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Reducing Lawn Maintenance
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Ways to Reduce
If you find that your lawn dries out quickly and needs more frequent
watering than other lawns in your neighborhood, there are ways to
minimize waterings.
a. Keeping your grass relatively tall will help the plants reduce
moisture evaporation my shading the soil.
b. If you choose native grasses or those well adapted to your area
when seeding, they will need less watering. Bluegrass is a guzzler;
Buffalograss is not. See "Choosing the Right Grass," for
more on grass types.
c. Improving your soil can also help reduce your watering needs.
Try topdressing your soil with organic material. Then work it into
the soil using an aerator (with a core cultivator). Organic material
helps your soil hold water longer.
d. In addition, aeration promotes deeper root growth. When combined
with infrequent, deep waterings, aeration enables grass plants to
take moisture from a greater soil area.
e. Keep chemicals off your lawn. Organic lawns require less watering
than chemically-treated lawns.
f. Use a sharp mower blade to make cleaner cuts. Cleanly cut lawns
look greener and cause less evaporation than raggedly cut lawns.
g. Do not over fertilize.
h. Allow your lawn to temporarily brown out temporarily, or go dormant,
when drought conditions persist. Usually this will not hurt a healthy,
established lawn because the roots continue to live and are ready
to send forth new shoots when conditions improve. There may be times
during the year when it's just not worth trying to keep your lawn
green. (Continue to water lawns less than a year old through dry
spells.)
i. If you have an automatic sprinkler system, check for consistency
of coverage. Uneven coverage often causes homeowners to overwater
some areas in order to adequately water others.
j. If you water you lawn manually, invest in a timer(either built
into the sprinkler or installed at the outdoor faucet). With a timer,
you can't forget to turn off the sprinkler. Caution: The flip side
to using timers, the programmable ones, is if you're not careful
you'll find that they turn on the system rain or shine. There's
nothing more wasteful than sprinklers watering on schedule during
a heavy rain storm. In-ground systems with soil or weather sensors
avoid that problem.
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