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Applying Products Correctly
Proper applications of fertilizers and lawn care products are important to the health of your plants and quality of the environment. Applying too much of a synthetic fertilizer or pesticide to your lawn may cause foliar burns and injury or have negative environmental effects. While applying too much of a natural lawn care product is usually not injurious to your lawn, it can be economically infeasible. Applying too little fertilizers or lawn care products can result in a low quality lawn deficient in what it needs making your lawn more prone to pest problems.
The only way to know just how much fertilizer or lawn care product is being applied to your lawn is to calibrate your application equipment. Calibrating simply begins with knowing the total square footage of your lawn and making sure you apply the correct amount of material for that square footage according to the manufacturer's recommendation. Always read and follow the product label.
Calibrating spreaders: Homeowners have a wide variety of spreaders to work with - some drop type, some rotary type, some listed on the product label for recommended settings, and many that are not. Rotary type spreaders are the best option in the application of lawn care products. They make applications easier, because you do not need to worry about coming back precisely on your previous wheel marks. Rotary spreaders also require fewer passes to cover your lawn.
The best approach for homeowners does not necessarily involve the actual calibration of their spreader, but a more common sense approach to applying. lawn care products. First, you need to accurately measure the square footage of your lawn and then purchase the correct amount of lawn care product. Second, evenly distribute that material over the total square footage. For example, you measured your lawn to be 10,000 square feet. The lawn care product you purchase states that, the contents of this bag covers 5,000 square feet. Therefore, you require 2 bags of this product to cover 10,000 square feet. You may ask now, what is the best technique to evenly distribute this product. Even distribution is usually assured with multiple passes in multiple directions over your lawn. Therefore, place your spreader on a light setting and continue to make passes over your lawn, changing directions with each pass until all the required material has been applied. This may require three, four, five or more trips over your lawn, but you can be certain that the distribution of the material is very good. In time, as you become familiar with your spreader and the products you use, you can fine tune your spreader to reduce the number of trips required.
Most fertilizers and lawn care products have tables on their bags with suggested settings for various brands of spreaders. If you are fortunate enough to own a spreader specified in the table, use that setting. Keep in mind that those settings are usually for one pass over the lawn. These application tables also assume a three mph walking speed. To give uniform applications, consider cutting the setting by 1/3 to ½, making two to three applications to avoid skips. This might be a way to decrease the number of trips you have to make with the above method.
For those wishing to know specific calibration techniques of rotary spreaders, please refer to MU Guide Sheet WQ551 - Calibrating Home Garden Equipment at http://extension.missouri.edu/explore/envqual/wq0551.htm.
Proper Mowing is a Key to Healthy Lawns
Turfgrass plants improperly mowed are under greater stress. Greater stress means a lawn can be more susceptible to weeds, diseases and insects. Therefore, less stress from proper mowing practices equals fewer inputs ($) for a home owner or professional grounds manager.
Optimal cutting heights for coolseason grasses, such as blends of turf-type tall fescues, should range from 3.0 to 4.0 inches. Warmseason grasses, like zoysia, can range between 1.5 and 2.5 inches.
Seasonal variation in mowing height was once thought to be highly beneficial and is still considered beneficial by some. We know that mowing cool-season grasses a little taller in the summer months can have benefits through summer stress periods (deeper roots, better cooling effect). Taller grasses will also conserve moisture, giving some reduction in irrigation requirements. We also know that cool-season grasses mowed a little taller in the spring and fall compete more successfully against weeds (up to 80 percent control of annual weeds). Therefore, select the tallest acceptable mowing height for your species of grass and maintain that height during the entire season. This provides benefits throughout the season-competition against weeds as well as reduced summer stress.
Clippings should be uniformly distributed rather than deposited in clumps. Mowing the lawn when the grass is dry and using a properly sharpened mower blade will spread clippings evenly. If some areas produce excess clippings, simply mulch those in with a second pass of the mower.
