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Starting new lawn

Posted on 2/6/20 at 1:31 pm
Posted by Stellytiger
Arnaudville
Member since Aug 2015
646 posts
Posted on 2/6/20 at 1:31 pm
I planted winter rye late fall in my yard. I’m thinking about putting down Bermuda seed. I have a lot of property. What’s the process I need to do to get this working?
Posted by BallsEleven
Member since Mar 2019
6163 posts
Posted on 2/6/20 at 1:35 pm to
How big of an area are you talking about?

Edited for all caps
This post was edited on 2/6/20 at 1:36 pm
Posted by NattyLite
St. Charles Community
Member since Jan 2010
2023 posts
Posted on 2/6/20 at 2:39 pm to
I have Bermuda that looks so good everyone thinks I sodded but I did not. Fertilize the hell out of it (33-0-0) till you get total ground coverage with whatever type of grass. Then treat the weeds with Target 6 starting around late March. It took me only a few months until my yard was beautiful. I planted no Bermuda just let the natural stuff come out. Fertilize it every month. Then treat the weeds and repeat. Be sure to mow often. At times I now 3 times a week. I’m no professional but I do have the best yard in my neighborhood.
This post was edited on 2/6/20 at 2:42 pm
Posted by Drunken Crawfish
Member since Apr 2017
3824 posts
Posted on 2/6/20 at 3:37 pm to
I had to start my lawn over after having to regrade my back yard. The back portion is about .75 acres. Here is a link to that thread that showed some of the progress.

LINK

Edit: Sorry I hit submit early.

I started out by nuking my whole yard with glyphosate so we could start from scratch. I would maybe look at doing that as well since the winter rye will be dying off in the heat. Once the area is mostly dirt, I would bring in someone with a box blade or a disc to till up the dirt. When I talked to the hydroseeding contractor he said that proper dirt prep can be the difference in a good and great result.

I decided to go with hydroseeding over just plain seed in a spreader. Went with hybrid Bermuda strain called Daniella. Lucked out with a few rain showers and had sprouts in about 18 days. Know that you will either need LOTS of hoses or lots of rain throughout the process. Also lots of beer to reward yourself for moving hoses.

Once it got to growing about two months I did my first cut about 3.5 inches and put out a low nitrogen fertilizer/humic dg mix. I purposely kept the grass higher than usual (2.25-2.5) this summer to not stress it too much. Towards the end of the growing season I used a good bit of herbicides to knock out buttonweed and dallisgrass.

Overall I am super happy with the results and the work paid off. Shoot me an email with any questions drunkencrawfishtd@gmail.

Here is a picture of the yard on September 22 last year (notice the sprinkler rolling):

This post was edited on 2/6/20 at 4:18 pm
Posted by BallsEleven
Member since Mar 2019
6163 posts
Posted on 2/6/20 at 4:16 pm to
Listen to this guy ^^^

quote:

I decided to go with hydroseeding over just plain seed in a spreader.


I wish I would have done this. Seeding was a PITA and I ended up with maybe half grass half weeds because I didn't water enough and hadn't done a soil test and was throwing down just nitrogen. The gully washer 3 days after I spread the seed didn't help either.

This spring and summer will be a process of killing off the weeds while pushing my princess 77 through the rest of the yard. I got a proplugger so hopefully that will help speed things up at the far ends.
Posted by ronk
Member since Jan 2015
6227 posts
Posted on 7/8/20 at 7:01 am to
Crawfish has done a really good job with his yard.

How much land are we talking about? I filled in my sunken areas of my irrigation lines and seeded with princess 77. That’s the closest match to tif 419. I had germination in 5 days.
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