You could lay sod, but make sure it is wet sod. The sod dries up easily if its roots are not wet. You could also try seed grass there is no guarantee that it will grow but make sure you keep it watered. I would recommend sod it is easy and make i look real, nice and green
Any area of grass that is shaded from the sun by a crate laying (for instance, on a lawn) would result in the grass becoming lank, weak and less green. Eventually, the area of grass shaded would die and become an area of bare earth.
Probably you are going to either need to give up the idea of grass in the area or change the ecology. Right now, the soil supports the growth of algae along with the shade. If you cut down the trees, eliminating the shade, in time you could grow grass there. Alternatively, you might leave the root area of the tree (roughly under the canopy) untouched and then use pavers in the bare area. I had a similar area of my yard in Houston that did this as the trees grew larger; I tried aerating the soil, amending the soil with lime and fertilizer and, even more soil. However, the tree just did better, not the grass!
Obviously, to grow wheat. But also as a fast growing way to prevent erosion of bare soil. Mix it with grass seed and wheat will come up fast to hold the ground while the grass germinates.
grass grow in a bunch
does grass only grow at night
A good product is Green Thumb LB Bare Spot Shady Grass Seed.
Yes, grass does grow in the arctic. Grass lives just about everywhere!
Topsoil.
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.
It's "grasses grow" (when talking about multiple kinds of grass) or "grass grows" (when talking about only one kind of grass).
Where Grass Won't Grow was created in 1969.
I Can Hear the Grass Grow was created in 1967.