Mowing creates wounds through which fungi can enter the plant and infect it. Leaf cuts made by a sharp mower blade are cleaner and heal faster than the tearing and shredding caused by a dull mower blade. A dull mower blade inflicts more and bigger wounds that increase potential for infection by turfgrass diseases. Having a sharp, spare mower blade allows you to switch blades when needed and prevents delays in mowing when getting your mower blade sharpened.
Observe leaf tips or grass clippings collected on your mower deck immediately after a mowing to determine the quality of cut. Use this as an indicator of when to sharpen mower blades.
During hot summer months it is best to mow later in the day to minimize additional stresses on your grass. It is also best to change directions of mowing each time you mow.
Frequency of cut should be determined by the "one-third rule" of mowing. You should make sure that no more than one-third of the leaf growth is removed during a single mowing. During the spring and fall, cool-season grasses can be mowed every 5 to 6 days.
Many homeowners believe grass clippings need to be removed to have a healthy, vigorous lawn. By following the steps in the "Don't Bag It" lawn care program, you can have a beautiful lawn without collecting your grass clippings ( MU Guide G6959-"Don't Bag It" Lawn Care: How to Recycle Your Grass Clippings, Leaves and Branches). Returning grass clippings can return as much as 35 percent nitrogen and 50 percent potassium. Grass clippings also contribute to the organic matter levels of your soil improving the water and nutrient holding capacity of the soil.
When is it okay to bag clippings? 1) When delayed in mowing due to rain; 2) When you wish to make compost (Refer to: MU Guide G6956 -Making and Using Compost and G6958-Grass Clippings, Compost and Mulch: Questions and Answers) and 3) When preparing for aeration and over-seeding in late summer to early fall. Avoid using grass clippings in compost when chemically treated.
A word of caution about weedeating: weed-eaters typically scalp turfgrasses when edging along sidewalks, curbs, and driveways. This promotes weeds! Best edging practices include a power edger or weedeater (rotated) with a vertical blade preventing any scalping of turfgrasses.
Fertilizer Schedules
Feed turfgrasses when they are actively growing (Synthetic Fertilizers -Table 1). Cool-season grasses should be fed primarily in the fall with some fertilizer applications made in spring. Many spring applications are in the form of fertilizer impregnated with preemergent herbicides for annual grassy weed control (crabgrass preventers-applied by April 15th). Warm-season grasses should be fed after initial green-up in the spring. They can be given nitrogen fertilizer during each month of active growth (May through August for nitrogen only; potassium applications in September).
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The latter method implies that fertilizer applications are made after the turf has lost most of its color during late fall or winter and is not actively growing. This differs notably from the late season concept, which requires that nitrogen be applied before the turf loses its green color in the fall. Late-season fertilization has become popular because of many agronomic and aesthetic advantages, which include: better fall and winter color, earlier spring greenup, increased shoot density, improved fall, winter and spring root growth, and enhanced storage of energy reserves (carbohydrates) within the plant.
It is important to remember that the nitrogen source used for fall application be a type that is not heavily dependent on microbial activity to cause the nitrogen to release. This means that fertilizers containing urea, sulfurcoated urea (SCU), IBDU, shorter-chain methylene ureas and ammonium sulfate are ideal N sources for the late-season applications. Although SCU and IBDU are referred to as controlled-release fertilizers, the rate at which nitrogen is released from these fertilizers mainly depends on soil moisture and not on the degree of microbial activity. The use of microbe-dependent nitrogen sources for late-season applications may not elicit the desired fall/winter color response because they do not provide enough available nitrogen for plant uptake when temperatures are low. However, these slow-release nitrogen sources would be ideal for spring and summer use. Examples of these would be natural organic nitrogen sources and fertilizers consisting mostly of longer-chain methylene-ureas (low in cold-water soluble nitrogen). Research has shown at several universities that natural organic fertilizers, such as Bradfield, Milorganite, Sustane, Ringer, Nature's and Organica, perform well in home lawn fertilization programs (See Table 2 and 3 for organic fertilizer schedules). A product like Organica a corn gluten-based fertilizer, can also provide some preemergent activity for annual grass and broadleaf weed control.
