Living Lawn
The easy way to a lush green living lawn

Articles
Feature Article
Getting It Right: Laying A New Lawn
How Much Water Does A Lawn Really Need?
Watering Your Lawn
How Lawn Fertilization Helps Your Lawn
Lawn Treatments to Maintain a Healthy Lawn
Lawn Mower - Keep Your Lawn Pretty All The Time
Organic Lawn Care Products : The Best Allies For Your Lawn
Lawn Care Restoration Of Your Winter Ravaged Lawn
Lawn Care Tips And Proper Lawn Maintenance
Outdoor Power Equipment Tillers
Lawn & Garden Garden Decor
Patio & Grilling Other Outdoor Living
Lawn & Garden Other
Patio & Grilling Swings

Other Sites
Keyword Tool
HDTV
Website Traffic
Xbox Cheats
Xbox 360 Cheats
House Repair :: All About Gardens and Gardening
Belfast Post
Autographs :: Collectibles :: Shopping Portal OnLine

Getting It Right: Laying A New Lawn

By Paul Carpenter

Getting Started: Removing Your Existing Lawn

Turf itself comes delivered in rolls of pre-grown grass of evenly sized pieces – typically one metre or one yard in size. Because turf is a living product and requires water to survive it cannot be left for more than a day before it is laid. Preparation of the soil beforehand is therefore critical.

Firstly if you have an existing grass layer, it must be removed as much as possible. Your old lawn will have seeds, weeds and other contaminations that could affect the new turf. Removing it is a fairly simple operation. Using a normal garden spade, dig at a shallow angle to a depth of around 6 inches. You should be able to lever out the existing grass, roots, weeds and all. Manually, this is the hardest stage of the process as each spadeful can weigh a little and collectively you may be removing a tonne or two. Think ahead and either hire a skip to remove the waste, or get a lot of garden bags and store the soil and grass for composting or other uses around the garden.

Preparing the Soil

Your new turf will grow best when your soil is prepared in such a way as to encourage deep, rapid rooting. Turf needs sunlight, air, water and nutrients to grow. Grass plants obtain three of these factors from the soil; air, water and nutrients. The quality of the soil and its preparation will greatly affect the quality of the lawn.

If your existing soil is friable (easy to break up) then you can remove the stones, roots and other contaminants using a pair of gardening gloves and a rake. If your existing soil is of low quality, then you will need to lay down a bed of good quality topsoil which you can buy from your local garden centre or several online outlets. Bought topsoil is generally of a much higher standard than existing soil, because it will have been sifted and weeded before it reaches you. Simply fill the area of your new lawn with this soil, and rake it until it is as even as possible.

If you are using bought topsoil, it is best laid down a day or two before your turf is delivered.

Laying the Turf

Turf must be laid out within 24 hours of delivery. When it is rolled up it is effectively slowly dying as the leaves are not receiving any sunlight.

Start laying the turves along a straight edge, butting them closely end to end. On subsequent rows stagger the joints brickwork fashion. Planks should be placed on newly laid turves for walking along and working from. Using the head of a rake, lightly firm down the turves to ensure good contact between the turves and soil. Push turf into a joint ensuring that turves are not stretched by pulling them. Cracks can be filled with a light soil. If you need to cut your turf to shape, it can be done by simply using a suitable knife or cutting spade.

Watering

Newly laid turf must be watered immediately and for several days after laying until it is firmly established. The amount of water will depend upon weather conditions but the turf should be given a really good soaking to make sure that the water has soaked through into the soil below. Either first thing in the morning or in the evening are the ideal times to carry out watering. It is important not to over water. Don’t keep watering until the water is pooling on the surface, but let the water soak in. You only need enough water soak through the turf into the soil below.

About the Author: Paul is a keen amatuer gardener who likes to share his knowledge through writing articles and advice (he’s enormously proud of his turf laying skills). Away from his garden he plays guitar and cooks. Badly. http://www.rolawn.co.uk

News
Thu May 17 2012

Master Gardeners’ tour highlights garden variety
The Popes’ garden has been a work in progress for 20 years and is primarily filled with a variety of greens. Betty Pope likes to joke if it’s a shade plant, “I’ll buy it and try it.” Pieces of yard art that the couple have collected ...

Backyard garden Pest Handle - Preserve Away From Any Backyard garden P
It is as there are a ton of garden pests that attacking lots of people's garden and lawn. And the most effective and effective way and keep the plant population from those lawn pests is via this pest control management. This article will mainly discuss ...

Garden tour supports McDonald House
Eight Greenville gardens will be open for tours from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. May 19 for the Art in the Yard Garden Tour 2012, to raise money to support The Ronald McDonald House of Eastern North Carolina. The gardens — located in Uptown Greenville, Brook Valley ...

Turning Denver trash into lawn and garden treasure
Ecofriendly Denver residents need look no further than the dumpster for yard decor. In my dumpster diving excursions, I've found everything from bird baths to trellis wire. Yes, dumpster diving is legal in Colorado, although trespassing in posted dumpster ...

Hotline Provides One-On-One Help To Get the Best Lawn and Yard Ever
Anyone who wants the grass to grow greener on their side of the fence or is simply stumped over a lawn and garden issue can turn to the Yard Smarts Hotline this spring for a personal consultation on what to do and how to do it right – without spending a ...

Wayne L. Westcott: Technique helps you safely conquer yard work
However, it is important to be physically prepared for yard and garden work and use proper movement mechanics to avoid soreness and injury. Getting in good physical shape is the first step, and I recommend a program consisting of strength training and ...

Garden tour highlights 6 unique destinations
Just a short stroll down the street is Gin Petty’s garden called “A Perennial Affair.” A gently sloping hill in her yard is lined with tiers of lettuce, chives, parsley, garlic, dill, basil, strawberries, sweet potatoes, rosemary, cantaloupe ...

Annual Lufkin garden tour scheduled for May 19
After admiring the roses in the front, visitors to the garden can walk down a pathway covered with different varieties of climbing roses. The rose-covered path leads to the back yard, which overlooks the Crown Colony Country Club golf course and the lake.

The Pecks: Maintenance -- and gravel -- make for a lush green lawn
Another, it was to allow for a large gravel patio and the garden and path leading to it. And, even though I'm the son of a Bermuda lawn fanatic (and he still is one, to this very day), the shrinking lawn makes perfect sense to me. That is ...

Passion for Beautiful, Manicured Gardens and Landscape Drives the Global Garden …
Consumer tastes in recent years have shifted drastically from focus on plants, simple lawn and indoor garden accessories to the outdoors, where consumers prefer to spend most of their leisure time. The manufacturers accordingly strive to offer customized ...








Copyright Notice: Information may not be used without permission from Living Lawn
Contact Us