May 2007

Options in Hydroseeding Equipment

Professionals discuss tank size, pumps, and agitators.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Ryan Goff, owner of A Cut Above Landscaping, finds himself in a lot of “precarious areas” when doing seasonal hydroseeding. Therefore, he favors a hydroseeding machine that will allow him easy access in tight spots.

To that end, his company—a full-service landscaping company with nine employees in Horseheads, NY—uses the Easy Lawn Landscaper Series L90, which is available skid or trailer mounted. It has a 1,000-gallon tank and features an electric mulch grinder that can process a bale of mulch every 15 to 20 seconds. The top agitation jet under the grinder wets down the mulch and mixes it into the slurry.

“The advantages are there are fewer mechanical parts to go wrong and it’s lighter. It’s been a good machine for us. We use a lot of wood in it and it’s run through fairly well,” Goff says.

He also uses Easy Lawn’s products, which include Hytac II, “the Blue Goo”; Hydrolizer (fertilizer); Hydrostimulant (biostimulant); Hycal (lime); Hygel (co-polymer); Hynet (hydroseeding fiber); Hygreen (dye); and Hycover (mulch). He says he finds the tackifier is easy to mix and effective on heavy slopes.

His company has done highway hydroseeding, using Hycover Easy Pour pelleted mulch, which he finds quicker to use with a jet agitation machine. “There are fewer clogs,” he notes.

Goff has had to deal with many highway restrictions regarding the weight he’s allowed to haul and ensuring the hydroseeding machine fits within his state’s load restrictions. “With the larger machines, you have to purchase larger, more heavy-duty trucks,” he says. “Just about any truck we have in our service can haul this tank.”

In addition to its size, another reason Goff favors the L90 is its ability to run both the turret and hose at the same time, “which is a huge advantage, especially when you are trying to unload the tank quickly and efficiently,” he notes.

The hydroseeding machine’s tank offers efficiency, says Goff. “We do residential and commercial applications. An average yard is typically an acre or less, so with this—depending on your fill area—you can do four tanks in two hours.”

Photo: Finn
Ensuring the hydroseeding material sticks is a tough job on steep slopes.

Goff says if there is ever a clog with the hydroseeding machine, it is easy to clean it out. The hoses have a cleanout hooked up directly to the hydroseeding machine. “You can flush out your hoses directly off the water source, which is helpful if the machine is sitting overnight or for a couple of days and there’s some product left in the hose—you can flush it right back into the tank.”

He also appreciates the relationship he has with the vendor when he needs a quick response time for parts, because he can’t afford downtime in his business. Goff purchases hydroseeding machines rather than leases them and tries to update his company’s equipment every two to three years.

“The reason is simply for the warranty,” he says. “The only reason we would ever consider changing the size of this machine is because we are getting into more highway work and larger projects like landfills—projects where you need more wood mulch outflow. Jet agitation machines don’t take the wood as well as the mechanical to allow you to mix the wood better. That’s the only drawback—the fact you can’t use 100% wood consistently through the jet agitators, where it’s expected out on highway or other state jobs.”

Working Under a Deadline
Brian Anderson, director of turf grass management for Nemacolin Woodlands Resort in Farmington, PA, found himself with a tight deadline two years ago when his golf course was hydroseeding a 12-acre driving range it had constructed.

“We had six weeks to get it grown in, because we had the PGA guys coming in and this was the practice facility we were going to use,” Anderson says.

Another challenge: slopes of 2:1 and 3:1. “We were looking at some sort of product we could use that would bind to the soil, and it was such a slope, we needed it to stick,” he says.

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He chose Finn Corp.’s HydroMax, HydroGel, and StikPlus, as well fiber mulch for the application. “The nice thing about the products was that we hydroseeded a half-acre shot or a quarter-acre shot, depending on the slopes and elevation, and adjusting to what we were going to do,” he notes. “What was interesting with this material was that we shot it on mixed with the seed and fertilizer, and it got hard as a rock. It bonded to the soil particles.”

The golf course’s hydroseeding work is done by a subcontractor with a 1,500-gallon truck-mounted Finn T170 HydroSeeder. As for choosing the size of the hydroseeding machine, Anderson says he looked to get “the biggest bang for our buck. We could get the biggest area done in the least amount of time with the least amount of damage done to the surface of the prepared area prior to seeding it. Next Page >

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