GrassIt’s Easy to Have a Healthy, Weed-Free
Lawn Without Chemicals—Just
Follow These Seven Steps!
Q. Mike: Our substantial lawn
is presently very weed-filled. What's the best plan of attack at this
time of the year (and forward) for ultimately establishing weed-free
turf?
---Gerald; Temple University
Tyler School of Art; Philadelphia
Mike: Thanks so much for your show’s insightful information and
encouragement. I am finally ready to fix my once beautiful, now
weed-infested lawn. I think I caused the worst damage by ‘weed and
feeding’ it in the middle of a drought and then not reseeding the bare
spots I created. I am a poor schoolteacher (and a tightwad to boot!)
What is the cheapest and easiest way to bring my lawn up to good
health?
---Keith in Downingtown, PA
We have some very stubborn weeds in our lawn, especially in the front,
which gets a lot of sun. We would gratefully appreciate your advice and
guidance.
---Ramesh in McLean, Virginia
A. Most lawn problems are
caused by lawn owners who overuse chemical fertilizers and pesticides
like mad, cut their grass WAY too short and water it all wrong. People,
People, People!: Any flower or vegetable gardener can assure you
that grass itself is a VERY hardy and tenacious ‘weed’. If you simply
stop trying to kill it, you should be able to achieve a lush weed-free
stand with VERY little work. Just follow these 7 Secrets of Successful
ORGANIC Lawn Owners:
1. Grow the right
kind of grass for your region and conditions. In the North, you
want to grow a ‘cool
season’ grass like Kentucky bluegrass, ryegrass or
fescue; down South, you need a ‘warm
season’ variety, like Bermuda, St.
Augustine or zoysia. Sunny spots need a grass that thrives on lots of
light, like Kentucky blue or Bermuda; shady spots demand a turf that
can get by on very little light, like fescue or St. Augustine.
2. Prevent weed
seeds from sprouting with corn gluten meal. Applied in the
Spring—when the forsythia shrubs in your neighborhood begin to
bloom—this all-natural by-product of corn starch processing stops new
weeds, weakens old ones and gives your lawn the perfect amount of
slow-release nitrogen for strong roots and beautiful green growth;
without nasty chemicals that threaten people, pets and the environment.
See last
week’s column for more details. And gee…I wonder
where you might be able to find some?
3. Cut your grass
at the right height! Most people cut their grass way too short,
thinking it will help them mow less often. But scalping your lawn of
all its green forces the grass to try and grow super-fast to replace
the solar collectors you executed. This weak new growth looks terrible,
so you cut it again—way too soon and way too short—and
again…and… Meanwhile, those roots aren’t growing at
all—allowing weeds to throw wild parties with loose flora where your
turf should be.
Your lawn should be AT LEAST two inches high AFTER YOU CUT—an inch
higher for cool season grasses and shady lawns. Use a ruler! And never
cut off more than a third at any one time. Your grass will grow slower
(because you aren’t trying to kill it anymore), look much greener than
a crew-cut lawn, and form DEEP roots that crowd out weeds naturally.
How deep? Our old buddy (and corn gluten meal creator) Dr. Nick
Christians, turfgrass Professor at Iowa State University, explains that
a fescue grass cut two inches high will have 18-inch deep roots (which
sounds pretty good). But if you raise the cutting height to the
fescue-recommended three and a half inches, those roots will go down
FOUR FEET—that’s a lawn that can find enough water and nutrients to
take care of itself!
4. Feed it right!
Cool season grasses should get a big feeding in the Fall
and a lighter
one in the Spring;
never
feed them in hot weather. Warm season grasses are the opposite—give
them three equal feedings from early to late summer. If you use a
mulching mower to return those nitrogen-rich clips to your turf, feed
less; if you collect your clips for other uses, feed more.
5. Water correctly!
A light sprinkling every day is the worst thing you can do—with no
water to reach for down deep, roots stay shallow and weeds move in.
Long, infrequent waterings = deep roots that stop weeds with a terse
“and where did you think YOU were going?” Most lawns need an inch of
water a week; if Nature provides this, sit on your hose. If she
doesn’t, apply that weekly inch (use a rain gauge) all at once on lawns
in clay soil. But break it up into two, ¾ inch-deep soakings per
week if your soil be sandy. Lawns in sun need more water; lawns in
shade, less. Some grasses, like Kentucky blue, are notoriously thirsty;
others, like Bermuda grass, like it dry. It is never wrong to water a
lawn in the early morning; but it can be disease-inviting Death on a Stick
to water in the evening—especially in the North.
6. Tap your local
expertise. No matter where you get your basic lawn-care
information, always fine-tune it with advice from your local county
extension agent and their amazing volunteer Master Gardener helpers.
Just type the word “extension” and [your state] into a search engine,
and you’ll find your local office at your state’s web page. They can
tell you what grasses work best in your specific microclimate, test
your soil for problems, and even identify your current grass if you’re
clueless. (Note: They MAY recommend chemical treatments. If they DO,
ask for organic options. If they won’t provide them, ask US—we be here
for you!)
7. Don’t be afraid
to ‘Take The Pipe’ and start over. If you’ve been trying to grow
a WAY wrong type of grass for your region and/or conditions, have nuked
whatever you did have with chemicals (or over-attention), or have a
‘lawn’ that’s more than 50% grass-free, start over. In the North, you
should always wait till early Fall to seed
a new cool season lawn; sod is
much more expensive but can be laid anytime—just be sure and keep it
well-watered till its roots establish. Down South, start your new warm
season lawn in the Spring; some warm season grasses can be seeded; with
others you plant plugs, sprigs or sod.
Helpful
Products From Gardens Alive!
Try our Organic solutions to maintain your Lawn effectively without
chemicals.
Turf Alive! III Brand
Grows slower, stays shorter!
Turf Alive! III Brand grass sprouts and establishes itself fast. Yet
once it has been established it grows more slowly cutting down on
mowing. Also has deep root system so it stays greener longer.
WOW!
Plus
Pre-Emergence Weed Control and Fertilizer
WOW! Plus lets you control pesky weeds while feeding your lawn with a
complete, balanced, and all natural
fertilizer. Easy to apply so it saves you time and money!
Spring
Lawns Alive!
Promotes rapid springtime growth
The formula includes quick-release nutrients to provide a greener lawn
within 10-14 days of the first rain or watering after application.