
A backyard lawn should feel like part of the home. Somewhere children can sit, the dog can stretch out and the family can step outside without saving the grass for special occasions.
Sir Walter Buffalo is a broad, soft-leaf lawn that suits many Sydney homes, especially yards with a mix of sun and shade. It offers a full, comfortable surface and a growth habit that is generally easier to contain than Kikuyu.
It is a living lawn, not a shade-proof carpet. Give it useful light, prepared soil and sensible care, and it can become the calm, everyday green space around which the yard comes together.
Is Sir Walter right for your yard?
Put Sir Walter on the shortlist when:
- The lawn receives changing light or partial shade during the day.
- You like a broad, soft-leaf appearance.
- The yard will have normal family use rather than relentless concentrated traffic.
- You want a lawn that is generally less aggressive at the edges than Kikuyu.
- The space includes sunny and moderately shaded sections that need one coherent lawn.
- You are prepared to mow, water and care for a living surface, but do not want Kikuyu’s most vigorous spread.
Pause if the area is deeply shaded, stays wet, or funnels every foot and paw through one narrow strip. Sir Walter can handle mixed light better than Kikuyu; it cannot replace sunlight, drainage or recovery time.

Why homeowners choose Sir Walter
A soft, broad-leaf lawn
Sir Walter’s broad leaf creates a full, relaxed lawn surface. It feels at home beside family patios, garden beds and established landscapes rather than demanding a formal, closely cut finish.
“Soft leaf” describes the style of buffalo, not a promise that maintenance never matters. A clean cut with sharp mower blades supports a better feel and appearance.
A better fit for mixed light
Many Sydney yards are neither fully sunny nor fully shaded. The house shades one side in the morning, a tree moves shadow across the centre and the western fence cuts off winter afternoon sun.
Sir Walter is generally the stronger of Demarco Sydney Turf’s two options in that kind of mixed light. The key word is “mixed”. Deep shade under permanent cover, dense canopy or a narrow south-facing passage may still be unsuitable for lawn.
Easier containment than Kikuyu
Sir Walter spreads by surface runners. It still needs edging, but it does not have Kikuyu’s same combination of surface runners and underground stems. For homeowners who want a full lawn without the most aggressive spread into adjoining beds, that can be an important practical benefit.
A strong everyday all-rounder
With enough light and recovery time, Sir Walter can handle ordinary family use. It suits backyards where life is active but the lawn is not expected to repair a permanent dog track or backyard goalmouth overnight.
Shade tolerance without the sales myth
“Shade tolerant” is one of the most misunderstood phrases in turf.
It does not mean Sir Walter grows without meaningful light. It means it is generally better equipped than Kikuyu to cope with reduced light under suitable conditions. Shade also slows recovery, so a shaded patch under heavy traffic faces two pressures at once.
Audit the yard before ordering:
1. Check direct sun in the morning, middle of the day and afternoon. 2. Think about the lower winter sun, not only a bright summer day. 3. Mark shade from buildings, fences and evergreen trees. 4. Mark dog routes, gates, clotheslines and play areas. 5. Consider paving or planting where deep shade and traffic overlap.
A smaller healthy lawn will serve the family better than turf stretched into corners where it cannot succeed.
Sir Walter for children and pets
Sir Walter can make an inviting family lawn. Its broad soft leaf suits sitting, play and the ordinary movement of people and pets.
Match expectations to the site. A dog wandering across a bright 100-square-metre lawn is different from a dog charging through the same shaded two-metre strip twenty times a day. The second problem may need a path, drainage work or a layout change.
If the entire lawn is in strong sun and must recover rapidly from heavy use, Kikuyu may be the more practical choice. If the light is mixed and use is moderate, Sir Walter may be the better whole-yard answer.
Mowing and keeping the edges neat
Sir Walter still grows, spreads and needs routine mowing. It is generally easier to contain than Kikuyu, not maintenance-free.
Mow often enough that you are not removing a large portion of the leaf at once. Keep blades sharp. Avoid scalping uneven ground, and allow shaded sections enough leaf to capture useful light. Follow Demarco Sydney Turf’s approved care instructions for seasonal height and timing rather than copying a generic number from another lawn.
Soil and drainage still decide the result
Sir Walter cannot root into rubble, breathe in sealed compaction or stay healthy in standing water. Prepare the ground before the turf is dispatched, not after it reaches the property.
Remove waste and weeds, correct levels and drainage, relieve compaction where appropriate and prepare suitable underlay. Plan access and watering so the turf can be laid promptly.
Tree shade deserves extra care because tree roots also compete for water and nutrients. Do not damage major roots or alter levels around established trees without appropriate advice.
Better farming makes better lawns
Demarco grows turf with the next lawn in mind. We pay attention to turf as a living crop and to the ground supporting it on the farm.
For the homeowner, that story should lead to one useful outcome: better turf arriving ready for a well-prepared yard. It does not remove the need to choose carefully or care for the lawn. It gives that work a better beginning.
Sir Walter or Kikuyu?
Choose Sir Walter when the yard has mixed light, you like a broad soft leaf and you want easier containment. Choose Kikuyu when the lawn is strongly sunny, heavily used and needs the fastest warm-season repair.
The comparison page covers shade, dogs, mowing, runners, winter response and soil side by side.
Make the yard feel finished
Send us your postcode, measured area and photos showing the light across the day. We will help you decide whether Sir Walter fits the site.
Sir Walter FAQs
Is Sir Walter Buffalo good for shade?
Sir Walter is generally the better of Demarco Sydney Turf’s two grasses for mixed sun and shade. It still needs useful light. Deep building shade, dense canopy or permanent cover may be too dark for a lasting lawn.
Is Sir Walter soft underfoot?
Sir Walter is a soft-leaf buffalo with a broad, full lawn surface. Mowing, leaf condition and maintenance affect how any lawn feels, so keep mower blades sharp and follow the approved care guidance.
Is Sir Walter good for dogs and children?
It can be an excellent family lawn when it has enough light and recovery time. For intense wear in strong sun, Kikuyu may repair faster. Concentrated traffic can damage either grass.
Does Sir Walter spread into garden beds?
Sir Walter spreads by surface runners and still needs edging. It is generally easier to contain than Kikuyu, which also spreads through underground stems.
Is Sir Walter low maintenance?
It is better described as manageable than maintenance-free. It needs mowing, edging, watering and nutrition appropriate to the site and season.