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Tricky

Best way to restore grass area ?

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Sorry, not very helpful !!

But you could always do what we did and lay a patio instead of lawn!! lol

Although, now, 2 years later, I would quite like a bit of lawn again. The hens area is just dirt and gravel now, i'm afraid grass doesnt seem to last very long when they are there scratching about, but they are very good for weeding!!!

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I think you've got the right idea, you need to seed it and most importantly keep the hens off it!

My lawn has also suffered this winter, not from the hens who have hardly been on it, but from my wellies walking across it morning and evening as I go to sort the hens out. I'll be doing the same - reseeding and trying to stay off it!

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If it's suffereing because of your footprints, try putting some slabs down as stepping stones. If you do it while the ground is wet, then jump up and down on them a bit, they'll be flush with the ground and the grass will eventually grow around them. All you have to do then is remember to use them! :)

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When is the best time to sow grass seed then? I would have thought end of March. Our small patch of grass (as we have paved quite a bit of the garden and grow veg on other) is compacted bare earth which will all have to be dug over and raked flat :( . Could turn into a whole weekend job!!!! :roll:

 

Would guess after all risk of frost, and when you can see the grass is beginning to grow (in other peoples gardens if not in yours!).

 

We have learnt to keep the chooks off the grass in the winter. It copes in the spring/summer when it is growing, but not the winter. They instead have access to the veg patch and patio, and we buy cabbages and things to give them to supplement their mash. Another few weeks, and they will be fenced off the veg patch and onto the grass again, so I can grow lots of veg and salad, and the chooks can play on the grass again!

 

The small bits we have had to "fix" we have bought turf for - on the basis it is instant and I am impatient!

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The box of grass seed that I have says you can start sowing it from early March :) .

 

My problem is; how will I prevent my girls from eating the seeds? They're lightly coloured so they will show up well against the dark soil...

 

I'm considering moving my chooks onto woodchips, too. At the moment the floor is just mud so I don't see any benefit of keeping them on it.

 

Hopefully my lawn will have recovered by summer so that my bunnies have some grass.

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We had to completely re turf our garden (not to be recomended, hard work :roll: ) As between my 3 chooks and golden retriever pup the grass had turned to a mud bath. My ladies have been given a barked area for their Eglu & run and seem very happy there.

 

Tracy (pink eglu)PP Doris, GNR Mabel, GNR Nellie

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My hubby has just finished pegging down lawn protector over our muddy excuse for a lawn. Someone else here recommended it, we used six packs at £19.99 for a 6 x 1 metre roll from home base. The idea is that the grass will grow through so you can mow as usual but the chicks and dogs won't be able to dig. I'll post some before and after photos when it finally grows. Hasn't put the girls off as they have been scratching away all afternoon.

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If it's suffereing because of your footprints, try putting some slabs down as stepping stones. If you do it while the ground is wet, then jump up and down on them a bit, they'll be flush with the ground and the grass will eventually grow around them. All you have to do then is remember to use them! :)

 

Thanks Jools, we're going to be having a bit of a garden redesign in the spring and stepping stones is definitely on the plan of things to include!

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At the moment my chickens are re-enacting the Battle of the Somme. I haven't had growing grass for almost a year. It all went within a month of the girls arrival. I just buy strips of turf every couple of weeks and lay it around. They seem to have fun demolishing that.

Good luck

Colette.

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I decided a couple of weeks ago to reclaim a tiny bit of my garden and restore it. I fenced it off with tree posts and expanding willow trellis. Within two weeks I can see blades of grass - actually amazed given the weather. So I've thrown a bit of old grass seed and compost around and covered the whole lot with that white fleece stuff (got it from Poundland) and pegged it down. Hopefully keep grass seed warm and keep wild birds off. Phoebe, however, has found a way in - not sure how as despite watching for hours she only gets in when I'm not looking. Clever girl. If this old seed doesn't grow will get some more for Spring, failing that it's going to be turf (again!)

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We are going to returf the bottom lawn - we had dug big veggie beds over most of it, but decided that one was too many. There's still grass down there but it's very sp"Ooops, word censored!" due to overhanging trees too. As it often resembles a paddy field we are going to have to make drainage ditches in there too. Sounds like a pretttttttttttty big job for Easter.

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Hello all

As the weather is improving we have started to prepare the girls half of the lawn for a summer of destruction as we need to reclaim the rest of the garden for our vegetables and plants! :D

Having read the other threads about Homebase Lawn Protector I have bought one roll and will be getting another tonight (it turns out their run is bigger than Ithought!). I just wanted to see how people had got on with it as I am a bit worried they might catch their claws in it. I am putting down two strips of protector leaving the ends uncovered so that they can dig holes in selected areas!

Any feedback would be very welcome!

 

Also, I have a corrugated plastic roof on my eglu extended run and aubiose as a base layer. They have only been shut in this over winter but in the summer we are going away for a week and they will need to be shut in. They will have plenty of water but is there a danger of over-heating? There is a gap at the bottom of a couple of inches which allows airflow. I was thinking of erecting a temporary giant sun shade for while we are away.....

Many thanks

Sophie :D

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