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Having a healthy lawn is sometimes an expensive proposition. We recommend an
organic lawn care program. Although this program might seem more expensive in
the beginning, you will save time, money, and effort in the long run when you
reap the benefit of a lawn that requires less water, fewer nutrients, and less
frequent mowing. On top of that, following an organic lawn care program actually
reduces weeds, with no chemicals and no pulling by hand! Your patience now will
be well rewarded in the future.
Common Lawn Problems and Solutions
Sunshine Landscape & Garden Center |
Come see us if you're having problems with your
lawn! |
Problem |
Symptoms |
Causes |
Treatment |
Brown Patch |
Circular areas
with brown centers and a yellow to light green outer edge. |
Poor drainage,
soil compression, and over watering. |
Aerate lawn,
improve drainage and soil fertility, and apply bacteria that will
protect the roots from the fungus. |
Take all patch |
Soil disease
that is similar in appearance to brown patch, but occurs in the heat
of the summer. |
Imbalanced soil
fertility, excessive herbicide use, and over watering. |
Remove thatch
buildup, and improve drainage and soil fertility. |
Chinch bugs |
Yellow grass
that has been watered properly. |
Infestation by
adult chinch bugs. |
Apply
insecticides such as pyrethrums or soap sprays until gone. |
Grub worms |
Brown grass with
no roots that has been watered properly. |
Infestation by
grub worm larvae. |
Apply beneficial
nematodes to control infestation. |
Fire ants |
Dirt mounds
appearing in the turf. |
Infestation by a
fire ant colony. |
Treat mounds
immediately with an approved pesticide. |
We've identified some common lawn problems and their solutions below. If you
need additional help, please bring a soil sample or a picture of the problem
you're experiencing and one of our lawn experts will be glad to help.
Organic Lawn Care Program Recommendations
Sunshine Landscape & Garden Center |
The best landscape is an organic
one! |
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Spring |
Summer |
Fall/Winter |
Mowing |
Mow every one to two weeks as necessary. |
Mow every two weeks |
Mow every two to four weeks. |
Fertilizing |
Top-dress lawn with compost, and then in three to
four weeks, apply an organic fertilizer (8-2-4) |
Spay once a week with liquid seaweed. |
Top-dress lawn with compost, and continue foliar
feeding with liquid seaweed. |
Watering |
Water deeply when there is no rainfall. |
Water deeply, in the morning or late evening, every
five days. |
Water deeply when there is no rainfall and before
freeze. |
Other |
Apply corn gluten to turf grasses to kill
pre-emergent weeds. |
Apply a soil activator to energize soil |
Prune oak trees and protect new plants from freezes. |
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