Archive for the ‘Lawn Care Tools’ Category

Choosing the right tools for your lawn..

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Every gardener would always want whtoolsat is best for their garden,yard or lawn and that is their main secret on how they take care of them by heart. But in caring for your lawn, one should not just be concern mainly on the health of the lawn but in choosing the right tools to be used for it too. You can visit your nearest tool care equipment store to check out best tools that would contribute to promote healthy growth for your lawn..

The mulching mower equipment would be the first on the list as this will help you eliminate weeds and the fallen leaves on your yard and will keep you less worry of grass clippings. Another important thing for your lawn is a good irrigation system this could also help in maintaining a healthy green lawn. An automated irrigation is important for your lawn to make sure water is conserved and is used up properly and would not be too much since it would not be good for your lawn.

Leaf blower would also contribute to your lawn’s health since it can do multi tasks they could eliminate autumn leaves as well as blow snow away during winter season and could also serve as sweep to clean out driveway.

You must know and be careful always when choosing the right tools for your lawn as these also play an important role with regards to lawn care. Choosing the right tool would promote good health for your lawn.

 

 

image source: gardeningresource.com

Achieving a Healthy Lawn..

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

healthy

Having a perfectly healthy lawn requires a lot of effort and time. These simple yet helpful tips could help you achieve your goal to attain a healthy, nourishing lawn that will help you feel relax:

1. Water your Lawn Early in the Morning – This is the best time to water your lawn so it could be absorbed by the grass thoroughly. Watering in the evening would make your grass stay wet that could be prone to diseases. In maintaining a healthy lawn, it only needs at least 1 inch of water in a week this is for cool and warm weather. 1-2 inch of water weekly for hot,windy or dry weather.

2. Regularly Mow and leave grass Clippings in your Lawn – Mowing your lawn is the next important thing to do to make it more healthy and to eliminate unhealthy growth or excess grass that grows in your yard. Always remember to leave grass clippings after you mow since it could be an additional food and dew to prevent weed invasion. Only an inch must be cut off from the grass and maintain the height of 2 ½ inches to 3 1/2 inches long. Then If it exceeds to 6 inches in length, rake up and combine it to compost.

3. Conduct Soil Test – Have your soil test for you to identify the best lawn care needed for you to attain a healthy one. Through the test, it will help you determine its type of soil and the right amount of fertilizer needed.

4. Fertilize Properly – After you conduct your soil test, you could already start to know how to properly fertilize and the right amount required depending on how wide your lawn is.

5. Distinguish Weeds – Learning to identify weeds in your lawn will also aid you to determine the health of your lawn.Thus, it is always important for you to know and be familiar with the weed so you will know how to treat or prevent them from destroying your lawn and the plants within it.

Tips to control weeds from your lawns..

Monday, November 10th, 2008

weeds Weeds are also plants that just grow in wrong places like that you see growing with your lawn if not properly monitored or maintained. They are called the native plants since they could well adopt in the environment that they grow. For longer years, their seeds could lie dormant in the soil although sometime they could also be medicinal or decorative. Thus, this must be controlled to have a healthy green lawn you longed for.

Below are the 5 tips on how to reduce weeds in your lawn

  1. Correct Mowing – Maintaining an appropriate height for your lawn could help you brush away the weeds that grow in your lawn.
  2. Mowing Frequency – Mowing regularly could remove flowing seed parts of weeds growing to make it harder for them to grow on the next crop and will help you achieve your go encourage al for for a healthy lawn.
  3. Soils play a factor in weed control – soils that are wet, dry and compacted, these mostly the growth of weeds since the grass struggles on these kind of soil.
  4. Soil Fertility is a factor – Soils that are poor and unfertilized are more prone to weeds growth. Turfgrasses do require some nutrients for best growth.
  5. Practicing good lawn maintenance – this is the most recommended method for weed control for your lawn care.

Top Most Useful Garden Tools

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

long1. Long Handled Shovel - A shovel is the one everyone thinks of for gardening: a curved head, a long handle, prefect for digging and scooping soil. A long handle gives you better leverage for all of that digging. The curved, somewhat pointed head digs through hard packed soil and lawn with ease. Use this for everything from digging holes for shrubs, to scooping compost or mulch onto your beds.

 

 

2. Spade - This is the shovel that has a straight, flat head. This has a ssvery thick steel head and shorter handle, although you can find long handled ones. Short handled could be use for edging beds and removing sod to prepare new beds. In gardening, a spade is a hand tool used to dig or loosen ground, or to break up clumps in the soil. Together with the fork it forms one of the chief implements wielded by the hand in agriculture and horticulture. It is sometimes considered a type of shovel. Its typical shape is a broad flat blade with a sharp lower edge, straight or curved. The upper edge on either side of the handle affords space for the used’s foot, which drives it into the ground. The wooden handle ends in a cross-piece, sometimes T-shaped and sometimes forming a kind of loop for the hand.hanbd

3. Hand trowel - This is the most-used tool in my garden shed. Use for: planting annuals, digging out stubborn weeds, potting up containers, and planting bulbs.

