Step outside
and take a good look at your lawn. Do
you see bare spots or patches of undesirable looking grasses and weeds? Maybe your kids’ activities, your dog’s
constant pacing in the same path day after day, or your parking the car on the
front lawn has caused the lawn to thin out due to wear and compaction. Its true that the 19 straight days of
temperatures exceeding 100 degrees certainly did not help our cool-season lawns
either. The lawns are beat and just
looking for some tender care.
Cooler
temperatures are just around the corner.
What is left of the lawn will perk up and appreciate the cool nights and
shorter, milder days. Crabgrass will
stop germinating by mid to late September.
Thirty days from now life will be great!
What needs
to be done in the next 30 days to have a better lawn for next year? Get ready because this is where you come in. Check for unwanted
grasses. Patches of Bermuda or
dallisgrass are hard to kill and should be sprayed 2-3 times in the starting
early September. Dense sections of
crabgrass or bentgrass are fairly easy to kill and could wait until the middle
of September to spray. If you think the
lawn looks bad now just wait to see what it looks like in a few weeks!
Here’s the
good news. Oct 1-10 is a great time to reseed all those problem areas. I would strongly recommend scalping down the
areas to be reseeded prior to seeding followed by a fall lawn aeration to
loosen the soil and encourage better root development. Areas could then be raked or dethatched
mechanically to make a proper seed bed.
Select a quality grass to match your existing lawn and follow suggested
seeding directions. Generally tall
fescue and ryegrass go done around 7-10 lbs/1000 sq ft. Next apply a ¼ inch of clean humus or compost
to cover the seed to keep in the warmth and moisture to insure good
germination. Apply a starter fertilizer
like 10-20-10 at 10 lbs/1000. Water 2-3
times a day lightly to keep the mulch and seed moist for the first 7-14 days.
Here is what NOT to do. 1) Nothing. Your lawn will
be no better next year and likely worse. 2). Sprinkle some seed over the bare
spots and hope for the best. This is not
much better than option 1. 3). Buy the cheapest seed you can find like annual
ryegrass. This will result in the
ugliest lawn on your block. It never
really greens up, it grows very fast and often clumpy, it does not match any
grasses in your lawn, and often gets riddled with disease in the winter months.
The window of opportunity is here. Now get outside and take the actions for a better lawn in 2013!
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