Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald
Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald
Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald
Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald
Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald
Workers with Clarke & Co. Inc. lay down about 130,000 square feet of sod Tuesday at Santa Rita Park. The sod, which came from Graff’s Turf in Fort Morgan, is a Kentucky bluegrass blend cut into rolls 4 feet wide and 100 feet long. Ami Salazar, a supervisor with Clark & Co., recommends a six- to eight-week period for the turf to establish itself before use. The field was used by the construction company that built the Santa Rita Water Reclamation Facility.
Jerry McBride/Durango Herald