Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Henderson's American Farmer's Manual, 1897
This is an invaluable hardy winter Grass for the South, and the longest, driest and hottest summer fails 'to injure' it. It makes as good sod as the Kentucky Blue Grass (poa Pratensis), and if sown together (not too (deep) the seeds of the two varieties generally come up together after the same shower, for it takes a wet, damp, drizzly spell to start it. It can be cultivated from both seed and sets, and either may be planted in the fall or spring.
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