Lawn Care Forum banner
Status
Not open for further replies.
21 - 40 of 344 Posts
Alex1389 said:
@g-man Thoughts on going with .5 N/M weekly in the first spring after a reno or is that overkill?
I've been following the .25lbs weekly and it's helped my yard tremendously. Nice and green. Now, here in PA the weather has been horrible this entire month so I haven't had a big green spring up but it's been growing slowly. I'm sure a bit more wouldn't hurt but the .25lbs has been seemingly working well
 
Excellent post as usual @g-man. I spent this past winter preparing by using @Pete1313 2017 Bewitched Renovation as a template so it's reassuring to know I didn't miss anything. One thing I noticed is that Pete used a slightly higher dose of Urea (0.35-0.46# N/M) for his weekly feedings so I'm wondering how much is too much when you're applying Nitrogen?
 
Excellent post @g-man! Where do you find the time! :lol:

g-man said:
[*] 21-28 DAG - Apply tenacity (4oz/acre rate no nis) and it depends on the weed pressure.
I would disagree not using NIS. I see your thought though.

Zip-a-Dee-Zee said:
Excellent post as usual @g-man. I spent this past winter preparing by using @Pete1313 2017 Bewitched Renovation as a template so it's reassuring to know I didn't miss anything. One thing I noticed is that Pete used a slightly higher dose of Urea (0.35-0.46# N/M) for his weekly feedings so I'm wondering how much is too much when you're applying Nitrogen?
g-man said:
Yes you can get away with more N. Strive for a healthy grow. I prefer to keep my rate at 0.25lb of N/ksqft and adjust the frequency (6 days or 8days) based on weather and what I'm seeing.
.25 lbs of N/M is good advice. You could do a little higher like I did and not have any issues. Some might argue that higher than .25 lbs of N/M might be wasted as the grass is not mature enough to take it all in. there is also risk of burning and mistakes as the rate goes up. One thing to @g-man's point is that there is no doubt a new lawn needs more N. Especially during the grow-in year. 50% more then a mature lawn? 100% more? That can be debatable and individual lawn based, but light and frequent is the way to go. :thumbsup:
 
Save
I live in nj and am planning a reno this year. I have about 4 different grass types and want to go mono. I have never done a reno but have a pretty good idea on what to expect. Planning a kbg reno so what will be the best seed down date for that? Im thinking mid aug may be still way too hot. I want to carefully plan every detail so i dont screw this up.
 
Save
Whats the trigger to first mow? height of lawn? if so, how high does the new grass need to be before the first cut at 1.5/2inch?
 
ArtOfWar626 said:
Also, have you used Ethofumesate during a fall renovation? It's a pre-emergent for Poa Annua. I'd recommend adding that in during seeding if you could add it into your renovation.
I've done a little research on this when I was doing an overseed last year. Depending on the turf type, this may be challenging given the safety intervals they provide for overseeding and application after emergence. This is from the PoaConstrictor label, which is an Ethofumesate herbicide.

Looks like it may be viable for a PRG or TTTF renovation, but less so for KBG.

 
My jug of Roundup concentrate says 2.5 fl oz / 1 Gallon water to cover 300sqft.

Do I really need that much carrier water for blanket sprays on my reno? My normal backpack sprayer calibration is 4 Gallons to cover my 5.1ksqft lawn which works out to 0.24 Gallon for 300sqft, a quarter of what the label says. I feel like at the label rate liquid will be dripping off the leafs into the soil.
 
davegravy said:
I measured the most "slope-y" part of my yard at 9 degrees. My soil is sandy and I've never had drainage issues. Is this enough of a slope to warrant any special measures to prevent seed from washing downhill?
I've seen the pictures of your lawn and I don't think it needs any germination blankets if that's what you were thinking.
 
SNOWBOB11 said:
davegravy said:
I measured the most "slope-y" part of my yard at 9 degrees. My soil is sandy and I've never had drainage issues. Is this enough of a slope to warrant any special measures to prevent seed from washing downhill?
I've seen the pictures of your lawn and I don't think it needs any germination blankets if that's what you were thinking.
Blankets I was wondering about yeah. The angle I shoot pics from doesn't really show the slope well so I thought I'd measure it just to be safe. But yeah my gut feeling is I should be fine.

Here's a pic that shows the slope

 
T minus 6 weeks (the point of no return) - Do any drastic amendment of soils know, per your soil test.
Is the idea here that I can apply higher than 1 lb K/M (the recommended max monthly rate for potassium) to get my annual correction in? For me my outstanding corrective apps will be 2.5lbs K/M and 4lbs S/M.

Since I'm glyphosating everything I guess I shouldn't be worried about turf damage due to high K levels. The K will work down into the soil by the time I seed 6 weeks later without causing germination issues?
 
I applied prop 14.3 onto my 2 weeks old Midnight seedlings two weeks ago. I'm due for another fungicide app soon. Should I use azoxy or another dose of prop?
 
21 - 40 of 344 Posts
Status
Not open for further replies.
You have insufficient privileges to reply here.