
Which lawn suits your family?
Answer five quick questions. We’ll point you in the right direction.
How much sun reaches most of the lawn?Think about winter as well as summer.
How busy will the lawn be?
How much mowing and edging suits you?
If the lawn gets worn, how fast must it bounce back?
What matters most when you buy?
Hero and 30-second answer
Choose Kikuyu for a sunny lawn that gets hard wear and needs fast repair during warm active growth.
Choose Sir Walter Buffalo when the yard has mixed light and you want a broad, soft-leaf lawn that is generally easier to contain.
Choose neither without fixing the site first when the ground stays waterlogged, the area receives too little useful light, or everyone is forced through one tiny patch.

Sir Walter and Kikuyu at a glance
These are useful tendencies, not promises. Soil, weather, establishment and maintenance can make a sensible choice fail—or help a well-matched lawn succeed.
Start with sunlight
Light is the first dividing line.
Kikuyu wants strong direct sun. In a bright yard it can put its vigorous growth to work. Under substantial building or tree shade, the same lawn can thin and lose the recovery that made Kikuyu attractive in the first place.
Sir Walter is generally more suitable where light changes across the day. It can manage mixed light better than Kikuyu, but it is not a solution for darkness. Grass beneath a permanently covered trampoline, dense evergreen canopy or narrow south-facing passage may receive too little energy to remain dense.
Do the check in winter if possible. Sydney’s lower winter sun can turn a bright summer strip into a shaded cool-season problem.
Decision: Mostly strong sun? Keep both on the list and move to wear. Meaningful moving shade? Put Sir Walter first. Deep shade? Redesign that section.
Then look at wear and recovery
Kikuyu usually wins when the lawn is sunny and busy. Its vigorous warm-season growth helps it close small divots and worn patches faster.
Sir Walter can handle ordinary family life. It may be the better whole-yard decision when use is moderate and the lawn moves between sun and shade. It does not repair severe wear as quickly as actively growing Kikuyu.
Wear resistance and repair are not the same thing. No grass stays untouched under concentrated traffic. A dog door, side gate, clothesline route or backyard goalmouth can wear out either lawn when every trip lands in the same place.
Decision: Strong sun plus dogs, children or regular games? Kikuyu leads. Mixed light plus normal family use? Sir Walter may fit better. One unavoidable traffic line? Add a path.
Be honest about mowing and edging
Kikuyu’s repair comes with growth to manage. Through warm, wet conditions it may need frequent mowing. Its surface runners and underground stems demand firm edging around beds and paving.
Sir Walter also needs mowing and edging, but its surface-runner growth is generally easier to contain. It can suit the homeowner who wants an active family lawn without Kikuyu’s most assertive spread.
Neither grass is maintenance-free. A living lawn needs water, nutrition, mowing and observation. The useful question is not “Which one needs no work?” It is “Which work am I willing to do?”
Decision: Comfortable with active summer mowing and edging? Kikuyu remains strong. Want easier containment? Sir Walter leads.
Compare the look and feel
Sir Walter has a broad, soft-leaf appearance that creates a full, relaxed family lawn. Kikuyu has a finer-looking, vigorous surface when it is growing well.
There is no honest universal winner for beauty. Architecture, garden style, mowing and personal taste all matter. Look at real samples in comparable light rather than choosing from a heavily edited photo.
Do not use generated close-up images as proof of cultivar identity. Confirm the named product on the quote and order.
Which is better for dogs?
For an active dog in a sunny yard, Kikuyu’s faster repair often makes it the practical first choice.
For moderate dog use in a yard with mixed light, Sir Walter may be the better overall match. Shade can reduce recovery, so keep the dog’s main route in mind.
Urine concentration, digging, wet soil and traffic patterns can affect either lawn. Rotate play, move objects, rinse only as appropriate under current water guidance and use a durable step or path where traffic cannot be spread.
What happens in winter?
Both are warm-season grasses. Growth and repair slow in cooler conditions.
