The nearest thing, by way of comparison,
to a lawn is a bed of plants that you set out in your
garden every spring. When you think it is planting
time you go to this bed with spade or fork and turn
the earth up from the deep bottom, putting in plenty
of well-rotted manure, thus ministering to the soil
according to its needs. Then you set out the
plants, and if weeds grow up you dig them out, after
which you water the spot intelligently. For this
labor your reward comes to you in the shape of an
abundance of bloom and foliage.
Just as truly is a lawn a bed of plants
needing an equal amount of treatment. Grass is
nothing but a collection of thousands of little plants
crowded together, which must have nourishment, and
from which the weeds must be taken. Likewise
the soil must be given water as it is needed and the
earth must be made mellow for the roots, to a good
depth. It makes no difference how much you pay
for your grass seed, how good or bad it is, or what
kind of fertilizers you use, if the bed is not properly
prepared in the first place. Without this fundamental
preparation, grass plants will not grow, or if they
do, will not thrive.
It is quite a trick to sow grass seed
evenly so that it will germinate without giving the
plot a spotty effect. It should be spread at the
rate of about three bushels to the acre, and this
sowing can be successfully done only on a quiet day.
Even a very light wind is liable to pile up your seed
on your neighbor’s lot or on your own in places
not wanted. Keep the seed in a pail while sowing,
and, after taking a handful, bend close to the soil
and let the seed feed through the fingers as the arm
swings back and forth in a semicircle. This is
very much easier to say than to do, but a little experience
will make one quite proficient. To help still
more, sow the seed two ways, one at right angles to
the other. After sowing, rake lightly and then
finish the work by putting a heavy roller over it.
While thick sowing has the advantage
of discouraging a growth of weeds, there is a limit
that cannot be safely passed. Seed too thickly
sown will mat and damp out, leaving great patches
on the lawn. Do not exceed the quantity suggested
above.
Spring sowing should be done just
as soon as the frost is out of the ground. This
early sowing gives the young grass a chance to establish
itself before the severe summer heat comes on.
Careful watering is necessary, with a fine spray,
and if regularly done will induce rapid germination.
In watering do not wash out the seed by too heavy a
stream.