Tips For Year Round Lawn Care
Lee Dobbins
Looking after a lawn is a year round job for some. If you get a brief
break because there is snow on the ground, then there maybe some things
you might want to research before Spring.
Spring isn't the only nor always the best time to do prep work. If you
need to re-seed patches where the lawn looks bare, just before the snow
comes is a good time of the year to start. The seeds will get worked
into the soil as the snow falls and lay dormant during the winter
months.
Once spring and the first melt arrive then the seeds will be in good
mud and the early stages of germination will begin. Once they start
getting the sun then good, fresh grass should follow in a couple of
weeks.
Crabgrass and its relatives don't thrive in the Fall or Winter and this
means that you have a head start on that kind of weed control. As the
new lawn grass starts to spread, it has a good chance of stopping the
crabgrass, and with any luck it won't develop at all.
Start applying the Spring fertilizer at the earliest possible time.
This will help give the young shoots a good start and, if you use
fertilizer that also controls weeds, you may solve two problems in one
go.
As that snow continues to melt off there will be areas where the grass
has become thatched - this is a condition in which the blades get lain
over one another, then compressed from the snow pack on top. Some of
these may die over the winter and this can leave you with a kind of
straw-like covering, hence the name 'thatch'.
Doing something about this is easy. Just cut the grass a little later
in Fall than you need to so that the length is controlled. This
restricts the height and helps keep thatching to a minimum.
In Spring give the grass a good raking. Of course, if you raked in the
Fall, there won't be any leaves to get rid of but the extra raking
helps pull up thatched areas and allows air to get to the soil.
If the ground has become hard, or the soil is easily compacted, you can
follow that up with an aeration. This can be done either by using a
special attachment on a riding lawnmower and running it over the grass,
or using special large-drum rollers with spikes poking out.
An inexpensive way is to use special shoes which are like golf shoes
with spikes on the bottom. You just put them on then walk around the
area you want to aerate. The tiny holes made by the shoes allow air to
penetrate the soil more easily. At the same time, it makes channels for
solid fertilizer pellets to fall into.
After de-thatching and aerating, your lawn will be ready for you to
carry out any weed control and to start seeding, fertilizer application
and regular mowing.
Lawn care may not be easy but it is worthwhile.
Lee Dobbins writes for
http://www.backyard-garden-and-patio.com where
you can learn more about gardening and lawn care.
See Also:
Index of Lawn Care
Index of Gardens & Gardening
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