By Michael on Mar 4, 2008 in Landscaping, Lawn | 0 Comments
When putting in a lawn, you’ve got several ways to go: seeds, sod, plugs, or sprigs. Seeding is the least expensive method but it takes work and time. A sod lawn, while expensive, looks great immediately and is ready to walk on in about 2 weeks. Sprigs and plugs are both less expensive than sod, [...]
By Michael on Mar 4, 2008 in Landscaping, Lawn | 0 Comments
These small pieces of sod are often used to plant warm-season grasses, some of which cannot grow from seed. They spread by horizontal runners, filling in the lawn in several months to years, depending on the grass species. Spring is the best time to plant them.
Buy plugs from a mail-order firm or a sod farm. [...]
By Michael on Mar 4, 2008 in Landscaping, Lawn | 0 Comments
Often used to plant warm-season grasses, these pieces of grass stems and roots (also called stolons) spread naturally by horizontal runners. They will fill in your lawn in 9 to 12 weeks.
In spring, order sprigs by mail or from a sod farm. (Local garden centers can recommend sources.) In your order, specify the area you [...]
By Michael on Mar 4, 2008 in Landscaping, Lawn | 0 Comments
Buy top-quality seed from a reliable source to be sure it will germinate evenly and is weed and disease free. Places that sell grass seed sometimes lend rollers and other planting equipment free.
The amount of seed you need varies with the type of grass - check the label to be sure you’re buying enough.
Sow seeds [...]
By Michael on Mar 4, 2008 in Landscaping, Lawn | 0 Comments
Sod is a carpet of grass you unroll to create an instant lawn. You can lay sod in any month when the ground isn’t frozen. To purchase it, look under “Sod” in your Yellow Pages.
Order enough sod to cover your lawn, plus about 10 percent extra to allow for fitting. Sod deteriorates quickly if it [...]