So, I'm in charge of fertilizer for several lawns in my family. One of them is a low-input, non-irrigated lawn--predominantly fine fescue (with some Tall Fescue, KBG, PR, and clover in some areas, too).
Most of this lawn is roughly 50+ years old. It was lightly fertilized Last year, (~1 lb/K of N from Milo and synthetic sources split up between Fall and Spring). It did pretty well like that.
The year or two before, I believe was similar. Before that, it went maybe 10 or 15 years with no N (other than that which occurs naturally). Before that, I believe it was fertilized sporadically.
This year, we are going attack weeds, so a little extra N might not be a bad idea. I'm considering 0.85 lb/K of N this Spring, split into two apps, because I got a better price on a pre-M that includes N this year versus the 0-0-7.
Does anyone think this is too much N, considering the factors posted above? FF is supposed to be provided with 1-2 lbs/K of N per year.
If we go this route, we're going to have to counterbalance the Spring apps with another 0.85 lb/K of N in the Fall, bringing the total N to 1.7 lbs/K for the year, which is near the upper recommended limit. I also don't want to have to go nuts with the mowing this Spring (once per week at most), or reduce the drought tolerance (since it's non-irrigated).
Just wanted to run these ideas past some of the other perfectionists on this board before I commit to the experiment.
I'm also going to make a follow-up post in this thread detailing the types of Nitrogen, shortly.
Most of this lawn is roughly 50+ years old. It was lightly fertilized Last year, (~1 lb/K of N from Milo and synthetic sources split up between Fall and Spring). It did pretty well like that.
The year or two before, I believe was similar. Before that, it went maybe 10 or 15 years with no N (other than that which occurs naturally). Before that, I believe it was fertilized sporadically.
This year, we are going attack weeds, so a little extra N might not be a bad idea. I'm considering 0.85 lb/K of N this Spring, split into two apps, because I got a better price on a pre-M that includes N this year versus the 0-0-7.
Does anyone think this is too much N, considering the factors posted above? FF is supposed to be provided with 1-2 lbs/K of N per year.
If we go this route, we're going to have to counterbalance the Spring apps with another 0.85 lb/K of N in the Fall, bringing the total N to 1.7 lbs/K for the year, which is near the upper recommended limit. I also don't want to have to go nuts with the mowing this Spring (once per week at most), or reduce the drought tolerance (since it's non-irrigated).
Just wanted to run these ideas past some of the other perfectionists on this board before I commit to the experiment.
I'm also going to make a follow-up post in this thread detailing the types of Nitrogen, shortly.