Sod: Difference between revisions
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Along with many golf courses across the southern United States, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers elected to install Celebration bermudagrass in their stadium. <ref>[http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/keyword/jack-thompson/featured/4 Citrus Bowl getting new sod] retrieved January 8, 2010</ref> |
Along with many golf courses across the southern United States, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers elected to install Celebration bermudagrass in their stadium. <ref>[http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/keyword/jack-thompson/featured/4 Citrus Bowl getting new sod] retrieved January 8, 2010</ref> |
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===Discovery Bermudagrass== |
===Discovery Bermudagrass== |
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Discovery is a bermudagrass that has an exceptional dark blue-green color. It also has extremely slow vertical growth which means that it only needs to be mowed once a month. Discovery has the drought toughness of a bermuda, but does not need to be maintained as much as other varieties. It was developed in Europe. It was made available in the United States in 2011 by Sod Solutions which owns the right to market it in the United States. <ref>[http://www.nccertifiedsod.org/pages.php?pageid=12 North Carolina Crop Improvement Association (NCCIA) Certified Sod]</ref> It grows well in all of the southern United States. |
Discovery is a bermudagrass that has an exceptional dark blue-green color. It also has extremely slow vertical growth which means that it only needs to be mowed once a month. Discovery has the drought toughness of a bermuda, but does not need to be maintained as much as other varieties. It was developed in Europe. It was made available in the United States in 2011 by Sod Solutions which owns the right to market it in the United States. <ref>[http://www.nccertifiedsod.org/pages.php?pageid=12 North Carolina Crop Improvement Association (NCCIA) Certified Sod]</ref> It grows well in all of the southern United States. |
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Revision as of 02:49, 19 March 2013
Sod or turf is grass and the part of the soil beneath it held together by the roots, or a piece of thin material.
The term "sod" may be used to mean grass grown and cut specifically for the establishment of lawns. In British English and in Irish English such material is more usually known as turf, and the word "sod" is limited mainly to agricultural senses (for example for turf when ploughed).
Uses of sod
Sod is typically used for lawns, golf courses, and sports stadiums around the world.
Scandinavia has a long history of employing a sod roof.
Following passage of the Homestead Act by the US Congress in 1862, settlers in the Great Plains used sod bricks to build entire houses.[1]
Cultivation
Sod is grown on specialist farms. For 2009, the United States Department of Agriculture reported 1,412 farms had 368,188 acres of sod in production.[2]
It is usually grown locally to avoid long transport and drying out and heat buildup of the product. It is sold to landscapers, home builders or home owners who use it to establish a lawn quickly and avoid soil erosion. The farms that produce this grass may have many varieties of grass grown in one location to best suit the consumer's use and preference of appearance. It is usually harvested 10 to 18 months after planting, depending on the growing climate. On the farm it undergoes fertilization, frequent watering, frequent mowing and subsequent vacuuming to remove the clippings. It is harvested using specialized equipment, precision cut to standardized sizes. Sod is typically harvested in small square slabs, rolled rectangles, or large 4-foot-wide (1.2 m) rolls. Some large sod farms may export internationally. Because of the product's short life after harvest, the sod may be washed clean of the soil down to the bare roots (or sprigs) which makes shipping lighter and cheaper. Sod can be used to repair a small area of lawn that has died.[3]
Sodding versus seeding
Seed may be blown about by the wind, eaten by birds, or fail because of drought. It takes some weeks to form a visually appealing lawn and further time before it is robust enough for use.
Turf largely avoids these problems, and with proper care, newly laid sod is usually fully functional within 30 days of installation and its root system is comparable to that of a seeding lawn two or three years older.[4]
However, turf is more expensive[5] and requires considerably more water for its establishment. Erosion after seeding may be a concern in some areas near water. Sod reduces erosion by stabilizing the soil in these type of areas.[6]
Types of sod
Celebration Bermudagrass
Celebration Bermudagrass is a breed of Cynodon dactylon from Australia which was developed by turfgrass breeder Rod Riley[7]. The grass has a distinctive deep blue-green color which makes it popular on golf courses and for private home lawns throughout the southern United States. It has excellent wear tolerance and recovery, as well as drought resistance. The blade width of the grass is 1.7mm.
