Lawn Renovation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lawn Renovation

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Severity of plant damage depends on flood water quality, duration and ... a rake to rough-up the soil. ... Till, rake, drag, level, roll. Now plant seed or sod ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lawn Renovation


1
Lawn Renovation
  • Post hurricane repairs

2
Some flood areas got killed
3
Some flood areas survived
4
Areas flooded differ in damage
  • Severity of plant damage depends on flood water
    quality, duration and temperatures.
  • Salty water for long periods of time in hot
    weather were the worst.

5
Storm topping could be good or bad/salty remove,
dont till in, if salt contaminated
6
Early sample conclusions
  • For those areas that had a large accumulation of
    sediment, it is recommended to scrape or remove
    this sediment from lawns and beds. The primary
    issue with sediment is salinity, which when
    watered into the soil may increase the soil
    salinity and thus be deleterious to plant growth.

7
What to do spring 2006 ?
  • A dry winter didnt help much.
  • Run a soil test and storm test if suspicious of
    salinity. 7 5.
  • Remove storm topping only if salty.
  • Whats dead is dead- reestablish as necessary or
    weeds will take over and predominate.
  • Routine 7 soil test may be a good idea to see
    what the flood water did to your soil fertility.
  • Dont rush into establishment do it right.
  • Kill existing vegetation first before replanting.

8
Simple Bioassays
  • Is there an area that you think may have a
    problem with salts? Take a
  • 0-3 section of the soil, place it in a
    suitable container and plant
  • into it the seed youll be planting. Water it
    observe.
  • Another more direct approach is to locate a
    questionable area and use
  • a rake to rough-up the soil. Plant sensitive
    radish and lettuce seed vs Swiss chard, tomato or
    broccoli (salt tolerant). Be sure to mark which
    crop is planted in which area. Water the areas as
    needed observe.
  • If sensitive crops emerge and do O K- great if
    the salt tolerant wont grow, you either have bad
    seed or extremely salty soil. Try some known good
    soil in a pot as a control comparison.
  • With these tests, youll have a pretty good idea
    of how affected is the soil.

9
Establishment preparation
  • Get the soil tested
  • Control perennial weeds
  • Remove rocks trash
  • Install drains, swales, irrigation, etc.
  • Develop the topsoil
  • Lime, fertilizer, organic matter, sand
  • Develop the seedbed
  • Till, rake, drag, level, roll
  • Now plant seed or sod

10
Have irrigation in place before final grade and
planting
11
Propagation success
  • Seeds and young plants are most affected by
    salinity or stress.
  • Vegetative (mature material) is more resistant to
    salinity or stress.

12
Establishment by seed
  • Choice of grass
  • Cool season type vs. Warm season
  • Mixture, blend or one kind
  • Review seed quality
  • Broadcast or drill the seed
  • Cultipak or roll to seat seed
  • Irrigate (lightly frequently)

13
First establish a good seed bed
14
Broadcast seed uniformly
15
Get good seed/soil contact- as shown by tire
tracks
16
Roll in your seed for good soil contact
17
Vegetative establishment
  • Solid sodding
  • Plugging or strip plug
  • Sprigging or stolonizing
  • Lay sod or distribute sprigs
  • Disc in, topdress and roll or cultipak as needed
    to plant or level the surface.
  • Irrigate immediately

18
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19
Sod beds need a good base too
20
Pallet distribution cuts work
21
Lay sod tight together
22
Lay sod in brick-like pattern
23
Keep those edges tight together or fill in gaps
with soil
24
Roll over your newly planted sod or plugs
25
Plugged lawn
26
Cut sod into Plugs- 2x2 or 4x4
27
Keep your newly planted investment growing well
28
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