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Planting a New Yard
A few years back we had the house at our camp demolished and the cellar filled and capped with top-soil. The work was done in early July. My wife wonders what to do with the mud flat where the house was and wants to put in grass some seed. I say 'wait until mid-September. Even if it rains some and the seeds germinate, the heat will kill new seedlings. 'We'd also have to 'prepare a seed-bed you know.'
So my wife buys $40 worth of grass seed and says 'what do I do now?' I say 'well as long as you've got the seed, just broadcast it around and maybe rake some loose dirt over it.' 'Don't expect much though' says I. She just threw the seed around and didn't bother with a rake. Well, it didn't rain much and it was pretty hot and we also got pretty good grass--still pretty 'tufty' though. Guess I'm happy I didn't make too big a deal out of the inadequacy of my wife's methods. Of course, we didn't end up with what you'd call a suburban lawn either.
I'd say if you want to get rid of a mud flat, try what my wife did now, but don't spend much work at it. Grass seed is fairly inexpensive. If you don't like the results you can always till it under and do it properly in the fall.
We replaced the house with an old 40' construction, a new 40' deck and later a 10' x 10' wash shed.
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Planting a New Yard
I forgot to say that a person down the highway recently planted buckwheat. The idea is to till it under in the fall and put in a lawn. I don't know if buckwheat would do any better than grass seed if planted without watering now, but whatever grows is supposed to be very good for the soil.
Such an idea might make a mud flat more acceptable over the summer. The expense and work of preparing a proper lawn could be delayed until fall when the chances of getting good results are better.
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Planting a New Yard
Soil! Good for the soil. I left out a word but fixed it with the edit.
Buckwheat is supposed to make great green fertilizer. I don't know if the plant also is nitrogen fixing but doubt it. It probably would attract rodents and birds if left to mature. Besides, there's not much experience in N.A. using it as a food except in pancakes. In Eastern Europe, it is called Kasha when it's cracked and cooked. I think of it as an alternative to rice.
I'm not familiar with growing buckwheat but I'm not surprised it does well with little water. It is a common crop in Eastern Europe where it is fairly arid. The same area also was the origin of most of the drought and rust resistant strains of wheat. Some of my ancestors were ethnic Germans who emigrated to N.A. from the Ukraine. They perhaps brought some of the wheat that eventually saved the day for North American agriculture with them.
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