Yes, the only time when it is not possible is when the ground is frozen
It is similar, but not the same. Be careful, when phoning round for quotes, be sure to get a price, which is for a square metre. Some growers charge a square metre price for a square yard or a half square yard (a square yard is 20% smaller than a square metre).
Not at all, turf is a mat of living grass plants; the soil is only the carrier in the same way as soil from a pot plant is. The turfs characteristics will depend on your soil, poor soil in your garden will need more feeding for the lawn.
Yes, it also has smooth stalk grasses, which give the lawn an element of self-repair
Be careful here, plants need sunshine to photosynthesise, it depends on how much shade you have. To see if grass will grow in your shady area, only buy one or two square metres of turf and try it before you buy enough to do the whole garden.
We suggest you purchase grass seed containing woodland grasses like Tufted Hairgrass.
What the trade call a fescue bent mix - is used for bowling and putting greens. It requires a high input of management and not commonly used for domestic lawns.
You can buy any turf, which has a quality standard and produced by a professional company with good after sales service.
Grass is quite difficult to kill, once the turf has rooted, it is then a lawn, responsibility back to the grower would be difficult to establish.
There are many and we would suggest further reading on this topic. Our farm has hundreds of acres of lawns. When it is harvested, the roots are cut off; the grass is rolled up, put in a lorry and taken to your garden. This puts stress on the grass plants. Like us, stress encourages illness. However, 99.9% of turf establishes into lawns to be proud of.
Most certainly YES, failure to lay and water turf immediately will result in the turf going yellow, putting un-necessary stress on the plant.
Depends on your garden size, turf must be kept moist, but not saturated, any signs of shrinkage, water immediately.