- Lawn Care
- Weed Control
- Vegetable Garden
- Pest Control
- Flower Garden
- Home Orchards
- Tools
A. That’s right,
April showers have brung us
lots of May flowers. Unfortunately, they’re yellow and in your lawn! Sorry
to disappoint you, Ray—but it’s already too late to try and change your
mind
and convince you to eat the greens from this first batch of dandies,
which you could
have enjoyed raw in a nice ‘Spring tonic’ salad or cooked up as a
spinach
substitute—the leaves are only nice and tasty before the flower
buds
form, after which they turn bitter. But you’ll have a chance to savor
young
members of the next generation if you don’t scorch those
puffballs
before they can drop seed, and then remove the perennial roots.
That’s right—scorch! Your
most
important dandelion chore right now is to not allow any of
those pretty
yellow flowers to turn to white; those puffballs you used to love to
blow into
your friends’ faces contain the seeds of hundreds more dandelions. So
cut them
down quick like a bunny with a lawnmower or weedwhacker if they’re
still
yellow.
If they’re
already ghostly white, you only have two options. 1) Destroy them
without
spreading any seed with a little flamethrower; you can use the small
kind of
propane torch sold for sweating pipes or get a real flame weeder like
BernzOmatic’s “Outdoor torch” and do the job standing up; either way,
incinerate those seed heads before they can propagate!
Or, 2) Spread corn gluten meal on your lawn;
no seed can germinate when this all-natural weed and feed is around!
(We’ll
discuss the details on corn gluten in just a few minutes. But now,
it’s
back to flame!)
An especially
perfect one for the task that must follow this extreme act of
dead-heading—the
removal of the perennial roots—is the “Dandy Destroyer”, a propane-powered device that sends 1800° of radiant heat through a
spike to char
those not-so-dandy roots without harming your lawn, and with you
standing up! It’s available from the Canadian company Rittenhouse; on
the web
at www.rittenhouse.ca. Toll free #: 1-877-488-1914.
You can also
destroy the roots with a well-aimed spray of herbicidal soap or a
vinegar-based
organic herbicide. Just be careful and spray only the dandy, and not
the grass
around it.
Or
instead of destroying them, remove those roots with a tool that
pops
them out of the ground, root and all, like an old fashioned hand-held
dandelion
fork. Mechanical pullers like the “Weed Hound”—available in garden
centers—or the Water Powered Weeder from Lee Valley Tools
allow you to do the job
while standing up. All deliver the mineral-rich roots unharmed for your
compost
pile (so you get free phosphorus and potassium rich plant food out of
the deal)
and you don’t have to poison yourself, your pets or your family!
The ‘Water Powered
Weeder’ is a long, thin metal shaft that
hooks onto your garden hose and blasts water down into the root zone,
allowing
you to essentially flood the suckers out; its available
from Lee
Valley Tools (www.LeeValley.com;
1-800-871-8158).
Your
LONG-TERM Dandelion Plan
Yes,
dandelions make homeowners crazy, but hold
back on those harsh chemical herbicides—you can pull or poison
dandelions all you want, but if you
don’t change your basic horticulturally-evil ways, they’ll be
baaaaccck.
To do the job right,
spread
lawn-feeding, seed-killing corn gluten meal on your lawn when the very
first
puffballs appear in your neighborhood. This will prevent any new
dandelions from taking root in your turf and give your grass a healthy,
gentle
feeding. Then
slowly
kill off old dandies AND prevent new ones by simply taking proper care
of that
lawn!
Raise the cutting height
on your mower to two and a half to
three and a half inches—especially if you have bluegrass, which BREEDS
dandelions when it gets the traditional American scalping.
Then
continue to feed your lawn correctly, so it develops the thick
roots
that deny dandies their hold. Give up on
those steroid-like chemical fertilizers; the weak growth they cause invites
weeds. Instead, use that all-natural weed and feeding corn gluten meal
in the
Spring, and again when ghostly seed heads appear in lawns all around
you. In
the Fall, feed with high quality compost or a gentle organic lawn food.
Gardens Alive carries corn gluten alone as “WOW” (short for “With Out Weeds”), and with added natural turf fertilizers as “WOW Plus”. They’re on the web at www.GardensAlive.com or call them at 513-354-1482. Depending on where you live, you might also find corn gluten for sale in bags at larger garden centers
“Who
says
this stuff really works”?
The
eminent
University researcher who discovered it!
It all began when Dr.
Nick Christians, a researcher at