Lawn Care Tips
by Michael J. McGroarty
You are welcome to use this article on your website or in
your newsletter as long as you reprint it as is, including the
contact information at the end. You must include an active
link back to the author's website, as well as an active link
back to http://gardening-articles.com
A beautiful lawn does not come without some effort. Depending
upon what type of soil you have, the amount of effort will vary.
For instance when raising trees and shrubs, sandy or a gravel
base soil is great. Landscape plants like well drained soiled. A
lawn on the other hand is different. Lawn grasses grow
constantly throughout the growing season, and need an ample
supply of both nutrients and water.
The most basic of lawn care tips includes regular watering
and fertilization is required to keep a lawn beautiful. If
you’re lucky enough to have a lawn that was originally planted
in good rich topsoil, you won’t have to work near as hard as
somebody like me, who has a lawn that is planted in sandy
gravel. The soil at our house has little nutritional value, nor
does it have the ability to retain any amount of moisture. By
mid May my lawn starts drying out. It is very difficult for us
to keep our lawn looking nice.
Lawns are one area where a little clay in the soil is a good
thing. Of course standing water is not good, but having soil
that has the ability to retain some moisture is helpful. If you
happen to be installing a new lawn, here's a news flash from my
lawn care tips that will make all the difference in the world:
Add lots of organic matter before you install your new lawn if
you have sand or gravel type soil. The easiest way to do
this is to find some good rich topsoil and spread that over your
existing soil.
Because most lawn grasses grow so vigorously, they need
additional amounts of nutrients added in order to stay looking
nice. Just use one of the four step programs offered by the
fertilizer companies. Most of these programs also include weed
control along with the fertilizer. Here in the north we
basically have two concerns with weeds in our lawns.
Crabgrass can be a problem, and I do consider it a weed. In
order to control crabgrass you must use a pre-emergent herbicide
that will prevent the crabgrass seeds from germinating. In order
for this herbicide to be effective you must apply it early in
the spring while the soil temperature is still below 45° F.
Lawn care tips continued . . .
Broadleaf weeds such as Dandelions are another problem,
although fairly easy to control with a broadleaf weed control.
Most broadleaf herbicides are mixed in with the fertilizers, and
must be applied when the grass and weeds are damp. The wet
foliage will cause the herbicide to stick to the weed, giving
the herbicide time to be absorbed by the weed. Once absorbed the
herbicide translocates through the weed plant and kills it
completely.
These types of herbicides are considered “selective”
since they seem to know the difference between a grass plant and
a weed. That’s why they only kill the broadleaf weeds and not
the grass itself. However, many people have different kinds of
thick bladed grass in their lawn such as quack grass.
Quack grass is on the ugly side, and can really detract from a
lawn. The problem is, it is still in the grass family, and
“selective” herbicides leave it alone because it is a card
carry member of the grass family.
So what’s a person to do?
In order to get rid of these thick bladed grasses you must
use a “non-selective” herbicide, and “non-selective”
herbicides don’t care who they kill. Well, at least that’s
true in the plant kingdom. When you use a “non-selective”
herbicide you must understand that everything that you spray is
going to die, but it really is the only effective way to rid
your lawn of undesirable thick bladed grasses. This type of
treatment is effective if you have isolated areas that contain
wide bladed grasses. You’ll have to spray all the grass in the
area, then reseed with good quality grass seed.
My herbicide of choice for this type of spraying is RoundUp®.
It is believed that RoundUp® does not have any residual effect,
which means that it does not linger in the soil. That means that
the new grass seed or the young grass plants will not be
affected by the herbicide. Being a non-selective herbicide you
must be careful when spraying, making sure that the spray does
not drift onto other plants or lawn areas that you do not want
to kill.
To keep the spray from drifting adjust the nozzle so that the
spray pattern is narrow with larger spray droplets. You do not
want a fine atomized spray if there is danger of spray drift. It
also helps to keep the pressure in the sprayer as low as
possible. Pump the sprayer a minimum number of times, to keep
the pressure low. You just want enough pressure to deliver the
spray, but not atomize it to the point that it can be easily
carried by the wind.
Buy a sprayer just for herbicides and mark it as such. You
never want to spray plants with a sprayer that has been used for
herbicides.
Once you have sprayed the area you want to kill, wait three
days before doing anything else. After a period of three days
the grasses that you sprayed may not look any different, but if
they have been properly sprayed, they will die. It takes three
days for the herbicide to translocate throughout the entire
plant, then the plants will die. So even though the weeds and
grass plants look fine, you can start digging and chopping and
not worry about them growing back. If you start digging and
chopping before the three day period you will interrupt the
herbicide, and the weeds and grass you were trying to kill may
come back.
Lawn care tips continued . . .
