Spring lawn weed and feed

We bought one of the below about 2.5 years ago and have now used it 4 or 5 times. Green Thumb would have charges us ~ £100 per visit. We used it yesterday on our approx 100 sq m lawn without using the grass box (fills up every couple of metres or so) and had done a light scarify in about 20 mins. Another hour of so of going over the whole lot with the rotary mower a couple of times to pick up all the arisings and the jobs a good 'un.

As Pants says, we have a very similar scarifier and it really is a thing of beauty. The problem is that the Box gets full after just two walks up and down the lawn. It is a slow process emptying the box but it does the job properly. Again I left the lawn an hour or so then went over with the mower to get the last bits up. The back garden, because it was more thatch than moss I went both ways to get as much as I could out. Quite looking forward to the rain tonight and over the weekend to help with germination.
As a side note, the scarifier also doubles up as an airiator, I tried it years ago but the ground was to wet and it ripped the lawn to bits.
 
Went ahead and bought the Makita scarifier because it uses the same batteries as the rest of my gardening equipment.
Delivered this afternoon. Just gave it a trial run on the small front lawn.
😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀
 
As Pants says, we have a very similar scarifier and it really is a thing of beauty. The problem is that the Box gets full after just two walks up and down the lawn. It is a slow process emptying the box but it does the job properly. Again I left the lawn an hour or so then went over with the mower to get the last bits up. The back garden, because it was more thatch than moss I went both ways to get as much as I could out. Quite looking forward to the rain tonight and over the weekend to help with germination.
As a side note, the scarifier also doubles up as an airiator, I tried it years ago but the ground was to wet and it ripped the lawn to bits.
We don't bother with the collection box. Just scarify the whole lawn then go over it a couple of times with the petrol rotary mower to collect arisings and cut the spindly grass strands.
 
We don't bother with the collection box. Just scarify the whole lawn then go over it a couple of times with the petrol rotary mower to collect arisings and cut the spindly grass strands.
That doesn't really work with a cylinder mower.
But I scarify with the catcher off then rake the debris up into piles with a lawn rake. Then into the compost via a wheelbarrow.
 
Rotary mowers are like outdoor vacuum cleaners. I wouldn't be without one now. Great for collecting and shredding leaves in autumn too.
I agree. The problem I have is wheels. My lawns are bordered by curved flower beds and the wheels drop off the edge unless I mow slowly and very carefully.
As it happens, a friend died about a year ago and his widow had been forced to get a gardener. She has just given me his old petrol rotary so I will use it once a year after scarifying ☺️
But I always reckon cylinders give a better finish .
 
If you have easy access to a rainwater drain system then field drains would probably be easier and note effective than a soak away. Really only of use for areas where you can’t tap in to a rain system.
The soakaway had to be dug for rainwater coming off the rear slopes of the roof of our house and of our new extension…we weren’t able/permitted to feed the rainwater into the drainage system. So a garden soakaway had to be dug and then turfed over.
 
The soakaway had to be dug for rainwater coming off the rear slopes of the roof of our house and of our new extension…we weren’t able/permitted to feed the rainwater into the drainage system. So a garden soakaway had to be dug and then turfed over.
I take it you have a water butt system as well?
 
The soakaway had to be dug for rainwater coming off the rear slopes of the roof of our house and of our new extension…we weren’t able/permitted to feed the rainwater into the drainage system. So a garden soakaway had to be dug and then turfed over.
Well no, if its a main sewer then you can’t tie rain water in to it. We’ve got rainwater lines that come off all the guttering downpipes that’s separate to the sewerage system.
 
Well no, if its a main sewer then you can’t tie rain water in to it. We’ve got rainwater lines that come off all the guttering downpipes that’s separate to the sewerage system.
When we had the extension on the back of the house, the back garden is about three foot above the patio. That meant digging a channel to a soak away like we did on the front garden and then having a rain water soak away. However once the channel had been dug which also meant going under a 4ft high retaining wall. It meant the soak away would be about 8-10ft deep. It just was not practice. The planners said there is two options when speaking to the powers that be. Drop it into the mains sewers, or direct the rain water into a water butt. Get it passed and then remove the water butt in a years time and drop it back into the mains. Fortunately the planners agreed that the small extension roof would not overpower the mains drains.
There are a few exceptions to the rules but the soakaways are the best options.

Oddly enough when we had the extension on the front the council came around at various stages of the build to check everything was fine and dandy and met the building regs. They were sticklers for dotting the I’s and crossing the T’s
When we had the back extension done the building regs had been sourced out to a private company and they were massively helpful in ideas and alternative suggestions.
 
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