January-February 2002

Seeding: Success Is All in the Techniques

There are many ways of getting seed into the ground. Knowing what you want to achieve helps determine which will work best.

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By Janis Keating

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Seed: Get It Wet?

USDA plant hardiness zones in the US and part of Canada

Starting from seed is obviously the most cost-effective way to vegetate a site. As for the application of that seed, many contractors divide into two major "camps": the hydraulic seeders and the terraseeders. (Broadcast application has shown a marked decline, except for agricultural or residential do-it-yourself projects.) Both methods offer ease of application; the seeder units allow contractors to quickly spray an area with seed, compost, fertilizers, and other amendments while using less manpower than manual seeding methods. With their high-powered blowers, both hydro- and terraseeding units can seed difficult, hard-to-reach areas, such as slopes, in an amazingly short amount of time.

For more than 30 years, the Bridgeville, DE—based company Easy Lawn has manufactured and sold hydroseeding equipment worldwide. "We also train people in using our hydraulic seeders," says President Bob Lisle. "Saving labor costs is the biggest factor that draws people to hydroseeding, but germination ranks up there too. The water is there in the seed mix, creating a higher rate of germination. The process also allows you to add fertilizer and whatever else you need–a tackifier; lime, perhaps; hydromulch to hold the moisture and help control erosion; or dye."

Dye? "The hydromulch, which is paper or wood fiber, is sometimes dyed green, serving a dual purpose. First, it gives the area a nice green appearance before the grass sprouts. Second, the dye makes it obvious where you’ve sprayed," Lisle explains. "The mulch breaks down quickly. The paper biodegrades in about six weeks, the wood in about six months, but by then you have grass."

As good as it is, the hydroseeding process can’t always do everything, "There’s a variety of types of hydroseeding–suiting the application to the requirements of the site, using different techniques or application rates, for example," Lisle reports. "If you’re trying to grow grass [under] adverse the conditions, you might have to use a blanket or add fiber or a bonded fiber matrix, which will rot away as the grass comes up through it."

Lisle realizes that the equipment is only as good as the seed that goes in it. "We do tests on seeding and get a lot of feedback from customers. If there are any problems with a seed or a type of site, we come up with a system to solve this."

Seed: Apply It Dry?

Rain-wash and foot-traffic patterns wore down this residential lawn.
Core aeration and top-dressing made a huge difference.

Brian Madden, who oversees the blower-seeder division for Madden Brothers in Cleveland, OH, has "seed it all," including terraseeding, hydroseeding, seed-and-straw methods. "But we try to promote terraseeding the most. Because it combines organic materials with seed and fertilizer, the process helps seed germination. Terraseeding’s better for erosion control; if it rains right after seeding, the compost holds the seed mixture to the ground.

"For residential work we prefer terraseeding, because we guarantee all our lawns," Madden continues. "There have been times when we’ve had to go back and redo hydroseeding. Part of the problem is that the hydroseeding mulch is only an eighth of an inch thick, and it’s only paper; if the homeowner doesn’t water it, it dries out and doesn’t germinate well. With terraseeding, we add compost with the seed, and it doesn’t have to be watered as much. Plus, most new-home owners have a clay soil, and you can’t put a lawn on that without some amendment."

The Madden Brothers’ terraseeding crew is sometimes called out to correct others’ hydroseeding. On one project, Madden recalls, "the client’s landscaper had hydroseeded a new lawn for them the previous year. Over winter, the lawn settled. It was all uneven. We blew the terraseed mix about 2 inches thick and leveled the whole lawn. Because they had no irrigation system, the client’s neighbor said theirs would never look like his golf-course-type ‘perfect’ lawn. But in July, even with drought conditions, the lawn we put in was still green and had to be cut–just like the neighbor’s!"

When terraseeding in northern Ohio, Madden uses 60% specific Kentucky bluegrass and 40% specific perennial rye. "We don’t use anything with less than a 90% germination rate, and our mix contains minimal inert matter. We use eight to 10 pounds of seed per 1,000 square feet. For shady locations in a yard, we use red fescues. Some homeowners want wildflower areas; we blow those in too."

Although terraseeding comprises about 90% of Madden Brothers’s business, the firm still gets calls for other methods. "We blow in crown vetch for roadsides, using perennial rye as a carrier, because vetch takes so long to grow. However, for a large commercial area, or if the Ohio Department of Transportation calls for it, we will hydroseed.

"Sometimes we use PennMulch–hydroseed put in pellet form. The water expands the pellets, which create a protective sheet atop the seeds. We’ll also do seed-straw for rough grade construction, or for new street construction, in that strip 50 feet from the right of way. Seed-straw remains the most cost-effective method for temporary seeding."

In the Minneapolis—St. Paul area, WindScapes, which has offered full-service landscaping and seeding/erosion control for more than 17 years, makes full use of its blower rigs. The units are not only used for terraseeding but also to blow down compost before adding sod.

"We’ve done it the old fashioned way–Brillion seeding, using a hopper with disk, seeding with straw. Hydroseeding is acceptable, but with terraseeding we have improved our service for a little bit of cost," states WindScapes’s Johnson. "Terraseeding does it all in one application–soil and seed put down at the same time, with compost as the carrying agent. The beauty of this is that it makes a nice seed bed, it holds moisture, and it requires less fertilizing.

"We sod or terraseed most of our jobs," he adds. "For a lot of home sites, we’ll sod around the house, but the remaining three-fourths of the yard we will seed." WindScapes uses Kentucky blue, some perennial rye, and a little red creeping fescue in its mix, with some annual rye for "instant" green.

Although the soil around the rivers is a sandy loam, most of the area’s soil is clay. "When sodding in heavy clay, we put compost down before sodding. If the soil’s really terrible, we’ll till the compost in. Otherwise we’ll blow the compost on, making the site sod-ready with little or no raking. Blowing compost on takes some training, though, to ensure you get a good, uniform depth," Johnson says.

Because his firm offers a variety of services, Johnson can easily tell clients the pros and cons of each grassing technique. "Sod is twice the cost. Ours is locally grown, so we can accommodate the soil to the site conditions. However, the sod is grown in a sunny area, so on a shady lot we have to make adjustments.

"When terraseeding, we can put in shade mix where it’s needed; the seed mix is self-contained [from the truck], so we can add different seed mixes in one trip.

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"We don’t hydroseed much anymore," he continues. "We’ve probably reseeded 20 hydroseeded lawns–sometimes the seed washes off; sometimes it grows, sometimes it doesn’t. With our terraseeder, we correct the problems. As we blow compost with the seed, our seed is planted, rather than exposed. We don’t get any voids in coverage–the only time I have to go back and fix things is when there’s an unusual rain right after application, or around downspouts’ wash. Three-fourths of an inch of compost is as high as I apply here; any higher and I need to mix in sand, to eliminate ‘squishiness’ or the mess left by excavators."

Customers are often amazed at terraseeding’s results. "In three to four days they’ll see growth. In about two weeks they’ll have a lawn that needs mowing. Customers will call and say, ‘I can’t believe it!’" In Minnesota, Johnson finds that fall seeding (August 1 through the third week of September) works best, although seeding is also successful from the second week of May until the first or second week of June.

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