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Author Type of Zoysia & Mulch to Use
jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com

2006-06-14, 10:21 am

I'm going to have zoysia sod put in at my new house in Raleigh, NC. The
landscaping company is asking me which type of zoysia I want. Does
anyone know the best types for my area and have any preferences?

Also, they are saying that they will supply me with triple-shredded
mulch. Is there anything that I need to verify (ex. type, age, etc)
regarding the mulch?

Kyle Boatright

2006-06-15, 12:21 am

The "old standard" zoysias are Meyer and Emerald. Meyer grows faster and has
a larger blade. Emerald has a much finer blade and is sometimes thought to
be a higher maintenance grass.

In more recent varieties, Zenith and El Toro are fairly similar to Meyer and
Zeon is fairly similar to Emerald.

If you want to do some reading, there is always the National Turf Evaluation
Program, which can be found at:

http://www.ntep.org/data/zg96/zg96_...zg96_01-15f.pdf

My preference is Emerald. In my opinion it is the best looking zoysia and
also has good properties in sun, shade, hot and cool.

Last summer I installed 7,000 sf of Emerald at our house and this summer I
added another 4,500 sf. Next summer I'm probably due for another 3,000 SF
and I'll have Emerald in all of my grassy areas...

KB



<jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com> wrote in message
news:1150289611.358736.28590@h76g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> I'm going to have zoysia sod put in at my new house in Raleigh, NC. The
> landscaping company is asking me which type of zoysia I want. Does
> anyone know the best types for my area and have any preferences?
>
> Also, they are saying that they will supply me with triple-shredded
> mulch. Is there anything that I need to verify (ex. type, age, etc)
> regarding the mulch?
>



jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com

2006-06-15, 10:21 am

Do the zoysia grasses stay physically soft year round. A neighbor has a
hybrid bermuda that is very "stick like" during the winter. I would
like to avoid a zoysia type if it's not soft year round.

Kyle Boatright

2006-06-16, 9:46 am


<jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com> wrote in message
news:1150375590.218785.226030@g10g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Do the zoysia grasses stay physically soft year round. A neighbor has a
> hybrid bermuda that is very "stick like" during the winter. I would
> like to avoid a zoysia type if it's not soft year round.


Zoysia does go dormant in the winter in most US climates. It is usually
thought to be a stiffer, more prickly grass than bermuda.

On the other hand, zoysia tends to grow more densly than bermuda, so it is
more cushioney if you fall on it, for instance. This is true year round.

KB


www.StockSeed.com

2006-06-23, 5:32 pm

You may want to look at Buffalograss as well...
http://www.stockseed.com/buffalograsses_default.asp


jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com wrote:
> I'm going to have zoysia sod put in at my new house in Raleigh, NC. The
> landscaping company is asking me which type of zoysia I want. Does
> anyone know the best types for my area and have any preferences?
>
> Also, they are saying that they will supply me with triple-shredded
> mulch. Is there anything that I need to verify (ex. type, age, etc)
> regarding the mulch?


David Anderson

2006-07-09, 3:26 am

jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com wrote:

> I'm going to have zoysia sod put in at my new house in Raleigh, NC. The
> landscaping company is asking me which type of zoysia I want. Does
> anyone know the best types for my area and have any preferences?
>
> Also, they are saying that they will supply me with triple-shredded
> mulch. Is there anything that I need to verify (ex. type, age, etc)
> regarding the mulch?


I live in North Dakota and was thinking about putting zoysia grass in my
yard here and have a few questions for those of you who might know more
about this topic. There is also farm land (i.e., many acres of wheat
fields) near my house. What type of border do I need to put down so that
the zoysia does not invade the crop spaces?

Is there a specific type of zoysia that would be best for the northern
climate here? I know the grasses originated in Korea and should be
somewhat cold hardy, but does anyone know what the coldest temperature they
can endure is? I was also wondering how warm the ground temperature needs
to get prior to the zoysia greening again in the spring.

I was thinking about going with the Zoysia Farm Nurseries for the initial
grass. Does anyone here have any experience working with them? Any help
would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks!

