Re: Garden Geeks thread
Any of you have experience converting your lawn from weeds to grass? What product did you have the best luck with?
I sat down on the ground and used a spade, shoving it horizontally just below the root line to strip the surface bare. The sitting position really facilitated using both feet on the spade so that I could peel back two or three feet of the surface at a time. If you use any kind of herbicide to clear the area, you might also leave chemicals behind afterward that could stunt the new grass; and if the chemicals you use don't stunt the new grass, then they might not be strong enough to clear the other stuff out of the area first. You can strip a fairly large area pretty quickly once you get into the flow.
Depending upon how soon you want the job done, you might also consider covering the area with a big thick tarpaulin for a year or two to kill everything under it by absence of sunlight. That worked really well for us in one part of the yard.
Then, either we'd put sod over the stripped section, or we'd plant grass seed and water it daily. You also can buy mats with seed embedded in it. and roll that over the area; this product works really well on hillsides: it keeps the bare soil from eroding and it keeps the seeds from washing away in a heavy rainstorm. if you are going to use sod, I'd recommend renting a sod roller; it's basically a giant, really heavy rolling pin whose weight pushes the roots of the grass into the soil.
Depending on the size of the area you want to convert, you might at least get a quote or two from a local landscaper. they have a machine that can come in and strip the surface away quickly and easily, and a quote can at least give you the sense of whether you want to do the labor yourself or hire someone else to do it.
I have a "system" that works really well for me to answer these questions: suppose the quote to strip the area and re-seed it were $xx0: if someone offered you that much money to do that job, would you accept? or would you say, "that's not worth it to me, I'll pass." So if the quote was, say $500, I'd do it myself; if the quote was, say, $150, I'd probably hire the guy to do it for me (depending upon how big the area was and how much work was involved).
We did the work ourselves in sections over the course of two years.