Browse Forums Landscape & Garden Design Re: Soil preparation and "conditioning" 5Aug 01, 2012 11:22 pm Fu Manchu Leave everything there as it is. All the old root systems will be great organic material that will be broken down by microbes and turned into nutrient for your new lawn. Thanks, sounds great, no hard work to remove them But it's going to take longer than a few weeks for the old roots to turned into anything useful right? I have a feeling they will start growing when spring comes. I will have a good read of your sticky thread. Cheers! Re: Soil preparation and "conditioning" 6Aug 02, 2012 4:04 am They won't. What may would be weed seeds that will germinate after disturbing the soil. They will be there now, for years having lay domant. nothing you can do to stop that. On the taking ages to deliver nutrient, you'd be spot on. The great thing is that is the rate plants need nutrients. They get no benefit from huge heavy impacting nutrients being mixed into the soil before planting. They have no capacity to absorb them, nor the soil hold them. Who's fertilising a forest? Anybody know any good and reasonably priced Air conditioning contractors/companies that could install a ducted air conditioning system in the Central Coast NSW for a small… 0 8996 Hi Building Expert, Thank you for the feedback, much appreciated, there is also a code of conduct for building surveyors which they need to follow as well. I am looking… 4 3680 I am not sure whether Perth has its own way of doing things in regards to this. Most of Perth has class A (sandy soil), except for some areas near rivers or hills. 2 13111 |