Our experience has been Zeon is not any more shade tolerant compared to a large Emerald area or small area of Meyer we have growing. We were sold on the shade tolerance bit when redoing our backyard w/ Zeon and it didn't live up to the promise. When the Zeon is grown in full sun it has proven to grow strong but requires frequent cutting and dethatching. Despite the Zeon being subjectively a bit thicker in our full sun areas compared to our Emerald, the Emerald does a better job of choking out weeds for some reason. Our family prefers the Emerald look, bare foot feel, and comparative ease of maintenance.
I am over in Shreveport. The lawn that we have is disappointing. LSU Ag Center has posted that there is something called St. Augustine Decline in NW LA. We are fed up with buying St. Augustine sod only to have it keep dying out. This yard was established back in 1969, but it is getting sparse. One of the sod dealers here says he won't sell St. Augustine anymore. I am exploring the possibility of plugging Zoysia to let it take over. Any thoughts on this?
I have Bermuda lawn next to Zeon Zoysia lawn, they both established and each lawn about 2500 sq feet, my question is which one will take over the other? I am worried about my Zoysia Zeon because I spent 5000$ on it when I established it. Should I leave the 2 grasses next to each other? or should I get rid of Bermuda grass incase it take over the slow growing Zoysia? thanks in advance
Bermuda grows into other grasses and intermixes. Good mix with Augustine, but If you don't want it in with your zoysia, you'll have to lay a tarp over it for a few weeks, or something else.
We have seen some girl dog urine burn some zoysia. Depends on the dog and the diet. My brothers back lawn has some burn marks on what would otherwise be the best lawn in town.
I just had Bemur Zorsia grass laid on my property, however I am not finding any videos on this specific Zorsia grass. Did I "get-got"... I'm in Texas where its hot as all get out. Did I make a good choice?
Although zoysia is a warm-season grass, it is becoming more popular in NJ each year. Depending on where you are in NJ (central and southern Jersey are now considered the northen most tip of the transition zone) you would likely either need to grow Meyer (Z52) or Innovation Zoysia, due to the colder climate (as compared to the southern parts of the country). Zeon can be killed in the NJ region due to our colder winters, whereas Meyer & Innovation Zoysia can survive without issue. Two things to be aware of before you plant it though (in case you weren't aware): 1. it WILL go dormant in late October / early November. It stays a straw brown / golden brown color until about Mid-April in central Jersey (this is a deal breaker for many). 2. It WILL creep in to your neighbors lawns eventually and choke out everything in its path. So you will either need a good perimeter or make sure your neighbors are on board. Assuming those are not a deal breaker for you, it makes a fantastic turf May - October (the time of year people actually want to be outside) in the Central Jersey area.
@Dolores M Go back and re-read what I wrote. Where did I say it would have a problem growing in a colder zone? The Zeon cultivar (shown specifically in this video), could suffer winter kill, but other varieties such as Meyer (Z52) and Innovation will do just fine. If you are in PA, it's likely you used Meyer (Z52) which is what virtually all the homes in Jersey who have it use. The newer cultivar, Innovation, is cold friendly like Meyer, but with a finer blade, so we may see that grown more in this region in the years to come.
Our experience has been Zeon is not any more shade tolerant compared to a large Emerald area or small area of Meyer we have growing. We were sold on the shade tolerance bit when redoing our backyard w/ Zeon and it didn't live up to the promise. When the Zeon is grown in full sun it has proven to grow strong but requires frequent cutting and dethatching. Despite the Zeon being subjectively a bit thicker in our full sun areas compared to our Emerald, the Emerald does a better job of choking out weeds for some reason. Our family prefers the Emerald look, bare foot feel, and comparative ease of maintenance.
@doloresm7396all grasses prefer sun. But zeon does well in shade.
best looking sod ice ever seen. you guys do a great job!
I am a Bermuda fan boy but I bought a greens mower from somebody and he had zoysia it was simple beautiful he reel cut his lawn twice a week
The soils in Dallas are black gumbo....how much top soil do you have to put over it?
What about texhoma 31 and ceebration.. celebration is very soft
I don’t have Zeon near me. How far is too far to ship pallets of sod?
