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Rain Garden Grass Seed Mix

Rain Garden Grass Seed Mix

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Grasses are a wonderful complement to any garden, but even more so to a rain garden. These grasses don't mind getting their feet wet. A rain garden is a depressed area in the landscape that collects rain water from a roof, driveway or street and allows it to soak into the ground. Planted with grasses and/or flowering perennials, rain gardens can be a cost effective and beautiful way to reduce runoff from your property. Rain gardens can also help filter out pollutants in runoff and provide food and shelter for butterflies, song birds and other wildlife. More complex rain gardens with drainage systems and amended soils are often referred to as bioretention. This mix consists of grasses. We also offer a perennial flower only Rain Garden mix. Use one or the other or combine them!

Height: 2 - 4 ft.

Light Requirement: Sun - Partial Shade

Zones: 2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

Seeding Rate: 15 lb. per acre with a cover crop of grain rye at 30 lb. per acre

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NOTE: Native grasses, like native wildflowers, take time to establish. They build their root systems before top growth. Good area preparation and weed control is key.

What's in the Mix?
Schizachyrium scoparium,'Camper' (Little Bluestem,‘Camper') Elymus virginicus,PA Ecotype (Virginia Wildrye,PA Ecotype) Chasmanthium latifolium,WV Ecotype (River Oats) Panicum rigidulum,PA Ecotype (Redtop Panicgrass) Agrostis perennans,Albany Pine Bush-NY Ecotype (Autumn Bentgrass) Carex vulpinoidea,PA Ecotype (Fox Sedge) Panicum sphaeroncarpon (Round Seed Panicgrass) Juncus effusus (Soft Rush) Carex scoparia,PA Ecotype (Blunt Broom Sedge) Seeding Rate: 15 lb per acre with a cover crop of grain rye at 30 lb per acre

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Grasses are used for conservation, erosion control, creating natural areas and for wildlife habitats. Planting native grasses has become increasingly popular over the last few years as they have low environmental impact. You can also use some grasses like rye as a green manure' over the winter months to repair or rectify your soil. Farmers have done this for years.

Preparation: Prepare the area where you would like to plant native grass seed as you would for a wildflower seed mix. Remove all existing growth, either by hand, roto-tilling, rough or power raking. Till only deep enough to remove all old roots. Deep tilling may bring up dormant weed seeds lying beneath which will compete with the new seed you wish to sow. If you want to be sure your soil is weed seed free”, you’ll have to till, wait for the crop of new weeds to grow, usually one to three weeks and till again as in step one before reseeding to have the best shot at eradicating them. If using the roto-till method, you can seed after the second or third tilling.

Sowing: Once your soil is prepared and free of previous growth, it’s important to sow immediately. (If you let time go by between preparation and spreading your seed, you’re giving possible weeds an advantage over the new seed you wish to sow. You can use a hand crank seed spreader, but most simply scatter the seed by hand. Put your grass seed into two buckets; add in any wildflower seed and some sand. Usually 4 parts sand to 1 part seed. The sand does two things: It dilutes" the seed, making it easier to sow evenly, and since it's light-colored, it shows you where you've been" on the dark soil as you go. Next, sow one bucket's mix over your whole area. Then go back in the opposite direction and do the same with the second bucket. This way, you should have even spreading and no bare spots. Once the seed is sown, be sure you have a good seed to soil contact. If you can, use a lawn roller or lay down a large board and walk on it to compress (squash down) the seed into the bare soil. If strictly sowing a grass mixture or an individual grass species, you can lightly rake in or cover your grass seed lightly.

Watering: Keep your new area watered for the first month or two and then it should be self-sufficient unless you are having a drought.

What in the World is Green Manure' or Cover Crops' and Why Should I Care?

Green manure crops may include legumes such as cowpeas, soybeans, annual sweet clover, vetch,etc. as well as non-leguminous crops such as sudan grass, millet, sorghum, and buckwheat. Legumes are often used as green manure crops for their nitrogen fixing abilities, while non-leguminous crops are used primarily for weed suppression and addition of biomass to the soil. Green manures usually perform multiple functions that include soil improvement and soil protection: Incorporation of cover crops into the soil is immediately followed by an increase in abundance of soil microorganisms that aid in the decomposition of this fresh material. The degradation of plant material allows the nutrients held within the green manure to be released and made available to the succeeding crop. This additional decomposition also allows for the re-incorporation of nutrients that are found in the soil in a particular form such as nitrogen, potassium ,phosphorus ,calcium ,magnesium ,and sulfur. Microbial activity in the soil also leads to the formation of mycelium and viscous materials which benefit the health of the soil by increasing its soil structure (i.e., by aggregation). Soil that is well- aggregated has increased aeration and water infiltration rates, and is more easily turned or tilled than non- aggregated soil. Further aeration of the soil results from the ability of the root systems of many green manure crops to efficiently penetrate compact soils. The amount of humus found in the soil also increases with higher rates of decomposition, which is beneficial for the growth of the crop succeeding the green manure crop. Green manure crops are also useful for weed control, erosion prevention, and reduction of insect pests and diseases. The deep rooting properties of many green manure crops make them efficient at suppressing weed. Green manure crops often provide habitat for many native pollinators as well as predatory beneficial insects, which allow for a reduction in the input of insecticides where cover crops are planted. Some green manures are also successful at suppressing plant diseases. Incorporation of green manure into a farming system can drastically reduce, if not eliminate, the need for additional products such as supplemental fertilizers and pesticides. Organic farming also relies on soil health and cycling of nutrients through the soil using natural processes. Green manure performs the vital function of fertilization, in concert with the addition of animal manures if those are used. Green manure also brings other organic advantages with it depending upon the plant type used. Buckwheat, for example, prevents the spread of weeds, and Winter wheat and Winter rye can also be used for grazing.

Planting a Cover Crop or Green Manure' Crop?

When Do I Plant? Plant in Spring/Early Summer or Fall

How Do I Plant? Same as the instructions above.

What is the Next Step? Some of your cover crops may slow their growth in cold temps but will re-start again in early spring. In mid-late spring, mow down your cover crops before they go to seed and then rototill them into the soil in preparation for new garden areas. You will need to wait about 3-5 weeks after tilling before you plant anything new in this area. As most cover crops or green manures add beneficial nutrients to the soil, this allows the nutrients added to be released into the soil and some of them like rye which keep down other seeds (like weeds) from germinating will no longer be present in the soil after a few weeks. After you wait this time amount, go ahead and plant your new areas according to the proper instructions for what you are planting.