If you happen to be installing a new lawn, make sure you
spray all the weeds and thick bladed grasses before you start.
Once you have the lawn installed, you sure don’t want to go
through all the trouble of killing areas of your lawn and
reseeding. If you make sure that all of these undesirables have
been killed before you start, you’ll be way ahead of the game.
When selecting grass seed, you should always use a blend that
is recommend for your area. Here in the north a popular blend
contains fine bladed perennial rye grass, fescue, and blue
grass. Keep in mind that it takes blue grass seeds 28 days to
germinate, while most perennial rye grasses germinate in 5 or 6
days, so you never want to plant a lawn that is 100% Kentucky
blue grass. Before the blue grass seeds have a chance to
germinate, every kind of weed imaginable will already be
actively growing in your lawn.
With a blend, the faster germinating grasses come up quick,
and act as a nurse crop for the slower germinating seeds. Having
a blend also gives you some protection in case some new pest
comes along that attacks certain types of grasses.
Lawn care tips continued . . .
People often ask if they have to have their lawn hydro-seeded
in order for it to be nice. The answer is no. Hydro-seed is not
some kind of magic formula. It is nothing more than a fancy way
to apply grass seed. A hyrdo-seeder is just a machine that mixes
water, grass seed, fertilizer and mulch into a slurry that is
sprayed onto your lawn. The ingredients are exactly the same
that you would use if you seed by hand, with the exception of
the mulch.
And contrary to popular belief, hydro mulch is no better than
good old fashioned straw. In my opinion straw is a much, much
better mulch. The primary advantage to hydro-seed is that the
grass seed is thoroughly soaked before it is applied, which
assures germination. That’s a huge advantage if your seeding
along a freeway where it is not practical to wet the seed after
it has been applied. At your house, it really doesn’t mean
much. Hand seeding works just fine.
With either method, you still have to water just as much once
the seeding is done. Many people are lead to believe that
hydro-seed doesn’t have to be watered as much as hand seed.
This is a huge misconception. If you fail to water hydro-seed
once it is applied, it will still germinate and little tiny
grass plants will appear. But just a few hours without water on
a hot day, and those little tiny grass plants will wither and
die. This is a big problem because once the seed has germinated,
it is spent. All the water in the world will not make that spent
seed produce another grass plant.
Hydro seed has its benefits, but for the residential lawn
it’s not all that important. Why do I claim that straw is a
better mulch than hydro-mulch? Think about how the hydro-mulch
is applied. It is mixed with the seed, fertilizer and water as a
slurry, and sprayed on the lawn. The mulch has not been applied
over top of the seed which is how mulch is supposed to be
applied, it is all mixed together. Some of the seeds are under
the mulch, and some of the seeds are on top of the mulch. Mulch
can’t do much good when the seeds are resting up on top of it.
They might as well be sun bathing!
Now think about the process of hand seeding. The seed is
spread on the soil, then you should take a push broom and drag
it backwards over top of the seeded area. This applies a very
thin layer of soil over most of the seeds. Then you spread the
straw over top of the soil. The pieces of straw are scattered in
all directions, with many of them crisscrossing each other.
Remember the movie, “Honey I shrunk the Kids”? The part
where they are walking through the lawn and the blades of grass
are huge compared to them? This is what it’s like to be
a grass seed under a mulch of straw. Those little tiny grass
seeds are lost under the straw, and that's exactly what you want
to protect them from the intense rays of the sun.
As the sun works its way across the sky the grass
seeds actually receive filtered sunlight. Enough sun to warm the
seeds so they grow, but also enough shade to protect the tender
young grass plants. As the grass plants grow, they also raise
the mulch with them to a degree, providing additional shade for
the seeds that haven’t germinated yet. The shade that straw
mulch provides also helps to retain the moisture around the
seeds. Grass seeds will never get this kind of protection
from hydro mulch.
Another trait of hydro-seed is that as the slurry dries, it
becomes a blanket over the lawn. In the event of a heavy
rainfall, running water tends to get under this blanket and
carry it away, leaving big areas with no seed at all. They
make a glue that you can actually add to the hydro seed mix, but
my experience has shown that the glue will hold the hydro seed
in place a little longer, but when it does wash out much larger
areas wash because they are glued together.
With hand seeding, each seed is independent, and they fall
between the nicks and crannies of the soil. In the event of
heavy rain, the running water must be severe enough to wash the
soil away before the seeds can be moved. I’ve installed
hundreds of lawns using both techniques, for the difference in
cost I’ll take the hand seeded lawn any day.
Michael J. McGroarty is the author of this article. Visit his
most interesting website, http://www.freeplants.com
and sign up for his excellent gardening newsletter.
Article provided by, http://gardening-articles.com.
If you use this article the above two links must be active. |