I thought I would revive this
thread started 16 years ago as I am working on restoring some patches of my back yard that are being quite stubborn. Just to be clear, the patches really need some type of work as they are on slopes, have a hard time getting any type of groundcover established and therefore are bare and are getting some erosion so I want to get something, almost anything, planted for erosion control if nothing else. Also, my wife would like our backyard to look a little nicer so I am taking on the challenge.
In doing so, I am getting grass seed on the yard, but doing so with as many
Permie principles as possible. I can't say I am going all "Lawncare-for-the-cheap-and-lazy" approach as advocated by Paul, but I am trying to use as many of those principles as possible, starting by seeding into existing broadleaves and just leaving the broadleaves there as a nurse/cover crop. I hope to let those "weeds" shade the soil, help retain the moisture so that the grass seed will grow down into the soil instead of growing up near the surface if daily watering were needed. I hate to say it, but in my pre-Permies days I sprayed a LOT of water down just to get grass to germinate, much of which died because the constant watering cause the early roots to grow up by the surface where the water was. I did the deep waterings as was recommended, but this was to no avail--much of the new grass died anyways in the first, blistering summer heat wave that brought a drought. I am embarrassed to admit how much money I spent on spraying water on the ground. Please don't be like me.
I live in the transition zone where no type of grass seed is ideal. To the North, bluegrass would be ideal. To the South, something like a centipede grass would love our heat and leap over bare spots (but can become a weed so that is an issue) but dies in our winters. Tall fescue (specifically, K-31 dominates) seems to be the predominate lawn grass around here but it does have some issues.
K-31 is not a bad lawn grass as it is deep rooting, making it drought resistant, a real issue in our summers. It also grows well on minimal nutrients meaning that minimal to non-fertilized lawns still look plenty nice. The blade is a medium blade and not too bad as lawn grasses go, though it can't compete with bluegrass for pure appearance value. It is a bunch grass, meaning it forms tightly packed bunches that themselves are plenty dense but unfortunately leave gaps between them unless the seeding is pretty heavy in which case the bunches but up against each other. It seems like Paul's interest in fescue, if I am reading this thread correctly, dates back to 1994 and since then there has been a LOT of breeding and advancement in different types of fescue types, significantly a few types that spread by rhizome and fill in bare spots. I am interested in this type of grass seed, though getting ahold of some is just a bit tricky and I have a bit of difficulty determining just how aggressively this grass fills in bare spots.
Another option that recently became a local option are heat tolerant bluegrasses. These are bluegrasses that still spread like bluegrass does, has a fine appearance that bluegrass does yet tolerates high heat, humidity, disease and drought, much like fescue does. This might sound perfect were it not for the cost. I could never afford a heat-tolerant bluegrass lawn, but I could afford to add a bit of heat tolerant bluegrass to my fescue-dominant lawn. I am also unsure of how a pure heat-tolerant bluegrass lawn would tolerate minimal to no fertilization. I know that Paul is not a fan of mixing fescues and bluegrass, but around here, one of the most popular seed mixes is a sports turf mix 5 varieties of fescue--each selected for genetic diversity and their heat and recuperative qualities (just what you would want on a soccer field for example) and a 5% addition of a heat tolerant bluegrass to spread and fill in bare spots in-between the clumps of fescue and to help self-repair bare spots as they appear. These soccer fields look pretty nice and get no special treatment aside from mowing. Not long ago I checked one of these sports turf mixes and it included in the fescue mix a species of fescue that spread by rhizomes in addition to the heat tolerant bluegrass to enhance the bare-spot filling qualities. This spring when I went to buy some grass seed I tried to buy one of these 95% fescue, 5% bluegrass mixtures but they were sold out--they are that popular. I ended up buying a 100%, 5-way fescue blend.
At any rate, I am not so much starting a new lawn as overseeding a pretty rough spot of existing lawn with some bare spots. I spread my seed about a month ago--really hammered it with seed since I had it--and added in some annual ryegrass since the annual ryegrass germinates very quickly--3-5 days--and along with the broad leaves will help to hold the fescue in place on the slope. I mowed that section for the first time yesterday and I was pleased that I had a nice little crop of new grass blades growing up. Now I just hope they will stay alive.
I only seeded a 3 bare spots about 20' in diameter. I hope to focus on just these 3 spots over summer instead of trying to keep a whole backyard alive as I have done--and failed--in the past. I figure if I can get these spots through the summer I will add just a bit of heat tolerant bluegrass (perhaps to Paul's consternation) so as to add a self-repairing ability. I really don't want to have to do this again. If all goes well, next spring I will move on to another, less neglected area and attempt something similar.
This may seem like a lot of work, but I don't mind the work and I do want a solid groundcover, something that is not happening at present. I am also doing this without any artificial chemicals--I may use a foliar spray and I may even use corn gluten, but that will be about it. I intend to control broadleaves by mowing and I hope that the dense grass--fescue and bluegrass working together--will crowd out any new weeds and old ones will die from mowing.
At any rate, I thought I would make this update to this otherwise very old thread. I am going about this
project using as many "Permies" principles as possible and thought it an appropriate addition and update.
Eric