March-April 2010

Inching Closer to the Sun

A look at today's hydroseeding materials and equipment

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Photo: Nature Gro Corp.

By Tara Beecham

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 Reel Neet also used hydraulically installed matting. Even during the torrential rain conditions, practically every seeded area already had grass established by the time workers monitored it. Despite the odds seemingly weighed against it, the project was deemed a success.

“With the new products that are coming out for flexible growth material, I think it’s going to be the coming thing,” says Thomas as he looks towards future trends in hydroseeding.

Highways and Golf Courses
Highway projects often require hydroseeding services. In addition to considering the climate when selecting a seed mix, Tren Hagman, of Granite Seed in Lehi, UT, suggests keeping in mind the overall goals for the site. For example, if it’s a critical area where soil is danger of erosion, select “faster-germinating species” instead of natives.

“If it’s an area like a national park,” he says, “you want to go with native varieties from that area.”

Work on highway projects remains steady, says Ron Dietz, president of Dietz Hydroseeding based in Sylmar, CA, noting that while there’s not a “spike” in that branch of hydroseeding work, the amount of work has not dropped off.

Photo: Trajan Inc.
This wall was constructed with earthen baskets.
Photo: Trajan Inc.
Flexterra and a seed mix were applied to the finished wall.

One sector that will always rely heavily on its green assets, golf courses continue to provide hydroseeding contractors with projects that provide an emerald glow today and establish strong roots for future foot traffic. Typically, when one pictures the green aspects of a golf course, however, one imagines the carpeted earth below. During the onset of one recent project, creative minds took the vision of a wall and instead saw a canvas.

In early September 2009, Trajan Inc. was contracted to hydroseed a newly constructed earthen basket wall at the well-established Cheviot Hills Golf Course, located on Capital Boulevard north of I-540 in Raleigh, NC. North Carolina-based ST Wooten served as the development general contractor, and Carolina Outdoor Services based in Matthews, NC, served as the wall subcontractor, explains Susan Keen, project engineer and owner of Trajan.     

“Discussions first began one week prior to my starting the project. I was invited out to the site to see products already purchased for the project. A seed mix and hydromulch had already been purchased to be used to hydroseed the wall. My Pennington/Profile representative, Brian Free, accompanied me to the meeting,” says Keen. “We urged a change of mulch to Flexterra in lieu of the hydromulch. Brian was able to present other cases in Georgia where Pennington had successfully used Flexterra and a specialty seed blend. I negotiated a contract with Carolina Outdoor to apply Flexterra and the wall seed mix developed by Brian at Pennington Seed.”

Free notes that the use of Flexterra was possible because of the machinery available.

“When I learned they had a 1,700-gallon Finn [HydroSeeder], I questioned them about using Flexterra, and they responded that they had considered it but didn’t think that ‘real thick stuff’ would work,” recalls Free, business development manager at Pennington Seed based in Madison, GA. He explained it could indeed be used as part of a two-step process.

Time constraints presented an obstacle.

“We agreed to seed the wall starting the following week,” says Keen. “Brian Free and Brad Eckley with Pennington helped to coordinate product delivery, while I concentrated on the plan for execution. All the necessary coordination and planning was accomplished within that week and product was delivered to the site Friday.”

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 The next challenge the team faced was the immensity of the wall itself.

 “The wall is 3,500 feet long and about 40 feet at its highest point,” says Keen. “Spraying from the top down and from the bottom up presented the best outcome with minimal shadowing.” Next Page >

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