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.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Janis Keating

Comments


Put a Sock on It!

FilterSocks injected with seed will sprout and can be left in place.

WindScapes also offers erosion control services. "We use 2 inches of compost on hillsides, eliminating conventional excelsior netting or blankets and replacing silt fences." WindScapes also has been working with a new product, Filtrexx FilterSocks. "We blow compost inside a cloth/nylon mesh ‘sock,’ which then replaces silt fence, hay bales, and the like. The FilterSock holds the compost in place and allows it to filter the water as it passes through. You can also inject the FilterSocks with seed while filling them. We’re using them in wetland applications around ponds. The socks are 8, 12, or 18 inches in diameter; wildlife can easily get through, as opposed to a silt fence, a ‘wall’ 36 inches high! Construction workers can also drive over FilterSocks–but not over silt fence."

Filtrexx’s creator, Rod Tyler, owner of Green Horizons in Grafton, OH, notes that the made-on-site berm created by the sock costs less to ship than many other erosion control materials. "It allows compost to be used where it formerly wasn’t, like streambank restorations or inlet protection, to respond to new Phase II regulations. FilterSocks allow for chemical, physical, and biological filtration, which is a step above conventional physical filtration offered by standard products like silt fence." The sock can be left in place and will eventually blend into the landscape. "When it sprouts, it looks like a giant Chia Pet," says Tyler.

A University of Georgia test compared FilterSocks, in combination with compost blankets, to silt fences for sediment control. "The FilterSocks and blankets yielded a nondetect for sediment, while the silt fences had a full 5-gallon bucket," Tyler reports.

Roots Solve the Problem

grassMasters develops its own equipment.
High-flotation athletic field sprigging allows for a lush, level surface for Louisville Slugger Stadium.

A newer method of grass planting, sprigging is gaining acceptance around the US. Sprigging accelerates the grass sowing process, as the roots are "already there." This method has been used in the Southwest and on the Hawaiian Islands for some time and is now making its way into the mainland South as far north as the transition zones (USDA zones 6-7).

KPA Enviro Green International of Snohomish, WA, uses a variation of hydroseeding called hydrosprigging. In this process, hybrid Bermuda sprigs or stolons are sprayed, along with wood-fiber mulch and optional fertilizer, onto the site. According to KPA Enviro Green, an average of six to 12 bushels of stolons are applied per 1,000 ft.2 One caveat: because they’re alive, sprigs must be used quickly; however, refrigerating causes sprigs to go into dormancy, which can extend their use.

grassMasters Sod Farm in Oakland City, IN, uses a dry process. "We grow it all ourselves," says Owner Joe Bammer. "We buy our sprig diggers but build our own sprig planters because we found we can build better than we can buy."

"Sprigging provides renovation work for a whole lot less money," he remarks. "For a golf course conversion, we sprig into existing turf, planting Bermuda or zoysia into existing material. Cool-season grasses can be sprigged, but no one does it; the process uses warm-season grasses. Many golf courses are converting to Bermuda grass because bluegrasses and rye experience disease patterns. Courses not only save money on fungicides and herbicides by converting to Bermuda, but it’s also good at holding up the golf ball."

The company’s services include row-plant sprigging, in which the machine cuts 0.5-in.-wide by 2-in.-deep grooves into existing grass. Sprigs are pressed into the groove, and a roller follows behind and presses the groove closed. "You don’t have to tear up the field," Bammer says.

On new acreage (not renovations), grassMasters often performs broadcast sprigging, in which grass rhizomes are spread over loose ground. For plots that need a good, level, "nontrip" surface, grassMasters offers high-flotation athletic field sprigging; the sprigging equipment is equipped with high tires that won’t leave indentations in the field.

Advertisement

Most of grassMasters’s work is performed in Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky. "Although the process has been known longer in the South, more facilities in transition zones are now sprigging," notes Bammer. "We recently worked on the Cincinnati Bengals’s training fields in Georgetown, Kentucky. We put in Bermuda grass, sodding one field and sprigging the other.

"Sprigging takes a lot of water, just like sod does," he says. "But you still get great results for less cost."

Author's Bio: Janis Keating is a frequent contributor to Erosion Control.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Erosion Control E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Erosion Control e-mail newsletter!