This Forum will close on Wednesday 27 March, 2024. Please refer to the announcement on the Discussions page for further detail.
Total bog
Hi, really need help and advice. We recently moved into a new home, house built 30 yrs ago ish. Now after quite a lot of rain we have two areas that are totally waterlogged in the lawn. On one side The garden slopes away from the house to the west. So the bottom of that lawn is a total bog and an area which again slopes away on the south side of the house is really muddy. We dug holes in both places and the one on the west side is full of water. Yes there is clay, we haven’t worked out how deep the layer of clay is yet will need a mini digger for that, but the garden is unusable in these areas. We are surrounded by other properties so can’t drain out. The flower beds on the side of these areas are not muddy though! The larger area is under a neighbours very large oak, which they won’t top off. Any and every suggestion would be soooo helpful. Love gardening and this is driving me mad. Thank you
0
Posts
Also - when you suggestions - what exactly do you want to do with the area? Plant it? Improve the grass?
I'm afraid in wet areas, waterlogged grass is fairly normal, and not much can be done without expense. Most people just stay off it in winter
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
Persistent rain and waterlogged ground is something you often just have to work with in a Scottish garden
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
Is it possible to build up the levels? 150mm of grit sand mixed with decent topsoil would create a good free draining base for the lawn, essentially elevating it above the wet zone. (Not mixed into the clay - the sand loses its drainage properties when you do that).
Saturated ground is normal at this time of year.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...