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Rx for a Healthy Lawn Linda Blue Agricultural Extension Agent Buncombe County
77

Home lawn care

Jan 17, 2017

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Page 1: Home lawn care

Rx for a Healthy Lawn

Linda BlueAgricultural Extension

AgentBuncombe County

Page 2: Home lawn care

Look familiar?

Page 3: Home lawn care

Healthy Lawn

Benefits of a healthy lawn:

• Aesthetics• Erosion control• Air quality

Page 4: Home lawn care

Maintain a healthy lawn

Lack of adequate groundcover :

● Erosion● Sedimentation● Pesticide and

fertilizer runoff

Page 5: Home lawn care

6 Steps to a Healthy Lawn• Select the right grass• Soil test • Plant correctly• Fertilize correctly• Mow correctly• Water correctly

Page 6: Home lawn care

Warm season vs/ cool season

Page 7: Home lawn care

Select Good Varieties• Cool season varieties

– Tall fescue– Kentucky bluegrass– Fine fescues

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Variety testing

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Plant a healthy lawn• Select

varieties best suited to your area

• Read the label• Plant at right

time of year• Correct

seeding rate

Page 10: Home lawn care

Read the label

Page 11: Home lawn care

Read the label

Page 12: Home lawn care

Read the label

48.3% Creeping Red Fescue 26.2% Annual Ryegrass

25.5% Kentucky Bluegrass

2 lb. bag (covers approximately 1,000 square feet)  

$19.90

CANADA GREEN GRASS SEED Mixture

Page 13: Home lawn care

Comparison:• Canada Green

– $19.90 / 1,000 sq. ft.

• Rebels Hybrid Blend– $10 / 1,000 sq. ft.

• Kentucky 31– $8.50 / 1,000 sq. ft.

Page 14: Home lawn care

Grass needs at least 50% sun

Page 15: Home lawn care

Tree roots

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Shade tolerant ground covers

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Shade garden

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Plant Correctly• September is best• Late February / early March • Tall fescue: 5 - 6 lb / 1,000

sq. ft.• Fescue + bluegrass:

– 5 lb. Fescue– 1 lb. Bluegrass

Page 19: Home lawn care

Can this lawn be salvaged?

Page 20: Home lawn care

To this?

Page 21: Home lawn care

Yes !

Before After

Page 22: Home lawn care

Soil preparation

Don’t guess:

Soil test

Page 23: Home lawn care

Correct soil pH according to plant needs

Healthy roots: healthy plants

drought tolerance

Page 24: Home lawn care

“Starter Fertilizer”

Adequate phosphate for good root growth

Super phosphate

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Incorporate amendments

Page 26: Home lawn care

Renovate existing lawn

• Kill with non-selective herbicide• Scalp and rake

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Core aerate and over-seed

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Spread seed

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Straw

50 % cover

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Water • Water daily if

needed• Keep moist

until emerged

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6 weeks

Do not remove straw

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Sod requires the same soil preparation.

Page 33: Home lawn care

Page 10; Delete:Water sod on a regular

basis and fertilize with a starter-type fertilizer to promote rooting. Use ½ to 1 pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet every three weeks for the fastest growth.

Page 34: Home lawn care

Maintain a healthy lawn

Healthy lawn:

• 15 times less runoff

• Filters runoff

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Maintain a healthy lawn•Fertilize •Mow •Water •Pest control

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Fertilize Correctly

• Slow release nitrogen• Apply at right time• Use correct amount

Page 37: Home lawn care

Fertilize correctly

• Less runoff or leaching

• Better plant health

• Fertilize at right time

Use slow release fertilizer

Page 38: Home lawn care

Turf Fertilization 

Turf 

DTotal lb. N/ 1,000 sq ft/yr

Bermuda         1 1 1 1 ½       4.5

St. Augustine         ½ ½ 1 ½         2.5

Zoysiagrass       ½   ½   ½         1.5

Fescue   ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

Bluegrass   ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

Fescue/bluegrass

  ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

Page 39: Home lawn care

Turf growth responseCool Season Grass Soil Temperature Warm Season

Grass

Roots stop growing 33°FShoots stop growing 40°F Roots stop growing

50°F Dormancy beginsOptimum root growth

50 – 65°F

Optimum shoot growth

60 – 75°F

Roots stop growing 75 – 85°F Optimum root growth

Shoots stop growing 80 – 95°F Optimum shoot growth

110°F Roots stop growing120°F Shoots stop growing

Page 40: Home lawn care

Turf Fertilization 

Turf 

DTotal lb. N/ 1,000 sq ft/yr

Bermuda         1 1 1 1 ½       4.5

St. Augustine         ½ ½ 1 ½         2.5

Zoysiagrass       ½   ½   ½         1.5

Fescue   ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

Bluegrass   ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

Fescue/bluegrass

  ½ -1             1   1   2.5 - 3

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Sweep up spills

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Mow Correctly• Right height• Frequently• Only when dry• Mulch clippings

Page 43: Home lawn care
Page 44: Home lawn care

You’re not mowing a golf course

Page 45: Home lawn care

What is correct mowing height ?

Page 46: Home lawn care

What is correct mowing height ?

Fescue 3”Bluegrass 2 ½ - 3”

Page 47: Home lawn care

Mow correctly

Mowing too short:

• Thinning turf• Erosion• Weeds

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Mow cool season grass taller for larger root system

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Correct mowing height

Page 50: Home lawn care

Correct mowing height

Page 51: Home lawn care

Correct mowing height

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Mowing height = best weed control

2 ½”2”1 ½”

1”

½”

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Recycle grass clippingsDo not remove more then 1/3 at a time

Use a mulching mower

Page 54: Home lawn care

Reasons to leave clippings on the lawn

• Less work• No longer

accepted in NC landfills

• Acts as mulch:– Moisture retention– Weed suppression

Nutrient recycling

100 lb dry clippings:

4 lb. N½ lb. P3 lb. K

Page 55: Home lawn care

Do not mow when wet

Brown Patch

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Sweep clippings off pavement

• High nitrogen content

• Nitrogen pollutes rivers and streams

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Water Correctly• Seldom but deeply• Allow established lawn to go

dormant• Morning is best

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Allow turf to go dormant

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Water wisely• Growing lawns

1 inch once a week

• Dormant lawns1 inch every 3

weeks

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Water deeply

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Why the path?

Page 62: Home lawn care

Why the path?

Soil compaction

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Core aerate• Increase water

absorption

• Improve fertilizer uptake

• Improve root growth• Improve drought

tolerance

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Thatch

Do you need to de-thatch?

Page 65: Home lawn care

Thatch

No Fescue does not

build thatchBluegrass only when

over-fertilized

Page 66: Home lawn care

Ah! Fall!

Page 67: Home lawn care

Do not let leaves accumulate

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Lawn Problems

• Weeds• Diseases• Insects• Moles

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An ounce of prevention: good cultural practices

Brown Patch

Weeds

Page 70: Home lawn care

Weeds • Prevention

• Pre-emergent herbicides

• Post-emergent herbicides– Selective– Non-selective

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Prevent brown patch• Correct N

applications• Correct mowing• Correct watering• Correct pH

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White grubs

Page 73: Home lawn care

Japanese Beetlelife cycle

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Mole traps

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What’s wrong ?

Page 76: Home lawn care

What’s wrong ?

Annual rye

Page 77: Home lawn care

The End