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Tips On Choosing A Lawn Aerating Machine

By Jessica Johnson


For grass to be healthy, the roots need to be strong and deep. This will not be possible if large masses of compact soil keep it starved. There is a need for proper circulation of air, water, and nutrients. Worms and other kinds of soil bugs are naturally meant to handle the loosening of soil. However, in some cases, the natural mechanism is not enough thus the need for a lawn aerating machine.

Compaction may happen on its own over time. In this case, the bugs can usually have it. However, if the grounds experience a lot of traffic the compaction is taken to a whole new scale. Soil layering is a process where the top layer is covered with another lighter layer. This action will cause the layer below to compact. The common sign is unusually quick and easy drying out of the ground. This is a sign that one needs to intervene and break up the thatch.

Before starting, the process ensures the soil is moist enough. It would be nice to do it the day after showers. Trying to perforate dry soil is going to be painful. Some areas will be more compacted than others are, make multiple passes over these areas until they are satisfactorily loose. Others will not be affected at all. Make a single pass or not at all.

Poking holes in the ground seems like such a mundane task. It sounds like a pair of heels and an idle afternoon could do the job. But then, the work would not be uniform and may be inadequate. Thus, the need to buy, rent, borrow, or co-buy equipment for more efficiency. Work along the perimeters, to begin with. Look out for the sprinklers. It should not take too long.

One may go for the spike equipment or the plug. These serve different purposes and are suitable for different kinds of situations. The foundation of use is the kind of soil and degree of compaction. The spike only pokes holes into the soil. This will do for the light soils and only mild compaction. A plug on the other hand removes soil once it has poked. It will work on heavy soils like clay and severe compaction.

The width of the equipment is also a major concern. If it is narrow then that means it will make many passes before the ground is fully covered. It is estimated that a single additional foot to the width covers about 33% more ground. The wider the equipment the fewer passes one can make. One will save a lot of time on this.

There is a hand pushed kind of equipment. This only requires human effort. It will go as fast as the human can handle. It offers the benefit of simplicity. It is wonderful on smaller yards. The tractor pulled kind is more complicated. It offers the benefit of width though. It works on large grounds. It would be suitable for a golf course for example.

The very last consideration is the price. This may be an asset although not worthy of the extreme expense. As long as it does what it should do, that is fine. No need to go for the most expensive.




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