I am over in Shreveport. The lawn that we have is disappointing. LSU Ag Center has posted that there is something called St. Augustine Decline in NW LA. We are fed up with buying St. Augustine sod only to have it keep dying out. This yard was established back in 1969, but it is getting sparse. One of the sod dealers here says he won't sell St. Augustine anymore. I am exploring the possibility of plugging Zoysia to let it take over. Any thoughts on this?
Does this work if your Lawn is NOT shaded? We do not like Bermuda Grass at all.
Why no texhoma 31 in videos..
Is there seed for emerald and zeon
Ok..so itg good with droughts ..what about with sun
.over 100 degree weeks at a time of scorching hot weather..
What type of soil do you recommend
I have Bermuda lawn next to Zeon Zoysia lawn, they both established and each lawn about 2500 sq feet, my question is which one will take over the other? I am worried about my Zoysia Zeon because I spent 5000$ on it when I established it. Should I leave the 2 grasses next to each other? or should I get rid of Bermuda grass incase it take over the slow growing Zoysia? thanks in advance
Bermuda grows into other grasses and intermixes. Good mix with Augustine, but If you don't want it in with your zoysia, you'll have to lay a tarp over it for a few weeks, or something else.
My neighbor has St. Augustine lawn. Will it take over the zoysia grass if they are side by side?
If your from the north... Theyy dont like agusta because of that weedy look.
Sure is some nice zoysia there.
So how much per square? Grass looks good
Probably like $500 per pallet
I have recently installed some Zeon and Emerald Zoysia and it was $300 per pallet which covers 450 sq. ft.
How tall can I let it grow. Or how short should it be
1-2 inches is where you want it
@@Mainstreetmowing ok thank you
Thanks great video. How does zoysia grass hold up to girl dogs and what type is best for the north east
We have seen some girl dog urine burn some zoysia. Depends on the dog and the diet. My brothers back lawn has some burn marks on what would otherwise be the best lawn in town.
I just had Bemur Zorsia grass laid on my property, however I am not finding any videos on this specific Zorsia grass. Did I "get-got"... I'm in Texas where its hot as all get out. Did I make a good choice?
I think you may have heard wrong. I suspect you have Jamur
@@Mainstreetmowing my apologies, yes Jamur…
I live in New Jersey… I cannot find Zoysia sod anywhere… Please help me someone
I am in Monmouth county and order from zoysia farms. Put the time in to plug it. You wont regret it. The sooner you do it the better.
Although zoysia is a warm-season grass, it is becoming more popular in NJ each year. Depending on where you are in NJ (central and southern Jersey are now considered the northen most tip of the transition zone) you would likely either need to grow Meyer (Z52) or Innovation Zoysia, due to the colder climate (as compared to the southern parts of the country). Zeon can be killed in the NJ region due to our colder winters, whereas Meyer & Innovation Zoysia can survive without issue. Two things to be aware of before you plant it though (in case you weren't aware): 1. it WILL go dormant in late October / early November. It stays a straw brown / golden brown color until about Mid-April in central Jersey (this is a deal breaker for many). 2. It WILL creep in to your neighbors lawns eventually and choke out everything in its path. So you will either need a good perimeter or make sure your neighbors are on board. Assuming those are not a deal breaker for you, it makes a fantastic turf May - October (the time of year people actually want to be outside) in the Central Jersey area.
@Dolores M Go back and re-read what I wrote. Where did I say it would have a problem growing in a colder zone? The Zeon cultivar (shown specifically in this video), could suffer winter kill, but other varieties such as Meyer (Z52) and Innovation will do just fine. If you are in PA, it's likely you used Meyer (Z52) which is what virtually all the homes in Jersey who have it use. The newer cultivar, Innovation, is cold friendly like Meyer, but with a finer blade, so we may see that grown more in this region in the years to come.
What are the tall stems in zazoyia sod
weeds
Most of the house doesnt have garage.
Where do they park the car ?
The garages are in the back of the houses.
Alley
Never lay new sod overtop old dead sod. Never lay new sod after spraying roundup for a minimum of 21 days after the last roundup application.
Why? Roundup is not soil active.
El toro