getting lawn ready for a wedding and panicking!

Discussion in 'Lawns' started by adamadamant, Dec 28, 2024 at 4:29 PM.

  1. adamadamant

    adamadamant Gardener

    Joined:
    Jul 23, 2019
    Messages:
    30
    Ratings:
    +7
    Hi I would appreciate some help. My lawn this year has been pretty bad from the middle to the back fence - the shadier part of the garden. The drainage isn't brilliant although I add lawn dressing every year, scarify and all that, and re-seed, but this winter it is dreadfully bare in some places and very mossy in others - combination of wear and tear, hot dry summer followed by wet and damp. So I was oddly rather looking forward to a massive and satisfying lawn renovation scheme in the spring, but my daughter has now asked if we can have a wedding party in the garden in May 2025. I worry I wont be able to get the new grass established in time. We are in South London. How early does anyone think I could start the re-seeding etc (I normally find it takes months to properly establish a lawn for the summer and I often start too soon). Or am I going to have to lay turf. If so, what is the earliest I could ask someone to lay for me. Very much appreciate your advice. All the best and Happy New Year
     
  2. Perki

    Perki Total Gardener

    Joined:
    Jun 2, 2017
    Messages:
    2,504
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    Lancashire
    Ratings:
    +9,155
    I am up north so can't really say for when best time for seeding but here the earliest I'd entertain seeding is March into April.

    It sound more like you have a drainage problem, are you on clay as well? If you do I'd be looking into that maybe even turn the whole area over add grit / sharp sand compost / other organic matter .

    I don't think its worth going down seeding within that time frame , turfing can be done anytime of the weather except when the ground is froze but not ideal either if water logged, if you get it turfed in March early April its will look well by May and knitted together.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • adamadamant

      adamadamant Gardener

      Joined:
      Jul 23, 2019
      Messages:
      30
      Ratings:
      +7
       
    • adamadamant

      adamadamant Gardener

      Joined:
      Jul 23, 2019
      Messages:
      30
      Ratings:
      +7
      Good advice, thank you I'll look into the turf.
       
    • shiney

      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

      Joined:
      Jul 3, 2006
      Messages:
      63,947
      Gender:
      Male
      Occupation:
      Retired - Last Century!!!
      Location:
      Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
      Ratings:
      +124,900
      I think you may be pushing it a bit even with turf. Although the grass will have a much better chance I don't think it will survive heavy wear from a lot of people. You may be better off leaving the grass you have to grow a couple of inches high at least. That will help hide some of the patches. By that time of year the moss should at least still look green.

      Generally speaking, guests at a wedding don't really care what the lawn looks like (we have had seven weddings in our garden) and it is only the bride and groom that want it looking green in photos. If it is left longer it will look green as you aren't pointing the camera down at the lawn.

      Of course, this will also depend on how bad it is at the moment. Any pictures for us?
       
    • fairygirl

      fairygirl Total Gardener

      Joined:
      Oct 3, 2020
      Messages:
      2,928
      Occupation:
      retired
      Location:
      west central Scotland
      Ratings:
      +6,630
      I'd agree with @shiney - better to just leave the grass a bit longer through spring, especially if it's likely to be drier in late April/early May where you are. Any new turf you put in would just be trampled anyway, so it's not really worth the money you'd spend on it. Certainly no point in seeding as, even with good conditions, it would only just be growing well by that time and would then be destroyed. Newly seeded lawns need quite a bit of time before they can withstand the wear and tear of lots of footfall. A smaller area, in particular, would be trashed more readily than a larger area.

      The alternative would be to lift the top layer and put gravel down. That could then be dug in [or just left in situ] if you then wanted to either replace the turf, or add some soil and re seed.
       
    • adamadamant

      adamadamant Gardener

      Joined:
      Jul 23, 2019
      Messages:
      30
      Ratings:
      +7
      Bonzer ideas from both of you, thank you. I like both - you're right that the garden looks green from a distance, just patchy as anything when up close but really who cares apart from me and my pride! But for a separate bad area at the back the gravel idea is genius! Thank you everyone.
       
    • Plantminded

      Plantminded Head Gardener

      Joined:
      Mar 13, 2024
      Messages:
      1,220
      Gender:
      Male
      Occupation:
      Retired
      Location:
      Wirral
      Ratings:
      +3,949
      A rented marquee would cover the worst area and protect your guests from any unreliable weather! You could then decide what to do with your lawn without any deadline :).
       
      Last edited: Dec 29, 2024 at 12:04 PM
    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

      Joined:
      Jan 9, 2005
      Messages:
      51,649
      Gender:
      Male
      Occupation:
      Retired
      Location:
      Mid Kent
      Ratings:
      +95,791
      I'd try weed and feed around early late march/April time and hope for the best, as others have said any new turf is unlikely to want trampling on.

      I'd even consider covering an area with fake grass if you have to, just for the photos.
       
    Loading...

    Share This Page

    1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
      By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
      Dismiss Notice