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The first of the three numbers on a fertilizer bag is the percent of nitrogen (by weight), the second is percent of P2O5 (not actual P) and the third number is percent of K2O (not actual K).
Percent nitrogen refers to the concentration of nitrogen in the fertilizer source. Natural organic sources are typically low in nitrogen concentration, while synthetic nitrogen sources are higher. Knowledge of this number allows one to calculate how much fertilizer to apply based on specific rates of nitrogen being applied per 1,000 square feet. If you want to apply one pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of lawn area, you must apply Ringers organic fertilizer (nine percent N) at a rate of 11 pounds of fertilizer per 1,000 square feet. Knowing this simple calculation allows you to apply the proper amount of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet regardless of the type of fertilizer or nitrogen type.
Table 2. Application Schedule for Organic Fertilizers Cool-season Grasses
(Rates are expressed in pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet)
| Cool-season Grass No Fall Seeding | Early April Corn Gluten* Product 0.8 – 1.2 | Late June Corn Gluten or other Organic Product 0.4 – 0.8 | Mid September Corn Gluten or other Organic Product 0.8 |
| Cool-season Grass Fall Seeding | Corn Gluten Product 0.8 – 1.2 | Corn Gluten or other Organic Product 0.4 – 0.8 | Do not use Corn Gluten, use another Organic 0.3 – 0.8 |
Table 3. Application Schedule for Organic Fertilizers Warm-season
Grasses (Rates are expressed in pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet)
| Warm-season Grass | Mid April Corn Gluten* Product 0.8 – 1.2 | Late June Corn Gluten or other Organic Product 0.4 – 0.8 | Mid August Corn Gluten or other Organic Product 0.8 |
Proper Watering Methods
Nearly all diseases require water for their development. Some disease problems such as pythium blight, brown patch and dollar spot are accentuated by extended periods of free moisture. Extended periods of free moisture in turfgrasses can be caused by dew, guttation fluids and frequent irrigation or rainfall. Guttation is the formation of water droplets at the tips of grass leaves that contain exudates of sugars and proteins. These exudates serve as an excellent food source for diseases. Remove dew and guttation fluids from grass leaves by dragging a hose across the surface, using a whipping pole, or briefly irrigating only long enough to wash the dew from the surface. Following these methods will spread the concentrated dew or guttation over a larger surface area causing the turf canopy to dry faster.
Improper irrigation alone may create a disease problem that could have been prevented. Avoid frequent irrigation that results in extended periods of free moisture. Avoid late evening watering that extends the free moisture period throughout the night. Cool-season grasses can be allowed to have drying periods (near wilting) to disrupt the growth cycle of fungi favoring free moisture.
Irrigation in the early morning not only limits extended periods of dew and guttation, but irrigation is also being applied at a time of the day when temperatures are low (reduced evaporation) and winds are calm (better distribution of water). A general rule of thumb is to avoid puddles and runoff during irrigation, put the water where it is needed, and irrigate only what your particular soil type can absorb in one cycle. Lawns need one to 1½ inches of water a week either from rain or irrigation.
Benefits and Timing of Aeration.
Aeration is a practice of pulling soil plugs to open the soil surface for better air, water and nutrient movement. It is a practice that also helps to reduce compaction and thatch by spreading soil plugs on the surface. Soil plugs are crumbled and fall freely into aeration holes as well as spreading some soil into the thatch layer where soil microbes can feed on thatch debris. Aeration is a practice that can be done in both spring and fall.
Aeration is the very best way to begin a fall fertilization program. Applications of fertilizer after aeration will move nutrients immediately into the root-zone of your lawn. This practice has shown excellent results in the density and color of cool-season turfgrasses on their way to recovery from summer stresses.
