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#1
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Frank Gilliland wrote:
On 05 Jan 2007 17:16:13 GMT, Steveo wrote in : snip Is it mostly sunny in that spot? It may be a strain poa annua which is an annual grass that dies every summer. Nice and sunny. It comes back every spring all nice and green, then croaks. ****es me off. But it doesn't get a chance to go to seed so it has to be a perennial strain of something. The **** grass is what goes to seed generally, the annuals. Most desirable turfgrass is perennial and never goes to seed because you cut it every week. It never gets tall enough to produce seed... like corn. If you see grass that's only 2 or 3 inches tall going to seed it's more than likely an annual grass. It's considered a weed in most parts and people will pay to try and prevent it. Golf courses hate it. I'd have to see it to know. Yeah if it's sunny there you might consider sowing some turf type tall fescue or some sort of a perennial blend rye/blue/fescue. If it's shade go more with the fine fescue/rye blend. I'm definitely saving this post.... Thanks!!! Glad to help. That's just a stab in the dark but it might be the problem. It's real common here. We slice seed those areas for people in the spring and fall. |
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#2
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"Steveo" wrote in message ... Frank Gilliland wrote: On 05 Jan 2007 17:16:13 GMT, Steveo wrote in : snip Is it mostly sunny in that spot? It may be a strain poa annua which is an annual grass that dies every summer. Nice and sunny. It comes back every spring all nice and green, then croaks. ****es me off. But it doesn't get a chance to go to seed so it has to be a perennial strain of something. The **** grass is what goes to seed generally, the annuals. Most desirable turfgrass is perennial and never goes to seed because you cut it every week. It never gets tall enough to produce seed... like corn. If you see grass that's only 2 or 3 inches tall going to seed it's more than likely an annual grass. It's considered a weed in most parts and people will pay to try and prevent it. Golf courses hate it. I'd have to see it to know. Yeah if it's sunny there you might consider sowing some turf type tall fescue or some sort of a perennial blend rye/blue/fescue. If it's shade go more with the fine fescue/rye blend. I'm definitely saving this post.... Thanks!!! Glad to help. That's just a stab in the dark but it might be the problem. It's real common here. We slice seed those areas for people in the spring and fall. I let my fescue get tall enough to go to seed a couple of times a year. I have a neighbor who really hated this and she let me know in her catty way. Funny thing the rest of my neighbors found out what I was doing now they are too. I told her it was a good thing we didnt live a little further south. Then she would have to put up with me burning off my St Augustine every couple of years. |
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#3
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"Jimmie D" wrote in message . .. "Steveo" wrote in message ... Frank Gilliland wrote: On 05 Jan 2007 17:16:13 GMT, Steveo wrote in : snip Is it mostly sunny in that spot? It may be a strain poa annua which is an annual grass that dies every summer. Nice and sunny. It comes back every spring all nice and green, then croaks. ****es me off. But it doesn't get a chance to go to seed so it has to be a perennial strain of something. The **** grass is what goes to seed generally, the annuals. Most desirable turfgrass is perennial and never goes to seed because you cut it every week. It never gets tall enough to produce seed... like corn. If you see grass that's only 2 or 3 inches tall going to seed it's more than likely an annual grass. It's considered a weed in most parts and people will pay to try and prevent it. Golf courses hate it. I'd have to see it to know. Yeah if it's sunny there you might consider sowing some turf type tall fescue or some sort of a perennial blend rye/blue/fescue. If it's shade go more with the fine fescue/rye blend. I'm definitely saving this post.... Thanks!!! Glad to help. That's just a stab in the dark but it might be the problem. It's real common here. We slice seed those areas for people in the spring and fall. I let my fescue get tall enough to go to seed a couple of times a year. I have a neighbor who really hated this and she let me know in her catty way. Funny thing the rest of my neighbors found out what I was doing now they are too. I told her it was a good thing we didnt live a little further south. Then she would have to put up with me burning off my St Augustine every couple of years. Why would you burn off St. Augustine? Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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#4
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"U-Know-Who" wrote in message ... "Jimmie D" wrote in message . .. "Steveo" wrote in message ... Frank Gilliland wrote: On 05 Jan 2007 17:16:13 GMT, Steveo wrote in : snip Is it mostly sunny in that spot? It may be a strain poa annua which is an annual grass that dies every summer. Nice and sunny. It comes back every spring all nice and green, then croaks. ****es me off. But it doesn't get a chance to go to seed so it has to be a perennial strain of something. The **** grass is what goes to seed generally, the annuals. Most desirable turfgrass is perennial and never goes to seed because you cut it every week. It never gets tall enough to produce seed... like corn. If you see grass that's only 2 or 3 inches tall going to seed it's more than likely an annual grass. It's considered a weed in most parts and people will pay to try and prevent it. Golf courses hate it. I'd have to see it to know. Yeah if it's sunny there you might consider sowing some turf type tall fescue or some sort of a perennial blend rye/blue/fescue. If it's shade go more with the fine fescue/rye blend. I'm definitely saving this post.... Thanks!!! Glad to help. That's just a stab in the dark but it might be the problem. It's real common here. We slice seed those areas for people in the spring and fall. I let my fescue get tall enough to go to seed a couple of times a year. I have a neighbor who really hated this and she let me know in her catty way. Funny thing the rest of my neighbors found out what I was doing now they are too. I told her it was a good thing we didnt live a little further south. Then she would have to put up with me burning off my St Augustine every couple of years. Why would you burn off St. Augustine? Burn it off in the winter while it is dormant is the easiest way of getting rid of the thatch. If you dont do it it will eventually choke itsself to death. When this happens you get a big bald spot in your yard then the grass fills in again. In other words if you dont dethatch it it will dethatch itself in very ugly ways. |
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#5
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On Sat, 6 Jan 2007 13:50:43 -0500, "Jimmie D"
wrote: +++Burn it off in the winter while it is dormant is the easiest way of getting +++rid of the thatch. If you dont do it it will eventually choke itsself to +++death. When this happens you get a big bald spot in your yard then the grass +++fills in again. In other words if you dont dethatch it it will dethatch +++itself in very ugly ways. *********** Be sure to verify that the brown spots are not chinch bugs. T hey log St. Augustine. They eat the roots and then you have brown dead grass. james |
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#6
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"james" wrote in message ... On Sat, 6 Jan 2007 13:50:43 -0500, "Jimmie D" wrote: +++Burn it off in the winter while it is dormant is the easiest way of getting +++rid of the thatch. If you dont do it it will eventually choke itsself to +++death. When this happens you get a big bald spot in your yard then the grass +++fills in again. In other words if you dont dethatch it it will dethatch +++itself in very ugly ways. *********** Be sure to verify that the brown spots are not chinch bugs. T hey log St. Augustine. They eat the roots and then you have brown dead grass. james Spectrocide, but burning keeps this down too. |
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#7
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"Jimmie D" wrote in message .. . "james" wrote in message ... On Sat, 6 Jan 2007 13:50:43 -0500, "Jimmie D" wrote: +++Burn it off in the winter while it is dormant is the easiest way of getting +++rid of the thatch. If you dont do it it will eventually choke itsself to +++death. When this happens you get a big bald spot in your yard then the grass +++fills in again. In other words if you dont dethatch it it will dethatch +++itself in very ugly ways. *********** Be sure to verify that the brown spots are not chinch bugs. T hey log St. Augustine. They eat the roots and then you have brown dead grass. james Spectrocide, but burning keeps this down too. Obviously you have St. Augustine grass, How do yo dethatch yours. I know there are mechanical ways of doing it but to me they are a lot of work and rip out the roots. |
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