Posted by maguire21 on February 23, 2009, 6:30 am
I've been waiting to plant a lawn until March because by May the huge
Elm tree in the garden (and those in surrounding gardens) blocks out
most of the light. I'm planning to sow special seed for shaded lawns
which I've seen for sale in my local hardware store. Drainage is poor
so I'm going to dig it over and cover with compost and sharp sand. My
problem is levelling the soil, I have no idea how to do this. The area
is about 12m by 5m. Every one tells me I'm mad and I'll never get a
lawn to grow in such an inhospitable area but I'm determined. I'm a
complete novice, please help!
--
maguire21
Posted by trader4 on February 27, 2009, 9:01 am
wrote:
> I've been waiting to plant a lawn until March because by May the huge
> Elm tree in the garden (and those in surrounding gardens) blocks out
> most of the light. I'm planning to sow special seed for shaded lawns
> which I've seen for sale in my local hardware store. Drainage is poor
> so I'm going to dig it over and cover with compost and sharp sand. My
> problem is levelling the soil, I have no idea how to do this. The area
> is about 12m by 5m. Every one tells me I'm mad and I'll never get a
> lawn to grow in such an inhospitable area but I'm determined. I'm a
> complete novice, please help!
> --
> maguire21
If it's just soil, with no clumps of grass, etc, then raking by hand
will level it. Growing grass in light shade isn't difficult, but in
dense shade, it can be diificult or impossible and other vegetation
may be more appropriate. I'd also suggest the following:
Test the soil ph before tilling and adjust if needed by applying
pellitized limestone before tilling
Buy a good quality shade mix. You may want to use two different
mixes that have different varieties of grass. Apply at the highest
recommended rate, along with starter fertilizer.
Get the seed down early. It will germinate when the temps rise and as
you know, the coming shade isn't your friend
Trim out the bottom of the trees to let as much light as possible in
Keep the area constantly wet, which in the shade probably means
watering lightly twice a day.
In the Fall, make sure to remove leaves promptly so they don't kill
the grass.
Posted by Janet Conroy on March 13, 2009, 6:32 pm
maguire21;831174 Wrote:
> I've been waiting to plant a lawn until March
because by May the huge
> Elm tree in the garden (and those in surrounding
gardens) blocks out
> most of the light. I'm planning to sow special seed for
shaded lawns
> which I've seen for sale in my local hardware store. Drainage is
poor
> so I'm going to dig it over and cover with compost and sharp sand. My
>
problem is levelling the soil, I have no idea how to do this. The area
> is
about 12m by 5m. Every one tells me I'm mad and I'll never get a
> lawn to grow
in such an inhospitable area but I'm determined. I'm a
> complete novice, please
help!
I previously had a garden where one part of the lawn was in shade 75%
of every
day. The lawn on the shaded side got full of moss and nothing
I tried ever
worked. Sharp sand and a special grass mix is worth a try,
but if the results
are poor after two years, it will only get worse and
I would give up. As to the
levelling, clear any weeds, rake it over
and remove stones, fill any hollows
with soil from somewhere else in
the garden, get the sharp sand on there, rake
again, firm it down (walk
all over it in a kind of shuffling motion with all the
weight on your
heels) rake again, fine tune any hollows, lightly rake to get a
sowing
tilth and then sow your seed. If poss cover it with fine netting,
otherwise the birds will eat a lot of the seed. April is a good time
to sow
grass seed.
Good luck ( I don't envy you!)
--
Janet Conroy
> Elm tree in the garden (and those in surrounding gardens) blocks out
> most of the light. I'm planning to sow special seed for shaded lawns
> which I've seen for sale in my local hardware store. Drainage is poor
> so I'm going to dig it over and cover with compost and sharp sand. My
> problem is levelling the soil, I have no idea how to do this. The area
> is about 12m by 5m. Every one tells me I'm mad and I'll never get a
> lawn to grow in such an inhospitable area but I'm determined. I'm a
> complete novice, please help!
> --
> maguire21