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Gardening

Find tips and tricks to make your garden or allotment flourish on our Gardening forum.

Has anyone ever killed off their whole lawn with glyphosate and started again?

4 replies

YoniTrix · 19/04/2013 14:31

I hesitate to use the word lawn as it is mostly moss with a few patches of weeds and bushy indigenous grass.

It's also not very level so I would like to get rid of the whole lot and re-level it, put in some drainage in a swampy bit and put down seed.

Has anyone done this? How long did it take before you had a functioning lawn again? Any tips?

OP posts:
Rhubarbgarden · 19/04/2013 19:39

Don't glyphosate it. You will be left with a rooty mess. You need to strip off the turf (slice it into rectangles with a half moon then lift with a spade) then dig over the whole lot. Rake the soil level, firm down, rake again to a fine tilth then seed or lay new turf.

passthecheese · 23/04/2013 13:56

We did in our old house, but it was just the lawn. The rest of the garden we had dug things up, including an old air raid shelter, and brambles. We did rotavate the lot both front and back gardens. Where the lawn had been we covered with good quality membrane and then pea shingle at the back. In the front we did the same but added loads of compost as we had clay soil and then planted stuff
through the membrane, all the plants grew really well.

Erebus · 28/04/2013 21:47

I am wondering the same, actually!

Thanks for the advice re glyphosate- that was Plan A!

Someone also said that once you remove the turf (using a turf cutter), don't rotovate as you won't end up with a fine, level surface. They added just fine sand to level, then a thin layer of topsoil, then the new turf, so you'd need to chop down enough to add all that stuff or your new lawn might be too high.

bumperella · 06/05/2013 18:33

You could rotavate, but after that you would need to do further works to make sure you had an even surface and fine tilth for seed sowing. Rotavating would be like digging: it would make the soil less compacted allowing air and water to move through it more quickly, but wouldn't give you a fine crubmbly flat, level surface.

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