HINTS ON THE LAWN
Moss on the Lawn is often troublesome. Its presence indicates that the ground is poor, and the remedy is so to encourage the growth of the grass that the moss shall have no chance. It is necessary to rake off as much of the moss as possible, and in spring to scatter sulphate of iron, a-quarter ounce to the square yard, upon the mossy patches; after a fortnight water it every ten days or so with a solution of nitrate of soda, half an ounce in a gallon of water. Mowing and Roiling. —When first cutting a lawn the machine should be j set high, otherwise the blades are j liable to damage the roots of the : grasses. As the grass thickens and becomes consolidated, the machine ! may be set to cut more closely. Dur- | ing mid-spring an established lawn ought to he cut at least once, though preferably twice a week, and each mowing should he followed by rolling. Rolling may with advantage be carried out throughout the year whenever the surface is not sodden or hard; it does the lawn a great deal of good. Fairy Rings are sometimes a nuisance on the lawn, and are difficult to get rid of. They are due to the presence of fungus which, as it do- j cays, enriches the grass and causes it to assume a rich green colour, char- I acteristic of fairy rings. Watering ' with a strong solution of sulphate of iron is likely to effect a cure, though it may be necessary to dig up and re- j move the soil containing the fungus j to a distance of 12 inches outside the ! ring. Clover when present in reasonable i quantity only is not objectionable, but j it is apt to spread and supplant the ! grasses proper. It may be lessened 1 by applying lawn sand in autumn and ! scattering nitrate of soda and sulphate | of ammonia (half an ounce to the ' square yard) in spring.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19291116.2.217
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Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 822, 16 November 1929, Page 30
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333HINTS ON THE LAWN Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 822, 16 November 1929, Page 30
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