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Sunrise over the vast West Turf farm, showing long rows of green turf ready for harvest

How Does a Turf Farmer Choose His Own Lawn?

Toni Ivanovic

In the late 90s, Paul and I built our family home in Fernvale, near Wivenhoe Dam in the Brisbane Valley. After all the building was finished, the last thing we did was lay our lawn – a Queensland Blue couch lawn harvested from our then paddock at Tarampa. 

That lawn performed fabulously through drought, floods, frosts, and searing summers. If it went backwards, it was never hard to restore to thriving. 

Growing up, our family was very outdoorsy, and we spent countless hours playing together on that lawn. 

Years later as empty nesters, Paul and I recently made some landscaping changes at our property. These changes snowballed into a new front lawn. 

Though we loved our old lawn, for various reasons we knew we wouldn’t be installing Queensland Blue again. 

So then came decision time. Which variety would we choose for our new front yard lawn? Of course it had to be a West Turf lawn.

West Turf varieties and their characteristics:

Wintergreen Aussiblue Zoysia Soft Leaf Buffalo Sir Walter
Growth Fast Very fast Slow Slow Fast
Shade Tolerance Very low Low-mid Mid High High
Mowing Medium High Low Low Medium
Durability High High High High
Leaf and colour Fine, Emerald Fine-Medium, Green/Blue Medium, Emerald Broad, Emerald Broad, Emerald

Lawn choice considerations for our front yard project:

  1. Firstly, we obviously wanted to use our own turf stock, so our choices were Wintergreen, Aussiblue, Zoysia, Soft Leaf Buffalo, or Sir Walter. 
  2. Secondly, in the area we were about to turf, a tree had grown tall enough to cast a huge shadow that would significantly impact the shade tolerance of any lawn we planted.  The area would get 5 hours of sun each day from midday.  
  3. Thirdly, the older we get, the less enthusiastic we are about mowing!
  4. Lastly, what did we liked the look and feel of for this space?

In the end the choice was easy – Zoysia!

Five reasons why Zoysia was the right choice for this project:

Growth

West Turf’s two slow-growing varieties are Zoysia and Soft Leaf Buffalo. Since we didn’t want Buffalo grass in this space, Zoysia was a good option to look impressive for longer between mows.

Shade Tolerance

Shade is a big decision maker! In the space we were turfing, an old leopard tree had grown so tall that it cast a long shadow over the area for the entire morning. Zoysia grass requires only four to five hours of direct sunlight daily, so this was a perfect fit.

Mowing

Landscaping changes meant only a push mower (not a ride on) could access the area. Zoysia requires half as much mowing as Aussiblue, or Sir Walter – so much less effort required in mowing. FYI: It’s also great for tricky to get to spaces like embankments.

Durability

Zoysia is a firm-leaved variety that can withstand wear and tear. As a slower grower, it won’t self-repair well, but we weren’t expecting any damage to occur.

Look and Feel

Above all, we wanted a stunning-looking medium-leaf emerald-green lawn. Zoysia grass has fabulous colour and is a good compromise between couch and buffalo varieties.

So, there you have it! In July 2024, we planted Zoysia grass in our front yard. We used the winter to establish it, and by spring, it was looking fabulous and well and truly ready for us to enjoy in the warmer weather. Would you like some help choosing your lawn? Call us on 1300871366 for friendly expert advice.
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Toni Ivanovic