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Lawn renovation with no straw or peat moss?

3.5K views 29 replies 16 participants last post by  MacLawn  
#1 ·
Is it too risky to do my renovation with no straw or peat moss?

Reasons:
  • I have full irrigation -- I can keep soil most all day easily
  • More money spent
  • More time wasted
  • Straw might have weeds
  • Peat moss might make a mess of my new concrete
Have some of you done renovations and rolled in the seed with no cover?
 
#2 ·
Is it too risky to do my renovation with no straw or peat moss?

Reasons:
  • I have full irrigation -- I can keep soil most all day easily
  • More money spent
  • More time wasted
  • Straw might have weeds
  • Peat moss might make a mess of my new concrete
Have some of you done renovations and rolled in the seed with no cover?
Well you said “more time wasted?” so why ask ? You have already decided that it is a waste of time.
Play on.
 
#6 ·
Is it too risky to do my renovation with no straw or peat moss?

Reasons:
  • I have full irrigation -- I can keep soil most all day easily
  • More money spent
  • More time wasted
  • Straw might have weeds
  • Peat moss might make a mess of my new concrete
Have some of you done renovations and rolled in the seed with no cover?
Why do you think you need peatmoss or straw cover?
If you want the seeds slightly covered why not some compost or loam . Drop your seed and tyen
 
#7 ·
You must have missed the part when he said more time spend and more money were reasons. Are you suggesting to that compost and loam are free and take no extra time to lay? How about making a mess on the driveway? Will it not do that?
 
#29 ·
This product looks interesting but can't find any info on how to use? Is it for large bare areas only when hydro seeding? Does it add a bio base for seed germination or just to prevent wash-outs? I'm planning to overseed in the fall and and address some bare areas on a slope, wondering if it would help
 
#12 ·
What seed you dropping? PRG not necessary quick aggressive germination. KBG it's a long test your patience germination. I think if you can seed and rake in good so it's covered in topsoil about a 1/4 inch maybe a little less highly doable if you can run the irrigation on a timely matter to keep it moist.
 
#14 ·
Save yourself the headache and wasted money from a heavy downpour washout. 99% weed free EZ straw from lowes is the ticket. Affordable large bag with a water activated tackifier added to hold everything together in hard rain and wind. I've never had any weeds from it and it has saved my a$$ more than once. Learn from the rest of us and cover the seed. I've made that mistake before and I'm sure others here as well.
 
#16 ·
#22 ·
How big of an area are you doing? Are you bringing in any soil or just killing off old grass?

I killed off old grass but there was still plenty of it to keep the new seed in place. Didn't use anything to cover. We ended up with 5" of rain in a 2 hour period,too.

Check my reno journal in signature.
 
#23 ·
Two years ago my KBG got washed out from torrential rain 10 days after seeding. It was very disheartening to put in all the reno work to then get washed away because I was lazy about covering. It can be done without covering, but it's all just a gamble in the end.
 
#24 ·
I did my renovation last fall by only rolling down the seed at first, but then with heavy down pours in the forecast I ended up spreading some Pennington slopemaster without seed. I think it helped a little. You can look up some tackifiers. I found the slopemaster was one of the cheaper options.
 
#28 ·
I have never used a cover for a full renovation of an existing lawn, only for small totally bare patches. I did rent a verticutter both times though. The first renovation was tall fescue and the second was KBG. Both were a complete success (but I do have automatic irrigation systems).