I am the total opposite. Rain ain't gonna "beat it in." I want soil contact and coverage with seed. Decades of seeding stuff commercially when lots of money is at stake has taught me that dragging it is often the difference between a good stand of grass, and none, or sparse, clumpy patches.IMO I do not drag anything after I broadcast seed. I tried that method one time years ago and I wound up with sticks and grass hung up in the drag and most of the seed as well. What I would have done was drag before I seeded then broadcast seed and let rain beat in. As soon as you get a couple rains on that it’ll be smooth anyway
My comment is I’d need to know if the grass seed was planted with a drill. I can’t tell for sure if those are disk harrows marks or drill marks. If drilled I think I’d leave it alone. If broadcast after a light harrowing, I’d drag it.I am the total opposite. Rain ain't gonna "beat it in." I want soil contact and coverage with seed. Decades of seeding stuff commercially when lots of money is at stake has taught me that dragging it is often the difference between a good stand of grass, and none, or sparse, clumpy patches.
Yeah, that's what I was asking. If it was drilled, it don't need dragging.My comment is I’d need to know if the grass seed was planted with a drill. I can’t tell for sure if those are disk harrows marks or drill marks. If drilled I think I’d leave it alone. If broadcast after a light harrowing, I’d drag it.