LAWN-MOWER, ROLLER, AND HOSE
After you have your ground made, your
seed sown and germinated, your trouble is not all
over, for it is a critical period through which to
carry the tender grass to a hardy condition.
Young grass should not be cut before
it is three inches high, and this means that a scythe
should be used in preference to a lawn-mower, as it
is difficult to get the blades high enough to allow
this length. In cutting for the first time, try
to do it on a cloudy day, as this will prevent any
possibility of scorching or burning. After a few
weeks the grass will have so toughened that it will
be benefited by frequent cuttings even
twice a week.
The roller should be used after every
cutting, and although it may seemingly be working
injury by crushing down the tender grass, it is in
reality making sure a solid and compact sod. In
the middle of the summer when the weather is very
hot, be careful not to crop too close, as the roots
are liable to be killed out by the sun.
When cutting your grass you will find
it a great saving to have some sort of a grass-catcher
on your lawn-mower. One can be made easily, but
very handy ones are sold at a small price. They
prevent the wear and tear to a lawn that results from
the hard raking necessary when not used.
There is a good grass-catcher that
fits into the back of all machines; it is very effective
and costs about fifty cents. It so effectively
catches all the grass that comes from the machine that
little raking is afterwards necessary. If you
prefer the rake it is best to use a wooden one, as
iron teeth do great damage to a heavy sod.
Where the grass is cut frequently
the clippings may safely be left on the ground, but
heavy grass should be always gathered up.
THE LAWN-MOWER
There are hundreds of makes of lawn-mowers
on the market, but of these very few will stand the
test of a season’s hard usage. These few
will be found to be the standard makes of good design,
and costing a seemingly high price. When you
can get a lawn-mower with a pound of tea you may be
sure that it is time to be suspicious, regardless of
the pretty paint and ornamentation that makes it a
symphony of colors. A good mower means that your
lawn will look well after being cut with it, and it
also means that the first seemingly high cost will
be all that you will be called upon to expend in years
to come. Such a mower is practically indestructible.
Once or twice during the season, give
it an overhauling. Grass and grit will creep
in, and unless it is removed the efficiency of the
machine will be greatly reduced.
It sounds like automobile parlance
to say “Use good oil,” but this really
applies equally as strongly to a lawn-mower. Cheap
oil is expensive in the long run, as it thickens up
and clogs the bearings, and makes it impossible for
the mower to do its best work.
This may seem like straining a point
to get down to such trivial details, but it is just
these little things that go to make up the getting
and keeping of a lawn.
THE ROLLER
Next to having good seed to sow, on
properly prepared ground, the great essential in lawn-making
is a proper kind of roller to use as occasion requires.
Few people realize just how important a part a roller
plays in the upkeep of any grass area, but it is no
exaggeration to say that without one, successful results
will be difficult if not impossible of achievement.
Use a roller a heavy roller on
your lawn early in the spring to repair the damage
that the freezing and thawing has caused in the winter.
The early rolling levels the surface,
packs the earth about the grass roots and makes it
possible for them to draw the moisture from deep down
in the ground. A roller is to be used often, not
once each season. Its consistent use means that
you will have fewer weeds, thicker and better colored
grass; the disfiguring moles will find the ground too
difficult to burrow through, moisture will be retained
longer, and a noticeably better condition will be
noted throughout the whole lawn.
The old-time stone roller was an instrument
of torture, and almost wholly unsuited for lawn work
as suggested. There are now on the market dozens
of ball-bearing rollers that are very easily handled.
The adjustable kind, in which there are compartments
to hold either sand or water to vary the weight, is
the kind that should be purchased. With it you
have a roller light enough to use for seeding, or heavy
enough for road work, and the prices are not prohibitive.
THE HOSE
The hose is a subject to which very
little attention is given. Paradoxical as it
may seem, all rubber hose is not rubber hose, and
because of this many lawns suffer from want of water,
because the supposedly rubber hose has proved, when
most needed, to be a combination of paper and scrap.
A first-quality hose will cost from twenty to thirty
cents a foot a frightful price when comparison
is made to the bargain price of four cents a foot.
The expensive kind will last for years, and even after
it begins to show signs of wear it can be used many
years longer by proper repairing. The cheap hose
bursts once, and its usefulness is at an end, as the
first burst is only a preliminary of total dissolution.
When a good hose bursts it is best
repaired by cutting entirely through it and removing
the damaged part, and then joining the ends with a
little brass sleeve that is easily inserted into each
of the severed ends and which has reversed prongs
to prevent its slipping out. This is one of the
best ready-made menders on the market, and it prolongs
the life of a hose for years.
Keep your hose on a reel. Empty
it of water before winding up, and never allow it
to lie baking in the sun. This latter is a very
common fault and is the cause of much good hose being
spoiled.
Another seemingly trivial yet important
thing is to caution against so fastening the hose
to the tap that it pulls away from it at right-angles.
For ordinary purposes the half-inch
size of hose is the best. It costs less in the
first place, is more easily handled, and the wear and
tear is much less than on the larger sizes.
You never see a gardener using any
spraying contrivance on the end of a hose. In
his thumb and forefinger, which he skillfully moves
over the flowing stream, he has a combination of sprayers
that can produce the heaviest stream or the finest
mist at will. This is to be recommended, but
few will care to follow the course of training necessary
to acquire the efficiency of the gardener.