David
trader4@optonline.net

2006-07-09, 3:26 am


David Anderson wrote:
> jhunter@huntercomputerinc.com wrote:
>
>
> I live in North Dakota and was thinking about putting zoysia grass in my
> yard here and have a few questions for those of you who might know more
> about this topic. There is also farm land (i.e., many acres of wheat
> fields) near my house. What type of border do I need to put down so that
> the zoysia does not invade the crop spaces?
>
> Is there a specific type of zoysia that would be best for the northern
> climate here? I know the grasses originated in Korea and should be
> somewhat cold hardy, but does anyone know what the coldest temperature they
> can endure is? I was also wondering how warm the ground temperature needs
> to get prior to the zoysia greening again in the spring.
>
> I was thinking about going with the Zoysia Farm Nurseries for the initial
> grass. Does anyone here have any experience working with them? Any help
> would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thanks!
>
> David



IMO, zoysia is a poor choice for northern climates, even if it will
survive the winter. A neighbor has it here in coastal NJ. It goes
brown in Oct and looks like dead straw all winter. It doesn't return
to green until mid May. My bluegrass/fescue will stay a nice green
most of the winter, only going off color Feb, and quickly greening up
again in early April. Zoysia performance in ND has to be worse.

The Other Funk

2006-07-09, 9:25 am



<trader4@optonline.net> wrote in message
news:1152430769.717574.217850@s13g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> "shirly" <sl_shirly@yahoo.com>
> David Anderson wrote:
>
> IMO, zoysia is a poor choice for northern climates, even if it will
> survive the winter. A neighbor has it here in coastal NJ. It goes
> brown in Oct and looks like dead straw all winter. It doesn't return
> to green until mid May. My bluegrass/fescue will stay a nice green
> most of the winter, only going off color Feb, and quickly greening up
> again in early April. Zoysia performance in ND has to be worse.

Trader4, I am not question your experiances with Zoysia but here in north
Jersey, my Zoysia stays green until I stop watering it and greens up in
about a week after I start watering. The previous owner put it in so I don't
know which variety it is.
What I can't answer, is David's question about howto stop it from spreading.
Even 4" deep edging only slows it down.
Bob

--
--
Coffee worth staying up for - NY Times
www.moondoggiecoffee.com

trader4@optonline.net

2006-07-10, 9:25 am


The Other Funk wrote:
> <trader4@optonline.net> wrote in message
> news:1152430769.717574.217850@s13g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> Trader4, I am not question your experiances with Zoysia but here in north
> Jersey, my Zoysia stays green until I stop watering it and greens up in
> about a week after I start watering. The previous owner put it in so I don't
> know which variety it is.
> What I can't answer, is David's question about howto stop it from spreading.
> Even 4" deep edging only slows it down.
> Bob
>
> --


Your saying your Zoysia in NJ doesn't turn brown/green in response to
seasnonal temps, only watering? Never heard of a grass that does this.
Plus, in Fall and early Spring, there is almost always enough water
here in NJ so that lawns don't need to be watered and doing so won't
have any real impact on color change.






> --
> Coffee worth staying up for - NY Times
> www.moondoggiecoffee.com


The Other Funk

2006-07-11, 1:25 pm

Finding the keyboard operational
trader4@optonline.net entered:

> The Other Funk wrote:
>
> Your saying your Zoysia in NJ doesn't turn brown/green in response to
> seasnonal temps, only watering? Never heard of a grass that does
> this. Plus, in Fall and early Spring, there is almost always enough
> water here in NJ so that lawns don't need to be watered and doing so
> won't have any real impact on color change.
>

I mistated that. If I keep it watered, it stays green longer then if I
don't. The guy next door has a lawn (not Zoysia) that looks like a putting
green but he's retired and can spend all day 2 or 3 times a day working on
it. The other neighbor also has Zoysia and doesn't do a thing other then cut
it. I am basing my comment on the results of my watering early and late in
the season. By late October till April, I have that brown lawn that comes
with Zoysia.
Bob
--
--
Coffee worth staying up for - NY Times
www.moondoggiecoffee.com

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