Any lawn experts or worm charmers on here?

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
OP
OP
Bazzer

Bazzer

Setting the controls for the heart of the sun.
Typical cool wet weather activities at this time of year. I don’t understand your question. Worm casts are a sign of healthy soil and lawn. Sweeping in worm casts is a way of fertilising the lawn. Don’t remove this rich source of nutrient. Kill off the worms and you kill off all biodiversity you have and you’ll have a poor lawn in no time. There will be hundreds of thousands of worms in a small lawn so moving them on is impossible.

Probably best to move to a flat.

IME sweeping casts only properly works when they are dry. This time of the year that is rarely going to happen.

[QUOTE 4991204, member: 9609"]without worms your garden would probably die. They are truly wondrous creatures, just let your grass grow a little longer and you will never see the casts.

Just a thought and I don't know the answer to this - would we even have soil without worms ? If worms had never existed how differant would our flora be ? I'm wondering if they are one of the most important creatures on the planet.[/QUOTE]

I don't doubt they do wonders for soil and I don't have a problem with them elsewhere in my garden. I am more than happy for them to live in my lawn, but I seem to have an over abundance of the varieties which deposit casts.

[QUOTE 4991265, member: 259"]Get a mulching blade for the mower and the casts get recycled on the lawn. We generally have a flock of blackbirds working our lawn and they never seem to stop pulling worms out.[/QUOTE]

Thank you. I shall look into a mulching blade, although the mower will have to have have the front roller removed as that is likely to flatten the casts before the blades got to work.

I try to encourage more birds in the garden, but there are number of local cat owners who give their animals free rein to kill local wildlife.

Use a fertiliser with a high iron content, certainly seems to have greatly reduced the amount of wormcasts on our cricket square since I switched to it 3 or 4 years ago

Thank you. That is encouraging. I had read about altering the soil's acidity level and had changed the fertiliser to one with a higher iron content.


Not going to happen. Badgers and I have history. :okay:
 

nickyboy

Norven Mankey

I'd love to have a few worm casts on my lawn instead of those black and white rotivators calling by, looking for leatherjackets etc

I wouldn't wish badgers on anyone who likes a nice lawn
 
Top Bottom