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Top dress left a million pebbles

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9.6K views 30 replies 16 participants last post by  davegravy  
#1 ·
Hey guys,
I am mid reno and just put down some soil and it was put through a 3/8 screen so there are a lot of small rocks. Now I have to clean up the mess. I am planning on mowing low so I need it debris free.
What is my best course of action? Rake?
Thanks!



 
#6 ·
Just ran into the same issue. Tonight I built a sifter with a 1/4" screen and got to work raking. Did about a 1/4 of yard and think I may just give up and live with it, or just focus on the bad areas since it was only the last truck load that seemed to have most of the rock. My biggest issue is trying to haul and find a place to dump all the rock/debris.
 
#7 ·
My lawn was left with a ton of small rocks when it was hydroseeded before we moved in. It's awful stuff but I've just been picking them up whenever I can.

I also have a SunJoe that does a good job picking up small rocks (its probably dulling the blade/metal, oh well) so when I dethatch and scarify I'm hoping it picks up a bunch.
 
#10 ·
Chris1 said:
backside of the landscape rake dragging does not collect the pebbles ?
Not really since there is scalped grass. It just bounces.
I bought a cheap plastic rake and it did the trick after raking this 6500 sq. Ft. Section for 8 hours.
Good times lol
 
#11 ·
I feel your pain and it really sucks. Worst part is you should probably pick them up.

I did an overseed last fall with 5 yards of "screened" topsoil and in the spring I was really disappointed with the results. The lawn was pretty patchy all over. Anywhere there was a patch I found these pebbles. I was furious. And they were everywhere because grass can't grow through rocks,

So I spent many hours listening to music/podcasts and picking up these pebbles. If you have/know any kids pay them per 500mL cottage cheese container they fill. At some point I gave up on ensuring all the rocks have been picked up because life is more important. But even if you manage to pick up only a handful that's helpful.

And on top of that I had to search through my growing grass to find them. Your rocks are a lot more easier to spot. I would recommend investing in a leveling rake: https://www.google.com/search?q=leveling+rake&client=firefox-b-d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj_8J7EhfbqAhWWX80KHaQsC-cQ_AUoAnoECA4QBA&biw=1536&bih=750 as these will gather a lot of rocks and will be useful for future adventures.

Best of luck.
 
#12 ·
Zcape35 said:
Chris1 said:
backside of the landscape rake dragging does not collect the pebbles ?
Not really since there is scalped grass. It just bounces.
I bought a cheap plastic rake and it did the trick after raking this 6500 sq. Ft. Section for 8 hours.
Good times lol
The "good times" line literally had me laughing out loud. Haha. We've all been there at some point with something in our yard. Glad you were able to get them up. Good luck with your Reno!
 
#13 ·
CanadianGrassMan said:
I feel your pain and it really sucks. Worst part is you should probably pick them up.

I did an overseed last fall with 5 yards of "screened" topsoil and in the spring I was really disappointed with the results. The lawn was pretty patchy all over. Anywhere there was a patch I found these pebbles. I was furious. And they were everywhere because grass can't grow through rocks,

So I spent many hours listening to music/podcasts and picking up these pebbles. If you have/know any kids pay them per 500mL cottage cheese container they fill. At some point I gave up on ensuring all the rocks have been picked up because life is more important. But even if you manage to pick up only a handful that's helpful.

And on top of that I had to search through my growing grass to find them. Your rocks are a lot more easier to spot. I would recommend investing in a leveling rake: https://www.google.com/search?q=leveling+rake&client=firefox-b-d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj_8J7EhfbqAhWWX80KHaQsC-cQ_AUoAnoECA4QBA&biw=1536&bih=750 as these will gather a lot of rocks and will be useful for future adventures.

Best of luck.
Oh no... I just finished spreading 5 yards for a reno and have tons of these. The soil looked finely screened and spread nicely. I'd dump a barrowful on the ground, spread it with the levellawn and it looked good until the last few swipes of the levellawn which was pushing a ton of these little pebbles and tiny twigs around. I have clusters of these all around, with hundreds per cluster. Some of the pebbles are clay balls that break if you stomp on them but at least some are legit stones.

Was really hoping they'd work themselves into the soil and the grass wouldn't care much.
 
#17 ·
The plastic rake worked good, just have to find one with as narrow of a spacing between tines as possible. My back is sore but the rocks are now in piles... across the street.... all alone.
A screen would have worked but 8 yards pushed the a hand screen would have been too tedious for me.
 
#20 ·
JerseyGreens said:
Best practice: use a makeshift sifter or rake them out.

What most people do: leave them...

Have to understand that native soil has a ton of pebbles and even larger rocks. Most of our lawns look just fine.
My goal is to reel mow so I don't want to damage the machine.
I ended up raking 99% of them up over the course of 12 hours (8K). I'm going to have my 12 year old go out and hand pick the remainder.
 
#21 ·
Zcape35 said:
JerseyGreens said:
Best practice: use a makeshift sifter or rake them out.

What most people do: leave them...

Have to understand that native soil has a ton of pebbles and even larger rocks. Most of our lawns look just fine.
My goal is to reel mow so I don't want to damage the machine.
I ended up raking 99% of them up over the course of 12 hours (8K). I'm going to have my 12 year old go out and hand pick the remainder.
I give you props for making that happen.

I'm going to reel mow as well. The drum will likely push most of them down over time.
 
#22 ·
Zcape35 said:
JerseyGreens said:
Best practice: use a makeshift sifter or rake them out.

What most people do: leave them...

Have to understand that native soil has a ton of pebbles and even larger rocks. Most of our lawns look just fine.
My goal is to reel mow so I don't want to damage the machine.
I ended up raking 99% of them up over the course of 12 hours (8K). I'm going to have my 12 year old go out and hand pick the remainder.
Wouldn't going over it thoroughly with a roller push them into the soil so they are captive / not free to damage the mower?
 
#25 ·
Part of my issue was that it is a reno and there is thick dead scalped turf. Some rocks might have just pushed down but a lot wouldn't have. I'd rather have as few rocks as possible. Weird things happen during occasional frigid winters and frost heaves.
This is my second Reno and I'm hoping this to be the last in this area, I don't want to chance anything.
Thanks fellas