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I've lived in this house for almost 20 years now and for the first few years I followed the Scott's 4 step program and had a lawn (with builder-applied "athletic field" grass seed) that was the envy of the neighborhood. Then my oldest son was born.
At that point, with kids playing out in the yard I started to move away from using herbicides/insecticides and only used the pre-emergent combo fertilizer in early-mid April. I eventually discovered Milorganite and stopped using the pre-emergent stuff entirely with an occasional spot spray of selective herbicide.
Fast forward to today, I've been battling Red Thread/Pink Patch every May for the past few years and finally broke down and had my soil tested so that I can try to get this under control. My soil chemistry was pretty bad so I am working to get a handle on that now. Now that my kids are teens I am open to using the pre-emergent stuff again since I don't have to worry about them going outside and rolling around in/eating lawn chemicals. I do have some clover, crabgrass, and violets, but IMO the crabgrass situation isn't that bad considering I haven't used the pre-emergent stuff in years.
For me, something like the Lesco fertilizer with Dimension would be my first choice to put down when the forsythia/daffodils start to bloom since it is readily available at Home Depot and easy to deal with. However, it appears that the current thinking is that is too early to fertilize.
My next choice would be a granular product, say like the Hi-Yield Weed and Grass Stopper with Dimension Herbicide currently on sale at domyownpestcontrol.com. This would allow me to get the pre-emergent stuff down on time without having to fertilize. It's also probably the most expensive approach.
Finally, my last choice would be a spray on pre-emergent. I'll likely end up getting this all over myself, I don't want to have to deal with worrying about cleaning my backpack sprayer to death, and I really don't want to bother storing this stuff. That being said, it is probably the most cost-effective and flexible solution.
So, is just using the Lesco fertilizer with Dimension a big no-no? If so, should I grab a bag of something like the Hi-Yield instead? Is not using the liquid stuff at all justifiable?
At that point, with kids playing out in the yard I started to move away from using herbicides/insecticides and only used the pre-emergent combo fertilizer in early-mid April. I eventually discovered Milorganite and stopped using the pre-emergent stuff entirely with an occasional spot spray of selective herbicide.
Fast forward to today, I've been battling Red Thread/Pink Patch every May for the past few years and finally broke down and had my soil tested so that I can try to get this under control. My soil chemistry was pretty bad so I am working to get a handle on that now. Now that my kids are teens I am open to using the pre-emergent stuff again since I don't have to worry about them going outside and rolling around in/eating lawn chemicals. I do have some clover, crabgrass, and violets, but IMO the crabgrass situation isn't that bad considering I haven't used the pre-emergent stuff in years.
For me, something like the Lesco fertilizer with Dimension would be my first choice to put down when the forsythia/daffodils start to bloom since it is readily available at Home Depot and easy to deal with. However, it appears that the current thinking is that is too early to fertilize.
My next choice would be a granular product, say like the Hi-Yield Weed and Grass Stopper with Dimension Herbicide currently on sale at domyownpestcontrol.com. This would allow me to get the pre-emergent stuff down on time without having to fertilize. It's also probably the most expensive approach.
Finally, my last choice would be a spray on pre-emergent. I'll likely end up getting this all over myself, I don't want to have to deal with worrying about cleaning my backpack sprayer to death, and I really don't want to bother storing this stuff. That being said, it is probably the most cost-effective and flexible solution.
So, is just using the Lesco fertilizer with Dimension a big no-no? If so, should I grab a bag of something like the Hi-Yield instead? Is not using the liquid stuff at all justifiable?