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4. Hoe - This is the best tool for weeding in established beds. Just run this over the soil, and it cuts all those rotten little weeds off at the soil surface.There are two kinds: the stirrup hoe (which, go figure, looks like a stirrup!) and the regular hoe.

5. Bypass Pruners - These have curving blades that,ff when you cut, end up next to one another. The other type of pruner is the anvil pruner, where the two blades just meet when you cut. Bypass pruners are perfect for light pruning of trees and shrubs, dead heading perennials and annuals, and cutting flowers for arrangements. They make a nice, clean cut that will heal easily.

Scarifying your lawn

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

lawn rakeScarifying your lawn during Mid-Spring or Autumn is important To remove debris from your lawn. It forms a cover of mulch over your lawn, stifling emerging grass. To allow air to reach the soil. Lawns with only a thin layer of thatch will not need treatment, this thinner layer actually helps to conserve moisture and help the lawn absorb hard wear. Scarify your lawn at least twice a month for a greener lawn.

How? - Either you can borrow or hire a scarifying machine, or you can scarify your lawn by hand using a spring-tined rake. Draw the rake over the lawn in short sweeps, digging the tines into the top level of the soil. Work in one direction across the lawn and then again at right angles to your initial sweep. Once you have completed the scarifying process, mow the lawn, collecting the clippings, to remove the thatch and even up its appearance.

Scarifying machines are essential for larger lawns and they will usually pick up the thatch for you. Mow after scarifying to even the appearance of the lawn, collecting the clippings. If you have a great deal of moss in the lawn, you may wish to consider applying a moss killer If you garden organically and have a problem with moss, this usually results from inadequate sun or poor drainage. Consider the viability of lawns in shaded or damp ground.

 

 

 

6 Steps to a Perfect Lawn

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Everybody is dreaming of a healthy and perfect lawn at home. Especially for those living in a cool season grasses rule. But, not every lawn needs a complete renovation. Maybe others just needed an extra care with tender loving. For cool season lawns & planting seed, early fall could be the best time to finish such a renovation then spring for a warm season grass and you can do laying new sod, plugs or sprigs, almost anytime during the growing season. Here are the six essential steps to follow:

1. Test the Soil – Investigating the soil is very important before removing your old lawn and that the soil has adequate nutrients and proper pH ideal for the grass to grow. Once you had undergo thorough test on the soil, you will exactly know what to do for a best possible place for your lawn to grow.

2. Remove the old lawn – these requires an average strength to help haul away the remains of the old loan.

3. Preparing the Site - Remove all rocks and expose all the roots. Large visible rocks must be dig up and tree roots be put down below soil level if it is a problem as well. With the sod removed and taken away from the site, rocks removed, holes filled, you’ll want to start adding the necessary amendments. You’ll probably want to add some sand (about 3 cubic yards per 1,000 square feet). To better condition the soil, add aged compost. This will add a lot of bio-mass to the soil (about 3 cubic yards per 1,000 square feet).

4. Tilling it in and Fertilizing - Turn the soil until there are no big clumps or patches of packed earth. with a rotary tiller and add lime, peat moss, or sulfur to balance the soil’s pH level. Spread peat moss with shovel, you can use pelletized lime or sulfur, to spread with a walk-behind spreader set to the appropriate calibration rate listed. And spread a starte fertilizer to the whole area using. Using a metal rake you can work on the fertilizer in one place. Finish grading the soil by raking it level. Pay attention to drainage slopes being careful not to alter the natural drainage pattern.

5. Spread the seed - Select a grass type that would fit in your area. With a simple hand sprinkler, apply the seed as evenly use a walk behind spreader.

6. Water regularly – When seed is sown, Don’t just spray your lawn with a hose nozzle.3 times a day to keep the soil evenly moist, but not soaked. Avoid over watering.Once the seed has sprouted, cut back watering to once a day (depending on local weather). It’s best to water in the morning.

Tricks for Lawn Mowing to make a tough turf

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

lawn mowing

Let it grow- Mow High - Mower blades be set to 3 inches & Let your lawn grow taller for best way to reduce the use of herbicide. Tall grass could be stress tolerant especially during excessive heat of summer, also provides shade to reduce weed seed germination especially on crab grass and it increases the uptake of water and nutrients due to its larger root structure.

Twice a year mow low – Your lawn should be cut low of 2 inches at least twice a year. First cut in spring and last in fall that prevent fungus from being established on winter.

Give The Grass a Clean Cut – Keep your mower blade sharp, Mow when grass is dry, Mow in the cool part of the afternoon or evening. Mowing whengrrass is wet or with dull blade can cause the tip of the grass to shred that would make your lawn brown and its tips dry out and more susceptible to disease and cutting grass during excessive heat would cause stress to plants.

Mulch Clippings - Leave grass clippings on the lawn. It lowers the needs for fertilizer since important plant nutrients are returned to the soil. Mulching Mower circulates the grass clippings in mowing chamber to make smaller clippings which break down more easily.