Canada green perfect grass
canadagreenperfectgrass.com The perfect solution for poor soil areas Convenient and Innovative Grass Seed, Fertilizer and Vermiculite Mixture Just ...
canadagreenperfectgrass.com The perfect solution for poor soil areas Convenient and Innovative Grass Seed, Fertilizer and Vermiculite Mixture Just ...
For a decade, Heather Comba and Laura Seed worked together for the same goal.
For the next 10 years, the local lawn bowlers worked toward reaching the national 4s championships. They came close, twice finishing third at provincials when, unfortunately, there were only two spots available.
This year, they decided it was time for a change.
“I talked to Heather. We had tried for so many years,” recalled Seed. “We knew each other so well, maybe too well. We needed to try something different.”
So they went their separate ways. Seed and Kelly McKerihen joined forces with Lisa McKerihen and Heather Battles, playing out of a different district while Comba and Linda Baron teamed up with Brampton’s Sheila Lumley and Mary Meldrum.
Each team won their respective district titles to earn a spot at the provincials where Comba’s team took the gold while Seed and her teammates took the silver — each qualifying for this month’s nationals in Toronto — though the two teams never met during the tournament.
|
Ugly perennials getting admiring looks On the other hand, Manitoba farmers are already growing intermediate wheat grass as a forage seed crop and getting 14 to 15 bushels per acre. "If we could double that in 10 to 15 years, we are within reach," Martens said, noting it gives farmers in and more » |
|
Bound for nationals BOWLED OVER: Heather Comba (left) and Laura Seed eagerly await their trip to the national 4s championships. Graham Paine / Canadian Champion For a decade, Heather Comba and Laura Seed worked together for the same goal. For the next 10 years, |
|
Shaughnessy: Hole by hole Particular attention has been paid to Shaughnessy's rough, which confounded players in 2005 and is even thicker now thanks to 35000 pounds of rye grass seed that has been thrown onto it over the past year. About 3500 tonnes of sand has been added to and more » |
|
Rediscovering long lost Longwood links In a letter from Morris Nursery, we learn that the original Longwood greens were a grass seed mixture of Kentucky Blue, Creeping Bent, Fescue, and Red Top. The fairways were a mixture of Kentucky Blue, Recleaned Red Top, Canadian Blue, English Rye, |
|
Crossroads at Big Creek: Goldfinches gravitate to open spaces Besides that, European settlers introduced some of our first invasive species — dandelions and Canada thistles — which provide the goldfinches with a generous supply flower seeds for food and and fluffy nesting materials. This time of year, |