I need help with figuring out watering in my area.
I am in the Bay Area in a semi-urban neighborhood. After years of seriously slow progress we're rid of our front lawns (corner property) and they are nicely replaced with natives.
We redesigned the backyard from a confusing patchwork of levels (some deck some lawn) 60% had concrete from parking pads underneath it, and now it's all one level. We had someone put in the pretty small lawn we wanted for our kids and dogs with a "mow free sod". (From
http://www.deltabluegrass.com/mowfree.html) it contains according to the website.
Mow Free
Sheeps Fescue
Hard Fescue
Chewings Fescue
Creeping Red Fescue
It didn't do so well the first couple of years because the guy who put it in did a lousy job with the sprinkler system, and I didn't do a great job maintaining it. (Did I mention I've got small kids?)I know he dug in compost and did a ton of prep work before he put it in but not how much, nor much else about my soil beyond that it's got a lot of clay.
We finally got the sprinklers fixed, and I've set myself the goal of trying to baby the lawn this year so it'll choke out the weeds, and go back to looking more like it did after I got it installed. So I'm complete on board with "organic" "Lazy" (obviously) and "cheap". I mow high, grass cycle, and practice benign (i hope) neglect. I've never used herbicides of any kind or let anyone use it. I probably gave up chemical fertilizers a decade ago and never used them on the lawn anyway. I'm the type who'd rather read 15 articles about the wonders of permaculture and CSA, then actually go out and do actual gardening-though I am improving especially now that my kids will actually hang out with me and let me do as much as 5 or 10 minutes of gardening without interruption.
But here's my question, can a lawn get buy on 1"/month with NO SUMMER RAIN?
We're in a very temperate area, where summer evenings are always cool, and frost is a once a decade event. 80's during the day are considered heat wave territory, and the soil is clay, and I don't want to use a drop more of water than I should, but I'd really like to get this lawn well established so it looks good, holds up to having my kids run around on it, and is a great place to spread out a picnic lunch on a sunday.