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My Kikuyu grass is starting to die off.
I have tried air rating the area with the shoes but is starting to spreed.
The underneath of the Kikuyu wasn’t really prepared properly and this particular patch was clay base.
Can it be saved and how. Would deeper penetration with a pitchfork help. Fertiliser?
Please help I hope it’s not too la
Hello @Mal78,
Sorry to hear about your Kikuyu lawn's declining health. I'm sure our resident D.I.Y. expert @EricL will be able to provide useful advice on how to revive your lawn when he's back online on the site later today. Let me also tag garden experts @Noelle and @mich1972 for their thoughts.
While waiting, I recommend checking out these helpful guides written by horticulturalist @Adam_W: How to detect lawn problems and How to repair a lawn.
Akanksha
Hi @Mal78
It is definatly not to late, I would like to suggest a range of options they can help depending on the cause of the yellowing. I dont think you need fertiliser as a cure but it wont hurt either,
My first best thoughts are:
Some times those patches are caused by curl grubs (they look like little witchetty grubs curlled up with black heads try digging a sample hole if you wish 100 deep 300mm wide and see if there are any curl grubs(in there larva stage of and adult beetle or other pests eating grass roots. Keep in mind these grubs can be treated with a simple relativly low cost lawn treatment. Starting with
I have noticed with these treatments results are slow ( I dug up grubs in a weakened sorry state monthes later still. ) I some times alternate brands of these products to try blizt the population numbers but keep in mind some of these products hurt earth worms to I try to transplant earth worms from around the garden to restore balance.
I also have grass on clay with little soil. Gypsum and earth worms may help break up clay soils. ( feed earth worms with organic plant layer like whoflungdung not traditionally for the grass but it will break down nicly if this part of the cause.
In clay/ grass areas more on a slope than you. I have hired a machine and hole cored the ground and added a loomy garden mix to improve the ground. Garden soil mix Pick it up smell it at nursery it has a rich smell compared to top soil. Mix this 50/50 with river sand it will allow water to get to roots and not run off on a clay slope. The loamy soil applied to your grass can help after looking for grubs.
Good luck hope this helps
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Hello @Mal78
Thanks for sharing your question about your Kikuyu lawn. Aerating and fertilizing the lawn would have been my first suggestion. But since you've mentioned that there is clay underneath that spot, it's possible that there is a pool of water just underneath the soil surface. I suggest checking the soil in the late afternoon to see if it is still moist or soggy. If it is, odds are water is sitting in that spot and is suffocating the roots of the lawn.
Your suggestion of using a pitchfork is quite sound and will allow the water to go down lower and relieve the roots of the lawn. I also suggest inspecting the lawn for lawn grubs. If the soil underneath the lawn is dry, you are probably getting good drainage and it's possible that the area is drying too fast. But these symptoms will be answered once you've investigated the soil itself.
If your suspicions are correct and water is pooling at the top, I suggest holding off on watering and allowing the lawn to dry off.
If you have any other questions we can help with, please let us know.
Eric
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