By Allyn Paul, filed under Lawn Tips.

The concept of a lawn treatment or grass treatmentis a confusing one to many of you folks. I know that clever lawn care marketers want you to think so, but treating your lawn is not as simple as buying a bag of fertilizer and throwing it down a few times per year. There is a specific lawns treatment for just about any lawn problem, but few yards require all of them be used every single year. As many of you know, I am not a fan of the throw the kitchen sink at it approach. I prefer a balanced approach that incorporates timed lawn treatment based on the needs of the turf that particular season. In other words, what works during a rainy year, will not work during a dry one. In addition, we do need to keep an eye out for the environmental impact we as homeowners have when we use lawn products. Ok, enough rambling; lets explore some of the basic lawn treatment practices I recommend.

I know you know this already, but nutrients are the basis for any lawn treatment program. Proper fertilization will promote a thicker lawn; and a thick lawn resists ALL other problems, naturally! The key is to feed your lawn only what it needs to keep it healthy without causing it to overgrow. We use nitrogen to keep the lawn green, potassium to strengthen the roots, and iron to give it the dark blue shades that it apart from the neighbors. (it is all about beating your neighbor right? ) I recommend Milorganite as your base organic lawn treatment. It is slow release nitrogen and iron combined in a nice, organic package. I also recommend a spring and later fall application of 20-20-10 granular fertilizer to promote strong roots.

Here are a few more helpful articles for you: What do the numbers on the bag of fertilizer mean? Milorganite organic lawn care fertilizer information Iron applications for lawns How to apply lawn fertilizer

The word, herbicide is NOT a bad word! I know that there are environmental extremists out there who want to outlaw the use of herbicides and pesticides, but they are just plain ignorant. (BTW-for you Canadian readers, it is against your laws to apply any pesticide products to your home lawn! Sorry guys) The big problem with herbicides is their misuse by homeowners and uneducated professionals. If used properly, herbicides can actually reduce the need for other lawn chemical applications. Think about this: if you dont spray your weeds, and they spread to your neighbors yard; then he may be forced to spray more pesticides year-after-year as your weeds invade his space. You follow that? (stepping off my soap box) I always recommend you use a pump sprayer (mix concentrate with water) and spot spray weeds in your lawn. Mix the herbicide according to label directions and spray carefully and target your application only where the weeds are and no where else! In my lawn, I get a few weeds per year and I just pull them by hand, but when I first started out, I never used more than one gallon of weed control over the entire year because I was very careful to only use what I needed and no more. I never use weed-n-feed products; ever!

Here are some helpful articles for you: Weed N Feed bags are the real environmental problem. Pesticides information

For this one, I need to break things into a list. I look at insects like this: (1) Lawn Damaging Insects Surface feeding damaging insects (Cinch Bugs, Billbugs and Sod Webworm) Sub-surface (below ground) damaging insects (Grub Worms)

(2) Nuisance Insects (ants, fleas, spiders, ticks)

I promise you that 90% of insect problems in a healthy lawn need absolutely no treatment at all. In fact, grub worms really only damage lawns that are unhealthy to begin with. Put it this way (and I am bragging a bit here): my lawn pictured in the sidebar gets grubs in it every year. I know this because I find them. But I dont lose sleep over it because my lawn is so healthy that it just grows out as fast as the little buggers can eat! Once again, a thick lawn will resist pretty much anything thrown at it! Now most of you are still working on getting your lawn healthy, so for your sake, I would recommend a once-per-year treatment for grubs. Put this application down in the later spring BEFORE grubs become a problem. The best grub treatments contain the product Merit. As far as above ground insects (both nuisance and damaging types), you can use a general lawn insecticide (granular preferred) in April that will take care of them all year. I do apply this lawn treatment each year so I can enjoy summer picnics without the hassles of ants and the like.

Here are some more helpful articles: Grub worms in your lawn Sod Webworms

Read more:
Lawn Treatment Information for DIYers | Life and Lawns

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November 8, 2013 at 1:05 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Lawn Treatment