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Snow Seeding - (Lawn care)

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Snow Seeding - (Lawn care) DerbyDad03 04-08-2008
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Posted by DerbyDad03 on April 9, 2008, 10:02 am
> Winter wheat also is a 'dormant seeding' BUT it is drilled directly into t=
he
> earth BEFORE the snows.
>
> The above mentioned grass technique is better thrown on the ground before
> the snow. =A0I think the OP was misled when told to 'throw it on top the
> snow'.
>
> s
>
>
>
>
>
> > DerbyDad03 wrote:
>
> >>A friend who used to own a landscaping business told me about a trick
> >>I might try next year - too late now.
>
> >>He calls it snow seeding.
>
> >>I told him about an area under a tree in my back yard that never gets
> >>any sun, so I can never grow grass there.
>
> >>He said next year, in late February, early March, I should sow some
> >>annual grass seed on top of the snow. He says the seed will stay
> >>dormant in the cold, but as the snow melts it will settle onto the
> >>dirt and have a chance to to germinate before the tree fills with
> >>leaves and blocks the sun. The melting snow will moisten the ground to
> >>help the seed get started.
>
> >>Since I can expect it to die off by the end of summer due to lack of
> >>sun, I should stick with inexpensive annual seed (landscapers mix, he
> >>called it) and expect to re-snow-seed every year.
>
> >>Anybody heard of - or better yet, tried - this process?
>
> > I've never heard of snow seeding and it seems very unlikely to give
> > anything near a satisfactory
> > crop of grass. =A0Birds would eat it, some would rot, and if/when some s=
eed
> > does sprout, part of
> > the new crop would probably freeze. =A0There is a lot I don't know about=

> > growing grass, but I
> > wouldn't bother. =A0It would be an interesting experiment :o) =A0Is this=
what
> > "winter wheat" is?- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

re: I think the OP was misled when told to 'throw it on top the snow'.

Not sure what you mean by "misled". Are you saying that:

1- I misunderstood? Nope, there is no question as to what I was told.
I work with the guy now and we've talked about the technique numerous
times.

2- The teller is wrong? All I can say is that he says (and he's in my
office right now confirming it!) he used it for many of his "corporate
accounts" (malls, office parks, etc) where there were trees along side
buildings, etc. He'd snow seed and end up with decent lawns for the
season.

BTW...he also suggested a technique I do use now. I live on a curve
and the snow plow tends to rip up the front edge of my lawn. No sense
spending money on good seed, so I just use an annual in the 3 foot
strip that the plow ruins every year.

BTW 2...the rest of my lawn isn't going to make an appearance on the
Fine Living Network. It's got a better chance of making Desparate
Landscapes, so I'm not concerned with the use of cheaper seed. I
basically want it green, not dirt.

Posted by S. Barker on April 9, 2008, 11:08 am
RE: BTW#1. I'd be setting some concrete posts or very large rocks on that
edge. When he rips that blade OFF the truck one time, he'll learn where the
curve is.

s



BTW...he also suggested a technique I do use now. I live on a curve
and the snow plow tends to rip up the front edge of my lawn. No sense
spending money on good seed, so I just use an annual in the 3 foot
strip that the plow ruins every year.

.



Posted by Smitty Two on April 9, 2008, 11:27 am

> RE: BTW#1. I'd be setting some concrete posts or very large rocks on that
> edge. When he rips that blade OFF the truck one time, he'll learn where the
> curve is.
>
>

Do you actually live where it snows? How does one "learn" where a curve
is when the entire road is completely obscured by eight foot drifts?

>
>
>
> BTW...he also suggested a technique I do use now. I live on a curve
> and the snow plow tends to rip up the front edge of my lawn. No sense
> spending money on good seed, so I just use an annual in the 3 foot
> strip that the plow ruins every year.
>
> .

Posted by S. Barker on April 9, 2008, 12:55 pm
#1. YES and i've operated snow plows for 30 years.

#2. You mark them ahead of time. (if you're senile and can't remember
where they are)

steve


>
> Do you actually live where it snows? How does one "learn" where a curve
> is when the entire road is completely obscured by eight foot drifts?
>
>>
>>



Posted by DerbyDad03 on April 9, 2008, 1:12 pm
> RE: =A0BTW#1. =A0I'd be setting some concrete posts or very large rocks on=
that
> edge. =A0When he rips that blade OFF the truck one time, he'll learn where=
the
> curve is.
>
> s
>
>
>
> BTW...he also suggested a technique I do use now. I live on a curve
> and the snow plow tends to rip up the front edge of my lawn. No sense
> spending money on good seed, so I just use an annual in the 3 foot
> strip that the plow ruins every year.
>
> .

re: I'd be setting some concrete posts or very large rocks on that
edge.

Town plows road. Town owns front of lawn and driveway. All
obstructions must be 10 feet from edge of blacktop.

If my daughter's portable basketball hoop is near the road when they
do their Fall drive-by inspections, I get a letter from the town
reminding me of the 10 foot set-back rule.

Besides...it's such a narrow street that if they did not plow it as
wide as they do you probably couldn't get through by the end of
winter.


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