Kikuyu’s winter slowdown matters in high-use yards because damage may remain visible longer. Frost-prone parts of western and southwest Sydney can show stronger seasonal effects. Sir Walter also slows and cannot rely on shade tolerance to replace winter light.
Do not buy either grass on a guarantee of identical year-round colour. Local temperature, frost, light, soil, nutrition and maintenance all affect the result.
Soil and drainage can overrule the variety
Neither product fixes a bad base. Fresh turf may stay green briefly using the moisture and reserves in the roll, then struggle when roots meet compacted fill, rubble or waterlogged soil.
Before delivery:
- Correct drainage and finished levels.
- Remove rubble, weeds and unsuitable material.
- Relieve compaction where appropriate.
- Prepare suitable, even underlay.
- Make sure irrigation can cover the whole area.
- Plan to lay promptly after arrival.
If water pools now, solve that before choosing a grass. If a tree dominates the area, account for root competition as well as shade.
Four real-yard decisions
Sunny family backyard with a dog
The lawn receives strong direct sun and gets daily play. The family accepts regular mowing. Start with Kikuyu. Design a path at the gate if traffic is concentrated.
Compact yard with morning sun and afternoon shade
The lawn is used for sitting and light play. Buildings create moving shade. Start with Sir Walter. Check winter light before ordering.
Large open lawn with weekend sport
The area is bright, wear is spread out and fast repair matters. Kikuyu is the stronger fit, provided edging and mowing are planned.
Shaded side passage that stays damp
The area gets little sky, holds water and is the only route to the backyard. Choose neither yet. Fix drainage and consider paving or another surface.
A simple decision path
1. Does most of the lawn receive strong direct sun? If no, put Sir Walter first and complete a winter shade check. 2. Will the lawn receive heavy, spread-out wear? If yes and it is sunny, put Kikuyu first. 3. Do you want to minimise aggressive spread and edging? If yes, Sir Walter is more likely to suit. 4. Is the ground compacted, wet or poorly levelled? If yes, stop and fix the base. 5. Still tied? Choose the appearance you prefer, confirm the exact product and ask Demarco to review the yard photos.

Better turf, matched to the right yard
Better farming makes better lawns, but better turf still needs the right home.
Demarco grows two choices because two clear recommendations are more useful than a wall of product names. We will not recommend Kikuyu simply because the yard is busy if it is too dark. We will not recommend Sir Walter simply because there is shade if the shade is too deep or the traffic too concentrated.
We grow better turf so you can grow a better lawn. That begins with an honest match.
Send us the yard, not just the square metres
Include your postcode, measurements and photos taken across the day. Tell us about children, dogs, shade, drainage and mowing. We will help you choose between Kikuyu and Sir Walter before you request the final quote.
Comparison FAQs
Is Kikuyu or Sir Walter better for Sydney?
Neither is better everywhere. Kikuyu is usually better for strong sun, heavy use and fast warm-season repair. Sir Walter is usually better for mixed light, a broad soft leaf and easier containment.
Which is better for shade?
Sir Walter is generally the better of the two in mixed sun and shade. Deep shade may not support either lawn, especially where traffic or damp soil adds pressure.
Which is better for dogs?
Kikuyu often leads in a sunny yard with heavy dog use because it repairs quickly during active growth. Sir Walter may suit moderate dog use where the yard has mixed light. A concentrated dog track can wear out either grass.
Which needs more mowing?
Kikuyu usually demands more frequent mowing and edging through strong warm-season growth. Sir Walter still needs routine care but is generally easier to contain.
Which stays greener in winter?
Do not rely on a universal guarantee. Both slow in cooler weather. Frost, light, soil, nutrition and local conditions affect winter colour and recovery.
Can I mix Kikuyu and Sir Walter in one yard?
Usually it is better to choose one turf for a visually continuous lawn and redesign unsuitable sections. Different growth rates, textures and maintenance can make a mixed lawn difficult to manage. Ask for site-specific advice before combining them.
Is Sir Walter worth the extra cost?
Do not decide from an assumed price difference. Compare current delivered quotes and, more importantly, the fit for the yard. The wrong cheaper turf can cost more if it fails or demands care the household will not provide.