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I live in Southern Illinois and I am looking for a grass seed that can withstand the heat in the summer, cold of winter, and the traffic of me and my dogs. I don't want to have to reseed every year. Thanks for any help.

2007-01-29 22:28:31 · 4 answers · asked by DT 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

4 answers

Improved Tall Fescue is indeed the way to go. Some examples are "Falcon" and "Finelawn". The best ones for your area will be for sale at the big box home improvement stores. Fescue, however, will decrease in density every year due to traffic, diseases, shade, etc. So, to keep a lawn nice, it must be overseeded each September. This is not a complete reseeding, it takes less seed, but it really should be done. If not every September, every-other September.
Do not try Kentucky 31 Fescue. It is just glorified pasture grass, rough in texture and not especially disease-resistant. Its only benefit is the cheap price.
Kentucky Bluegrass, on the other hand, should be avoided altogether, IMO. It needs to be babied. Even in the heart of what people call "The Bluegrass" in Kentucky, people mostly grow Fescue. I jokingly say Kentucky Bluegrass is for rich people. It IS beautiful, but high-maintenance!

2007-01-30 07:27:47 · answer #1 · answered by Emmaean 5 · 0 0

I've sold grass seed for 9 years and I've never heard of Kentucky Fescue. Many varieties of KY bluegrass and many varieties of creeping or tall fescue, yes. But it could be a very new variety.

I would choose Tall Fescue. Usually if you go to a good L&G center they will have Tall Fescue--it's usually a blend of 3 or 4 different varieties of tall fescues. The problem with tall fescue (that some people don't like) is that the blades are more coarse than bluegrass or perennial ryes. But on the plus side it has a deeper root system than bluegrass or rye, isn't as sensitive to periods of dryness, and is more tollerant of high traffic. If they don't have a tall fescue blend one of the best single varieties is 'Crossfire II' Tall Fescue.

2007-01-30 02:09:32 · answer #2 · answered by college kid 6 · 0 0

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2016-04-15 10:40:24 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

get some Kentucky Fescue
I wish I could have that kind here but I think it's a little too hot in the summers for us. Kentucky Fescue is a nice dark green almost blue and very lush and your area should support it.

2007-01-29 22:48:11 · answer #4 · answered by Enigma 6 · 0 0

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