Very important that it get drainage. You may know this from experience if you've ever planted sod over poorly draining clay soil: the roots rot and the grass won't make it a season.
I think if I were to do it, I'd see if i could find an old outdoor trash can lid or an old cooler lid and put some holes in it. Barring that
i'd just make something from landscaping timber. Easy to drill holes in the bottom of either plastic, metal, or wood (maybe seal the wood with roofing stuff or garden plastic). I'd fill partly with gravel and the rest with soil. maybe leave some gravel exposed for texture, visual appeal, or some other type of plantings like succulents.
then I'd buy a flat of sod plugs (5 dollars in the spring time) from the home center and water daily until established.
If the balcony is covered so that rain is not a problem then drainage won't be too big a problem. then you'd maybe like a shade tolerant grass variety.
Just be sure not to make it so big that you can't move it easily. It will be heavy. Just think of how much space a 40 lb bag of anything takes up.
maybe elevate it and put a water collection container underneath it to keep the balcony from getting stained.
2007-03-07 06:57:28
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answer #1
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answered by farmer 4
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2016-12-24 05:19:46
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Grass Planter
2016-11-12 21:50:46
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answer #3
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answered by hiller 4
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Yes you can plant grass in a 4" shallow planter but I recommend that you not use a Rubbermaid type product. Drainage is necessary and you will not get it with that unless you drill holes in the bottom and add a little gravel or broken clay pots to the base. Fill with dirt/top soil and plant your grass seed. OR put some SOD in the planter and water heavily until it roots..
2007-03-07 05:32:37
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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You can plant grass or sod in a planter, but if something or someone "pottys" in it, it will die pretty quickly. You, technically, could use a litter box as a planter (sounds like that's what you're looking for anyway), just punch a couple of whole in the bottom for drainage.
2007-03-07 07:01:42
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answer #5
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answered by CJ'sMomma 2
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Seed. It extra inexpensive than sod and, on your concern, would be extra common to apply. Use a backyard rake to interrupt up the soil interior the bare spots, sprinkle the seeds, and rake over it gently. you need to be dedicated to maintain the seeds moist, in any different case it may provide up the germination technique. in case you do not have time to water it 3-4 situations an afternoon, possibly because of the fact you have an afternoon activity, purchase peat moss and sprinkle it over the climate. The peat will preserve water plenty longer than airborne dirt and airborne dirt and dust which cuts down watering to 2-thrice an afternoon. In end, planting seeds could be a miles better option, fantastically on your wallet. purely wait and spot, and be dedicated.
2016-12-18 17:16:57
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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2017-03-09 01:00:58
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answer #7
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answered by Sidney 3
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yes, one piece of sod will suffice. Check out the rubbermaid sweater storage bins or somthing simular at walmart or dept store.
2007-03-07 05:16:48
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answer #8
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answered by �îkè®�ó� 2
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HUHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
2007-03-07 05:18:59
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answer #9
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answered by dodgeum43 3
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