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For untold centuries it has been the custom
in rural areas of the Orient--in China, Korea and the Philippines
in particular--to build an earthen mound over a new burial
grave and cover the mount with "wild" Zoysiagrass sod harvested
in nearby hills.
This practice has assisted Nature in developing
numerous strains of Zoysiagrass and scattering them over vast
areas of land too rugged for agricultural crops.
In 1906 Dr. Frank N. Meyer, a noted plant explorer,
collected seed in Korea and introduced Zoysia into the United
States (Meyer collected the first Centipedegrass seed in China
ten years later).

Japonica Zoysia, one of four distinctly different
families of Zoysia, is also known as Korean or Japanese Lawngrass.
A warm season, creeping perennial, Zoysias form a dense turf
by means of slow growing underground rhizomes and above ground
stolens (runners).
In 1951 Meyer Zoysiagrass, a Japonica selection
made by Dr. Ian Forbes, was released. Soon thereafter Dr.
Forbes released Emerald Zoysia, a fine textured hybrid similar
to the better strains of Matrella Zoysia. Meyer and Emerald
have been popular for 40 years and many people consider them
the ultimate in lawn grasses. Emerald produces few viable
seed and Meyer seed do not reproduce true to type. Therefore
each must be established with sprigs or plugs, which can require
one to three years, or solid sodding, which is expensive.
Zoysia seed are hand stripped and cleaned in
the Orient and have been exported to the U.S. and other countries
for many years.
Chemical
treatment has overcome earlier problems with germination,
but the turf quality produced by such seed is variable and
generally not very satisfactory. It is marketed in the U.S.
under several different grade names, Because land suitable
for farming is needed for food production in countries where
Zoysias are native, it is unlikely that acreage will be established
there for mechanical harvest of improved selections. Some
of these countries are already importing better seeded varieties
such as Zenith.
Fifty years ago Zoysia researchers were dreaming
of and working at finding a Zoysia which would produce a superior
turf AND enough seed to justify commercial harvest.
Hundreds of selections were observed and evaluated
at the USDA Research Station at Beltsville, MD as well as
at other public and private research centers. Plant explorers
continue to search for different and better Zoysias in Korea
and China, where it has grown "wild" for centuries.
Dr. Jack Murray , who headed the Zoysia research
program at Beltsville, MD, died in 1994. He retired in 1988
because of health problems, and was permitted to take a collection
of some of the most promising materials with him to his new
home in Florida.
The "Green Revolution" has more than doubled
the world's food supply in the last half of this Century,
largely through the efforts of plant breeders who created
high yielding "hybrids" by cross-pollinating selected parent
plants.
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Murray
reasoned that if two or more of his best Zoysia selections
were systematically planted in a manner that invited one parent
to fertilize the other(s) i.e., cross-pollinate, the resulting
"synthetic" variety would produce plants endowed with the
magic of hybrid vigor as well as the meritorious characteristics
of the parent plants. Murray provided Patten Seed Company,
one of the Nation's oldest and largest producers of warm climate
turfgrass seed and sod, with five of the better USDA selections
and under his guidance seed production fields and observation
plots were established.

Zenith is the progeny of three parent plants
which have yellow-white flowers. Each parent was selected
for superior attributes such as leaf texture, color, disease
resistance, drought tolerance, fall color retention, uniform
color when dormant, and early spring greenup.
Zenith is in the Japonica family, as is Meyer
Zoysia, and is similar to Meyer in many respects, including
blade width and color. It is somewhat less dense, thus making
it easier to mow and providing a better opportunity for interseeding
with tall fescues for year-round color. Zenith grows well
in full sun or under light shade, and is presumed to have
good cold tolerance.
When compared with turf produced by Japonica
seed imported from the Orient, Zenith is far superior in appearance
with a finer blade, brighter color, better rust resistance,
much better fall color and earlier spring greenup.
Planted shallow on a newly prepared seedbed
and watered frequently, Zenith germinates readily, producing
a stand of seedlings in as little as 10 days. Like all Zoysias,
it grows and spreads slowly, and therefore seeding rates of
one to three pounds per 1,000 square feet are recommended.
Even so, users are cautioned to not expect an establishment
rate com-parable to seeded Bermudas, ryegrasses, fescues and
other fast growing grasses.
Cost Comparison: Zoysia sod would be a bargain
at $400.00 per 1,000 square feet, plus the cost of installation
on a prepared, fertilized seedbed. The cost of Zenith seed
for the same area is in the $30 to $60 range.
It was a long road. After more than 50 years
of searching, observing and evaluating,
ZENITH®
ZOYSIA SEED IS HERE AND NOW, AND IN COMMERCIAL QUANTITY!
Characteristics
- best adapted turf for the transition zone
- low water requirement
- low nutrition requirement
- winter hardy
- less frequent mowing required -- from 1 to 2 inches --
with either reel or rotary mowers
- dense turf resists weeds

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| PRICING |
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Bag Size
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Regular Retail Price
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GUARANTEE:
We guarantee to the extent of the purchase price that
the purity and germination of these seeds are as described
on the affixed label, within recognized tolerances. We
do not guarantee performance or suitability, and make
no further warranty, express or implied. |
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2 pound
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$48.00
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6 pound
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$141.00
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