beautiful lawn. Although repairing these unsightly areas
may seem like a complicated, drawn out process, there's a
fast and easy solution that gives immediate results, according
to the not-for-profit Turf Resource Center (TRC).
Whether it's called cultivated turf, turfgrass, turf or
just plain sod, this carpet-like grass can turn a hole in
the lawn into a whole lot of lawn if you just follow these
simple steps.
Step
1. Identify what caused the old grass to die and fix
the problem. It might have been too much traffic on the area,
root-eating insects, disease or something that spilled. Fix
the source of the problem, or you'll just be re-doing the
next steps over and over.
Step
2. Outline the patch area(s) with boards or string
to create straight sides around the dead area to fit the
new turfgrass sod without a lot of trimming, gaps or holes.
Then till or spade the area to loosen the soil under the
dead patch, and rake it smooth while you remove roots, clods,
rocks and other debris. TRC tip: the top of the raked soil
should be about one inch below any sidewalk, driveway and
existing grass.
Step
3. Purchase enough fresh turfgrass sod from a turfgrass
sod farm, home center or garden center to fill the repair
area(s) by measuring the length and width of the tilled area
and converting this to square feet or square yards. (Example:
3 feet wide by 4 feet long equals 12 square feet. Dividing
the 12 square feel by 9 converts the area into 1.3 square
yards).
Step
4. Within hours after buying the sod, begin installing
it onto the tilled area by placing the first piece along
the longest, straight line available. All subsequent pieces
of sod should be laid tightly against the first piece, without
stretching or overlapping.
Step
5. Ensure the new sod has good contact with the soil
underneath by either using a half-filled lawn roller, or
just place foot-square boards on the new sod and walk on
the boards a few times.
Step
6. Water the new patch until the soil under the sod
is wet, but not saturated. Depending on how sunny the location
is, the amount of wind or other drying conditions, you may
have to water the patch more than once a day for the first
week. You can check to see how well the sod is rooting by
lightly tugging on a convenient corner of a sod piece. Also,
if the soil beneath the sod is not wet, you need to apply
more water.
Step
7. Restrict traffic on the area for at least two weeks
to give the grass roots a chance to grow and penetrate the
soil and for the soil to settle.
Step
8. Mow the area about two weeks after patching, or
whenever the sod is tightly rooted. If possible, try to run
your mower diagonally across the sod seams. This will reduce
rutting and the chance of your mower lifting a corner of
sod from the new patch.
Step
9. Enjoy your lawn, without further worries about the
repaired areas!
These
simple steps will create a mature and complete lawn patch
immediately, unlike attempts at patching with grass
seed that generally requires months and several re-workings
to achieve even a marginally acceptable result. For free
information on turfgrass lawns and sodding, choices about
establishing lawns and the environmental benefits lawns provide,
visit either of the websites listed below.
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