Some grasses can repair themselves by spreading across and filling in bare areas. Some grasses can't. This is just a very brief chat about it, and also to secretly show you an amazing view I adore every time I come to this street.
After watching your dethatching video last spring I followed your advice and my old drought ridden lawn came back beautifully. Thank you. From Boston, Massachusetts.
Awesome view ! Looks like this lawn is on its way to becoming beautiful again under ur care ! Kudos for upload n ur advice. Anticipating ur next one. Peace
Hi Shaun 😊 keep it up you are doing a great job and having fun making some brilliant videos superstar Ali Walsall west midlands england junction 10 m6 Walsall churckery
Morning I don't know if you've ever done this. When I have stray grass from the lawn seeding itself in the nearby gravel paths. I check to see if its a match for the lawn grass, pluck it out, find a bald patch, poke a little hole in the turf, plant it and give it a little water. What I find with this plug technique it you fill small spaces if lawn a hell of lot faster with already established grass.
Your aeriator unit would be ideal for it. The grass cores you create you could use to "seed" bald areas in your customers gardens. Dark corners areas where the dogs had peed etc
Thatch is a layer of both living and dead plant material that accumulates on top of the soil surface. If you have a properly maintained tall fescue lawn, thatch is not usually a problem. If you prefer a grass type that requires less maintenance and has spreading abilities, you can opt for a rhizomatous turf-type tall fescue. To avoid thatch buildup, you can try using regular treatments of blackstrap molasses EM1/EM2 instead of mechanical detaching. It is just another option to consider.