Grass in general is judged by its color, its softness, whether or not it retains color during the fall, and the quickness that it turns green in the spring, or greenup. Celebration bermudagrass scores well in all these criteria. It grows in either clay or sand, recovers well from potential injury, and copes well with insects and diseases. Along with many golf courses across the southern United States, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers elected to install Celebration bermudagrass in their stadium. [8]
Discovery Bermudagrass
Discovery is a bermudagrass that has an exceptional dark blue-green color. It also has extremely slow vertical growth which means that it only needs to be mowed once a month. Discovery has the drought toughness of a bermuda, but does not need to be maintained as much as other varieties. It was developed in Europe. It was made available in the United States in 2011 by Sod Solutions which owns the right to market it in the United States. [9] It grows well in all of the southern United States.
Bella Bluegrass
Bella Bluegrass was developed by the University of Nebraska as a drought resistant grass that would help states conserve water. It was immediately embraced by schools and homeowners in the state of Utah who are voluntarily trying to conserve water. [10]. Bella is the world’s first dwarf, vegetative Bluegrass. It is sold only as sod, not as seed. Bella is a quick grower laterally, but has very minimal vertical growth. Because it only grows to about 4" in height, it requires less mowing. It grows in sand, clay, muck and peat, and is currently being adopted across the northern United States.[11]
Captiva St. Augustine
Developed by the University of Florida in 2007 [12], Captiva is a chinch bug resistant St. Augustine cultivar. It has a lush, dark green color with a dense canopy and a massive root system. Because it has a slow leaf blade growth and lateral spread, the requirement for mowing is reduced. Captiva has good-excellent shade tolerance and has excellent pest resistance which means there is less need to use pesticides.
Covington
Centipedegrass was introduced into the United States from southeastern Asia in 1916. It does well in the climate and soils of central and northern Florida and is the most common home lawn grass in the Florida Panhandle. [13]
Covington is a proprietary cultivar of centipede grass from Sod Solutions, Inc. that grows in the southeast United States, from the west half of Texas to all of Louisiana, and most of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia. It is the only uniformly green centipede grass on the market. It is a low maintenance grass, which retains its color in the fall and greens quickly in the spring. This variety is currently being evaluated by the University of Florida. [14]
See also
- Cob (building)
- Divot
- Groundbreaking (cut or turn the first sod)
- Peat
- Sod house
References
- ^ "Life in a Sod House". Smithsonian. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
- ^ "Table 29. Sod, Sprigs, and Plugs Sold: 2009" (PDF). Us Dept. of Agriculture. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
- ^ "Use Sod For Quick Repair Of Damaged Lawns". Louisiana State University, Agricultural Center, Research and Extension. Retrieved December 2011.
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(help) - ^ "The High Cost of Instant Gratification; To Sod or to Seed?". Streamline Publications. Retrieved December 2011.
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(help) - ^ West, Dawn. "Planting by Seed". All About Lawns. Retrieved December 2011.
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(help) - ^ "Sod vs. Seed". Central Sod Farms, Inc. Retrieved December 2011.
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(help) - ^ Sod Solutions announces death of turfgrass developer Rod Riley World Golf, December 5, 2008
- ^ Citrus Bowl getting new sod retrieved January 8, 2010
- ^ North Carolina Crop Improvement Association (NCCIA) Certified Sod
- ^ John Hollenhorst New variety of Kentucky Bluegrass could conserve water Deseret News, retrieved Sept 20, 2011
- ^ What’s New From What’s From Buff To Blue: Grasses For a Green Environment University of Nebraska –Lincoln, retrieved Jan 31, 2911
- ^ LE Trenholm and KevinKenworthy Captiva St. Augustine Grass University of Florida
- ^ J. B. Unruh, L. E. Trenholm, and J. L. Cisar [http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/lh009 Centipedegrass for Florida Lawns
- ^ J. B. Unruh, L. E. Trenholm, and J. L. Cisar [http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/lh009 Centipedegrass for Florida Lawns