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    Renovating my ruined newly laid lawn!

    Hi all,

    Beginner here ?‍♀️

    We laid our turf this September and it grew surprisingly long. We weren't sure whether to leave it long over winter or cut it. Unfortunately, we decided to cut it and are now left with this, still long, wet, discoloured and flat ? In hindsight the ground was probably too damp when we cut.

    Any tips please on recovering the grass or getting it looking tidy over winter? Should we try cut again on a dry day? 

    Many thanks!! ?

    Hi Katie,

    If it were my lawn I would just give it a good rake to clear any surface debris, leaves,  old dead grass, any weeds showing etc, if the grass is really wet don't walk on it as you may compress the soil, wait for a dry period before raking, I would advise not to cut as the frosts are nearing.

    Then just wait until next spring and the warmer weather, grass will recover, during this summers hot period my grass looked like straw, now the green is back, so just be patient, when it perks up again on the first cut make sure your mower is on the blades highest setting, making sure the grass is not wet.

    Hope all goes well, post a picture next spring.

    Bob

    Lee Garden Ninja has reacted to this post.
    Lee Garden Ninja

    Hello again Katie,

    Ultimate lawn laying guide: How to Lay Turf

    https://www.gardenninja.co.uk/how-to-scarify-a-lawn/

    Lots of info gained from these articles on Lee's website, hope they assist you?

    Bob

    Hi @katienewbiegardner

    I think what's happened here is the grass hasn't been cut early enough after laying i.e. after 2 weeks of it being laid. Hence it's grown long and straggly then its got wet and all gone a bit matted and flat.

    Bob's advice about not mowing during a frost is correct. However, given the length of it, the frost will probably damage it given it's all matted together if left as it is leading to yellowing and it becoming a mushy.

    Here's what I'd do (asap) to fix this newly laid lawn:

    1.On a dry day use a stiff brush to comb the lawn to separate the blades of grass and get it to stand upright

    2.Using a mower do a cut on number 4 to take the tops off

    3.Brush or rake the lawn again

    4.Make a final pass cutting on a 3 or even 2 to get it back to a normal length ready for winter

    5.Leave it well alone until spring - don't need or fiddle too much with it. 

    Then the lawn should bounce back. Lawns are tough and you just need to get them into shape and not pamper them too much!

    Happy gardening.

    Lee

    Hi @lee and @bob 

    Thank you both for your help and advice. It's greatly appreciated ? 

    I will certainly do as suggested Lee and keep you both posted on the lawn in spring ?

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