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Aeration equipment can be found at local rental stores or garden centers as well. A machine that pulls a ½" diameter plug three to four inches deep on four inch centers will do an excellent job. Machines that force hollow tines into the soil are better than pull-type drums with tines. Not all machines will meet these specifications; however, any amount of aeration is better than no aeration to kick-off fall fertilization and over-seeding.
Why We Over-seed
A thick lawn mowed tall (3½ to 4 inches) is your best natural weed control. Over-seeding of cool-season grasses should occur in September to maintain the density required for competition against weeds. Lawns showing some thinning from summer stress can be over-seeded with half the amount of seed used in a normal establishment or renovation. Normal seeding rates for turf-type tall fescue blends range from seven to nine pounds/1,000 square feet. Mixtures of tall fescue with Kentucky bluegrass in a 95/5 ratio should be seeded at the same rate for a normal seeding. Therefore, over-seeding rates for these grasses should range between 3.5 to 4.5 pounds/1,000 square feet. As with fertilizers and other lawn products, we recommend applying seed at a half rate in two directions to provide better distribution of the seed.
Keep in mind that it is always important to have good seed/soil contact for better seed germination. Covering seed with light amounts (¼") of good quality compost is another means to help germination and improve the soil. When seeding small bare areas avoid using straw since straw contains some weed seed. Some good commercial mulch, such as PennMulch or Straw Net, can be used and do not contain any weed seed. Keep soil moist for several weeks until seed germinates. Frequent, light waterings may be needed to keep soil surface from drying out and affecting seed germination.
Begin mowing just as soon as grass reaches desired height to promote tillering and improve density. Mowing grass frequently in the fall will also mulch down fallen leaves.
Pests Control
Managing Common Turfgrass Pest:
Weeds, Disease, Insects and Moles
Whatever pest problem you are having, there are five basic steps to effective pest management:
Weeds.
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Diseases
Selecting disease resistant varieties of turfgrass species is the
foremost best step to reduce potential disease problems. Using good
turfgrass management practices that lead to a healthy plant is the
second. Managing plant growth and carefully selecting the appropriate
varieties for your conditions come next. Knowing some information
about what diseases favor --especially any that have historically been
at that site-- can give the homeowner a heads-up on prevention of
turfgrass diseases. A couple of examples include: dollar spot is a
disease that favors lower fertility, primarily infects bluegrass and
ryegrass, and likes 80-degree days with moderate humidity and
nighttime temperatures in the 60s that produce heavy morning dews.
Brown patch favors high nitrogen in turfgrasses, primarily infects
fescues, ryegrass and bentgrass, and likes 90-degree days with high
humidity and nighttime temperatures above 70 degrees. This information
would help you decide how to change management/cultural practices to
favor your lawn and not the disease.
Insects
While insects are one of the most populous forms of animal life on
earth, only a small number of insects may, at some time in their life
cycle, become a potential threat to turfgrass. Turfgrass insects can
be somewhat cyclical and population levels depend on a number of
factors, including weather, suitable food sources, desirable habitat
and predators. Turfgrass damage is usually not observed until the
numbers of an insect species reach a threshold level. Insects may
always be present, but not always at damaging levels. For example, a
homeowner would not need to treat if only one or two white grubs are
found while doing yard work. However, if the homeowner peels back dead
sod and finds more than five annual white grubs per square foot, then
treatment is called for. Turfgrass pests cannot be controlled over
long periods of time solely through the use of pesticides. To have a
healthy and vigorous turfgrass, it is necessary to use pesticides in
combination with sound cultural practices.
A healthy, growing plant is the best defense against turfgrass pests. Many plants become more susceptible to pests if they are stressed. Following good turf management practices with mowing, proper watering, fertility, aeration, thatch control and overall sanitation (leaf litter, mulches and other debris) produces good, healthy, dense turf that is pest-resistant.
Brad Fresenburg
University of Missouri Extension
Turfgrass
FresenburgB@missouri.edu