No, in order for grass to grow properly, it needs dirt/soil for it's roots to dig into the dirt, if you sprinkle grass seed on cement (putting dirt on the cement first), it may grow but pure ground works the best.
Not really, not on cement with no faults or cracks whatsoever. Grass needs a place for its roots to go so they don't get exposed to sunlight. A crack in the cement is enough for a grass plant, provided there's some living microscopic organisms to give it the kick-start it needs to even grow, and to start breaking down the constituencies that make up cement.
Yes, if the soil under the gravel is nice and moist with minerals and naturally soil food for the grass....unless you put de-weeder or weed killer on the gravel
Cher
It is because some cement may allow water to travel downhill or to stop the flow of the water when it's in the soil, and could cause the soil to absorb to water, causing it to grow faster than the others, and when the cement conducts or reflects heat/light, it will go to the nearest place possible, the grass, And sometimes grass doesn't grow well either near walkways because people sometimes walk on the grass, causing it to flatten, or to die.
cement cement it is easier to run on cement cement
uh..no
grass grow in a bunch
does grass only grow at night
Snails move faster on dirt cement
Cement because the surface tends to be flatter than grass. In grass, the blades hitting the ball cause it to start losing speed, as the ball now needs more energy to go over or push past the grass compared to the cement, where there is nothing there to stop it from moving forward except the air.
grass
Yes, grass does grow in the arctic. Grass lives just about everywhere!
No the digestive tract will destroy the grass so that it will not grow. It would have to be the roots of the grass for it to grow anyway.
Neither. The ball rolls faster on cement, not grass, or dirt.