Tall Midget wrote:
Tall Midget wrote:
man of few opinions wrote:
TM that sounds great, glad it is coming in so well. Have you done a soil test? The only reason I ask is that you need to be careful with the lime if you already have soil with a healthy to high PH. I am sure you are fine, I know lots of people who have applied lime. I personally have never felt the need to but that's just me.
I dumped a nice load of Milorganite about three weeks ago and things are really popping now. I spot sprayed for weeds last weekend and as of right now things look pretty good on that front. I took over my elderly neighbors lawn this year - the service he was using sucked and he was riddled with crabgrass and weeds last year. I have put more work and product into his yard than my own so far but its been fun. It is kind of a fun challenge. His neighbor on the other side has playfully been giving me shit about taking my show on the road and trying to dominate him now, telling me to go back to my yard where I belong, but I'm like "fuck that, you had better step your weak lawn game up, I'm coming for you."
Yeah, I did test my soil, which is somewhat acidic. I am really hoping to thicken up my lawn in the next month or so. I'm also going to rototill another section and completely reseed where weeds have taken over. The Northeast has a major problem with the invasive oriental bittersweet vine, and I've been battling against that, too, this spring. Thanks again for your advice.
The 10,000 square feet of my lawn closest to my house--where I rototilled last year and used Scotts Step 1 this spring while also overseeding--is looking great--thick, lush and almost entirely devoid of weeds.
I will be fertilizing again in a couple of weeks, probably with Milorganite, although I am also wondering if I should just go ahead and use Scotts Step 1 again since that provides pre-emergent weed control along with a good fertilizer. If I use Milorganite instead, should I spray with Prodiamine as well? Thoughts?
I recently purchased a landzie peat moss/compost spreader that should be delivered in June--I'm looking forward to using that when I do more overseeding in the lawn areas farther away from my house in the summer or fall.
Just saw this post - my impression of Scotts Step 1 is that it provides crabgrass control, not necessarily weed control. My neighbors yard historically has been overrun with crabgrass, so when I took it over this year i gave him an early-season hit of Step 1, and then 4 weeks later gave him a second hit, since I knew he had a crabgrass problem. If you traditionally have a crabgrass problem two hits of Step 1 is not a bad idea. On his yard i did the two doses of Scotts and have been bombarding it with Milorganite in between and the results have been shocking, especially since recent rains. I have also been spot-spraying weeds with Weed-Be-Gon with great success. If your yard has a lot of current weed problems and you already laid down Step 1 for crabgrass prevention, it might be a good idea to go to Step 2 to get a handle on the weeds before that gets out of control. If weeds aren't a huge issue, there is nothing wrong with a second shot of Step 1.
There is nothing stopping you from using Milo along with these products, Milo cant fuck up your yard. Prodiamine is fine to use as well, although the window is pretty much closing on pre-emergent weed control, most weeds are already rocking and rolling. It might be kind of late for that. If you have large swaths of weeds, use a blanket application of Step 2. If you have just intermittent weeds, I'd spot spray them and hammer away with Milo.
I just bought a new fertilizer online that I saw some stuff on YouTube about, so I rolled the dice and bought a bag of Yard Mastery Double Dark last week that has 6% iron and applied it last Friday before it rained Saturday and earlier this week. I am not familiar enough with this product to all-out endorse it as a full-time go-to fertilizer, but I cut my lawn last night and I couldn't BELIEVE how green and thick it was. I had it on the highest setting (4") and the mower was really working hard to get through it, it was unreal. It has never been so thick and dark green, no weeds are going to be growing in that anytime soon.
Oh, one last thing - don't forget Grub control, that can go down really anytime between now and say the second week of June for max protection. It keeps the grubs at bay and keeps the critters from digging them up. Nothing kills a yard faster than uncontrolled grubs feasting on your lawns roots.