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Suggestions on types of grass to plant
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Author:  ddirt [ Mon Jul 06, 2015 2:52 pm ]
Post subject:  Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Looking for suggestions on the best type of grass to plant (sod, not seed) in the Allen/McKinney area. Moved into home 2 years ago and the grass has never been great. More like weeds mixed in with some Bermuda and fescue. Yep, kindly ugly but not terrible as long as it's kept trimmed. Don't need to do the entire yard just a few big patches in the front, where it's mostly dirt.

Suggestions on grass types? Always thought St. Augustine looked the nicest but it's a water hog. And of course looking to go the natural route.

Thanks

Author:  northwesterner [ Thu Jul 09, 2015 1:13 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Personally, you couldn't pay me to plant Bermuda, it is the worst weed in the world if you want to keep it OUT of flower beds and gardens near a Bermuda lawn. Have you looked into Buffalo grass? It has a look like Bermuda but takes a lot less water. It can be planted by seed or sod.

Author:  ddirt [ Fri Jul 10, 2015 7:18 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Thanks Northwesterner. Irregardless of what I decide to put down and in the spirit of keeping it as natural as possible what would you suggest to mix in the soil prior to laying sod and then what would you recommend putting on top of sod now and moving forward. Have read through many posts here and elsewhere just trying to sum it all up.

Thanks

Author:  northwesterner [ Fri Jul 10, 2015 1:06 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Howard usually recommends putting down a thin layer of compost before sod. Wait a little while and David Hall, the moderator of this particular forum, should come along and catch up on posts and give you a more complete answer. You can also look up varieties of grass and planting techniques in the Library of Organic Information.

Author:  ddirt [ Tue Jul 14, 2015 2:53 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Thank you

Author:  Dchall_San_Antonio [ Fri Mar 11, 2016 12:51 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Suggestions on types of grass to plant

Normally I get back to this forum more frequently, but this has been an unusual year of remodeling one house and moving out of another. My free forum time has been limited.

All lawns need an inch of water in the hottest heat of summer to look good. If you don't care about looking good, then you can go longer. When you go longer without watering St Augustine is going to wilt before you water again. Wilted St Aug will come back fine, but it's a lot of stress on the plant. Bermuda, on the other hand, may wilt but it seems to rebound much more quickly than St Aug. So St Aug is not really a water hog as much as it is more sensitive to drying out. If you leave it dry for the month of July, it might die and not come back with water. But I have left it dry for the months of September through December and it came back with water.

If you want to try something different, there is a variety of buffalo grass that has most of the good characteristics of a turf. The normal problem with buffalo grass is as soon as it's mowed down it sends up flowers and seed heads much faster than the grass grows. TechTurf (aka Turffalo) sends up the seeds and flowers but they grow at the same speed as the grass, so it doesn't look "hairy" in a few days. TechTurf also spreads like wildfire while normal buffalo spreads more slowly if at all. TechTurf becomes dense. Other buffalo grasses do not. Having said that the UC Verde buffalo hybrid is also a good alternative to the regular buffaloes. I have never seen UC Verde in person. TechTurf is a dense grass no matter what mowing height you like. The other issue with TechTurf is the color. It's a yellow green at its best.

Here's a picture of TechTurf that needs mowing badly. This shows the color and density. You can also see it escaping over the concrete.
Image

Any other buffalo grass would have flower stems 8 inches high at this point.

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