Yard won't grow

Joined
Nov 6, 2017
Messages
587
Location
WA
Plant clover. Dog resistant, dogs eat it, it greens up nicely, helps pollinators, and it doesn't need to be mowed or watered as much.
I'm also converting most of our yard to a mix of crimson and white clover. There's a number of sites that have pollinator lawn/pasture mixes designed for every growing region of the country, some examples:



Slowly converting our non-forested back acreage to pollinator/wildlife friendly meadows as well. A TON of work upfront to "do it right", but absolutely the right move, especially if you want greenage and color in the heart of summer and don't want to mow or water. We tripled our Mason Bee "harvest" this spring, which is our first year with pollinator pastures and have 4x the amount of Blacktail coming through the back pastures.

The wife and kid love seeing the different flowers, butterflies, bees, ladybugs, beetles, colors, etc. as well as love looking for four-leaf clovers, garter snakes, bunnies, etc. hiding within, and the dogs love having infinite tall things to pee on & bunnies to chase.

11/10 recommend!
 

KurtR

WKR
Joined
Sep 11, 2015
Messages
4,015
Location
South Dakota
I’m glad to see I’m not the only one who hates yard grass and thinks it is a waste of time. Maybe the fact my dad made me push mow and acre is part of my hatred.
 

Burnsie

WKR
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
313
Location
Illinois
I hate mowing and doing yard work, but I hate my place looking like a hobo or white trash lives in it more. I haven't worked all these years to build a good life, pay off my home and vehicles ...etc. to have my place look like a dump. I'm not out to impress anyone, but also don't want to be the eye sore of the neighborhood either.
Follow the Menards 1 thru 4 fertilizer application program and after a couple seasons you will have a nice looking yard. I have city water, so watering the lawn is much too costly and wasteful. During summers that are extra dry and hot the grass browns up for a few weeks during the dog days, but greens right up as soon as Fall starts to come on.
 

Lvthntitall

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Sep 25, 2019
Messages
239
Location
Illinois
What were the soil test results? Guessing it has to do with soil type or a contaminant in the poor areas.
 
Joined
Sep 28, 2018
Messages
2,233
Location
VA
Maybe you could try aerating your lawn and mixing in sand to promote drainage.

He actually should add pelletized lime and organic matter like horse manure or leaf mulch about 60-90 days out from temps in his area hovering in the 50-60 degree range(best range for grass to start growing). The organic matter will increase worm activitiy and carbon content of the soil, which in turn increases the water infiltration and retention of moisture that promotes grass growth. Before the winter temps settle in, he should selectively place good topsoil and seed when regular temps are in the 70's or less so grass starts growing and puts out roots before it hibernates.

............
It takes about 40-50 years to realize the carcinogenic effects of a chemical, we’re in for a reckoning in ~10-20 years when we realize we’ve poisoned our drinking water so boomers don’t have to look at dandelions.

I mowed for the first time June 2nd this year and have mowed twice since. Hopefully the weird lawn obsession is something that dies with the boomers.

Grass obsession has moved into the millenials and X'ers already .. People doing stupid shit like this and never bothered to ask "why"

I had to chew out someone who was advising another co-worker about food plots. He started by saying he need to spray broad spectrum herbacide. When I called him out on that he said "this is advice coming directly from whitetail biologist specialist". I said "sure its works but why have we never bothered to question methods and take ownerships of our actions using things like herbacide" When I asked if he truly cared about habitat promotion/improvement he'd use alternate methods of clearing space for food plots because all that herbacide would work its way into the water table and start poisoning all the streams, he was silent after my presentation about the effects of glyphosate type products
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,404
So we tried the soil test method and had to put a bunch of lime down and new seed. Grass till grows spotty. Local yard guy wants us to till it up and start over.

Previous owne had 3 dogs we have one, he pees on our walks and occasional in the yard.

Should I just put the tiller in the back of the tractor and turn it over or does anyone have any input ?
Time and time again I’ve chatted with clients that try all sorts of things to fix their soil that won’t grow grass and I tell every one of them I bet they eventually end up hauling in new topsoil to fix it. Mix in all the fertilizer you want, poor soil might also be contaminated, naturally or not, and will never do well. As the years go by my predictions come true more often than not. Grass in good soil almost grows itself.
 

BadDogPSD

WKR
Joined
Jan 12, 2019
Messages
375
Location
NV
I loved having a nice lawn to play in growing up. If it wasn't storming, we were outside. I don't mind mowing.
 
OP
J

Jmort1754

WKR
Joined
Aug 17, 2018
Messages
1,667
Time and time again I’ve chatted with clients that try all sorts of things to fix their soil that won’t grow grass and I tell every one of them I bet they eventually end up hauling in new topsoil to fix it. Mix in all the fertilizer you want, poor soil might also be contaminated, naturally or not, and will never do well. As the years go by my predictions come true more often than not. Grass in good soil almost grows itself.
I am not home to view the soil results. I know ph was 5.1

I just thought about having new topsoil brought in.

The yard in question is 28x30 so not a large yard Just our side yard.

We but down 50lb is pelletized lime, that's what was recommended this spring.
 

go_deep

WKR
Joined
Jan 7, 2021
Messages
2,031
Does the local farmer haul in new dirt for all his fields?
Or does they make the soil that's there right?
 

Jlamb

FNG
Joined
Jul 13, 2024
Messages
16
It sounds absurd, but a little dawn dish soap in a hose sprayer worked wonders on some poor patches of grass we had.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,404
Here’s a wheat field in the UK that’s been farmed for hundreds of years. Over the years I can only imagine how many times they’ve added extra this or that to those bare spots.
8DF5CFBE-4B2F-49E7-8C65-A16D817F859D.jpeg
 

Brewski

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 12, 2018
Messages
174
It sounds absurd, but a little dawn dish soap in a hose sprayer worked wonders on some poor patches of grass we had.
I use the cheapest baby shampoo from walmart. I have heavy clay soil and spray the baby shampoo after the first rain and then right before the first heavy rainstorm. Grass loves it and the soap improves drainage and reduces ponding.
 
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