|
Gardening Tips & Info
Ideas and advice for your garden. |
Creative designs tailored to your individual needs and unique site conditions. |
What type of lawn care tips work best for you
depends on the time and money you decide to put into your lawn. If
your lawn is your hobby, you can spend thousands of dollars and
hundreds of hours of time on it. On the other side of the fence, if
what you want is a low-maintenance green expanse that you can enjoy
with family and friends, you’ve come to the right page!
The best lawn care tip you can get is to start with a solid plan.
1.Do you need to plant grass? Do some research on the best seed for
your area, where to buy it cheap, and when it’s available. Depending
on where you live, you’ll plant either cool season or warm season
grass.
Cool season grass, planted in northern areas, is usually best
planted in early fall, but if you missed planting then, plant it in
the spring when soil temperatures reach 50 F.
Warm season grass needs soil temps of 70F to thrive and is the
choice for southern plantings. Don’t make the mistake of thinking
you can plant warm season grass in the upper Midwest. Warm season
grasses are bred to thrive in southern climates and are not winter
hardy in the north.
2.Of course, you’ll keep new grass plantings moist, but once grass
reaches a height of three inches, water it deeply once a week. A
healthy lawn needs about an inch of water a week. When watering,
remember to consider recent rainfalls. Shallow watering techniques
keep grass from sinking the deep roots that your lawn needs to
compete with deep-rooted weeds.
3.Do you already have a lawn? Aerate it in the spring while it’s
still moist and before the spring rains are done. Aerating your lawn
in the springtime gives microbes and other small life forms a breath
of fresh air after winter. Aeration also makes new paths for
drainage and keeps your lawn from becoming saturated.
4.A lot is written about lawn fertilizer and the big question is
why? Grass is the most efficient user of nitrogen on earth! Feed
your soil with nutrient rich compost and let your lawn get its
nutrients the natural way. The more chemicals you use, the more you
disturb the natural biological processes that convert organic matter
into nutrients and the microbes and other small organisms that take
natural care of your lawn.
5.Mow your grass high. A 2 ½ to 3-inch high cut makes your lawn look
fuller, feel softer, and helps keep it healthy. Taller grass shades
pesky weed seeds and keeps them from getting established. In
addition, a taller lawn is better able to absorb sunshine and better
able to retain moisture, the two main contributors to a healthy
lawn.
6.Enjoy your lawn. After all, isn’t that your main reason for having
a yard?
by Hans Dekker
More Gardening Tips, Ideas & Advice
About Us ● Design ● Installation ● Watergardens & Koi Ponds ● Maintenance ● Project Photos ● Maintenance ● Gardening Tips ● News & Info ● Kind Words from Clients ● Site Map ● Contact Us ● Home