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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 aemeijers on April 9, 2008, 6:51 pm
S. Barker wrote:
> 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.
>
> .
>
>
Put those rocks in the county right-of-way (which is usually several
feet past the pavement AND the gravel), and you'll be paying the county
for a new plow blade, and maybe the whole truck. Most areas specify a
clear zone that must be observed. Also applies to plow/kid-proof
concrete or I-beam mailbox posts being a no-no.

--
aem sends...

Posted by S. Barker on April 8, 2008, 6:12 pm
Very common around the midwest. We call it a dormant seeding. You won't
get quite as good a germination percentage, but it is easy.

s


>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?



Posted by Oren on April 8, 2008, 6:19 pm
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 12:42:52 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03

>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 tilled garden material into the ground, covered with dead leaves
in the fall and in the spring I had so many plants I needed the thin
them - even gave plants to neighbors. Plenty of snow that year.
Perhaps try a light till and seed before the first snow.

What type of trees and soil conditions? You might try to cut a few
cores of your lawn and transplant them to the area you want to grow.
Get them started too see how they grow.

Pick a low light condition grass seed for your area, is another
option.


Posted by on April 8, 2008, 6:51 pm
> On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 12:42:52 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
>
>
>
>
>
> >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 tilled garden material into the ground, covered with dead leaves
> in the fall and in the spring I had so many plants I needed the thin
> them - even gave plants to neighbors. Plenty of snow that year.
> Perhaps try a light till and seed before the first snow.
>
> What type of trees and soil conditions? You might try to cut a few
> cores of your lawn and transplant them to the area you want to grow.
> Get them started too see how they grow.
>
> Pick a low light condition grass seed for your area, is another
> option.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

I've heard of it, but never tried it. The basic idea is the seed
gets sown in late winter where freeze thaw cycles help work it into
better contact with the soil. When the soil warms it germinates.
However, as someone else pointed out, I doubt you will get anywhere
near optimum germination, as compared to using a slice seeder. I'd
also wonder what annual grasses there are that are suitable for dense
shade.

But all this is about is a seeding technique, not a real solution to
your problem. Even if you re-seed that area every year, it takes a
couple months for the grass to really establish itself. So, the
amount of time you have anything decent to look at isn't going to be
long. I think a better strategy would be to either thin out the tree
to allow more light in, or else go with alternative plantings under
the tree.

Posted by Joseph Meehan on April 8, 2008, 8:30 pm
This is one of those things that work very well, but not just anywhere.
I does work very will in most situations and most years in my area. In my
area we would not put it on the snow in February, rather we can put it out
anytime after the ground is frozen. This year would not have been the best
for that one however as we have had a very wet spring and most of it would
have been washed out before germinating. Most years it does work well.

Note: check the weed content. Some cheap seed has such a high weed
content that it would be best to avoid it, also consider that there are some
grasses you don't want spreading to your good lawn and some annuals will do
that. Again it is a local thing.



> 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?


--
Joseph Meehan

Dia 's Muire duit




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