Creeping Charlie can put up a good fight against 2,4 D. Dicamba (Banvel) or triclopyr (Turflon) are your best options.
Right. You’ll notice the few sprays I recommended in this thread had either or in them.
Creeping Charlie can put up a good fight against 2,4 D. Dicamba (Banvel) or triclopyr (Turflon) are your best options.
So, late last year I noticed some dead spots starting on one side of my property. This year, the 3 main spots all seem similar in that it is just DEAD - no weeds, nothing. I took a photo of one because there seems to be some coaxial cable hardware that was just below the surface - thinking of contacting mediacom about that..
Anyway, any ideas on what caused this? Or what kinds of things to check for? View attachment 64336
Moles randomly popping up in the wrong places. (should have been a new thread title). Mole
solutions. Traps hit and miss, castor oil is many, many repeated applications, killing the grubs just lessens the damage because the moles just travel through, but still leave a wake. They seem to avoid the little plastic toy windmills that are mounted on a straw, they say out of my vegetables now, must be the vibration? Any permanent solutions out there?
Advice on what works best to kill clover but not grass? Thanks in advance.
So, late last year I noticed some dead spots starting on one side of my property. This year, the 3 main spots all seem similar in that it is just DEAD - no weeds, nothing. I took a photo of one because there seems to be some coaxial cable hardware that was just below the surface - thinking of contacting mediacom about that..
Anyway, any ideas on what caused this? Or what kinds of things to check for? View attachment 64336
I am having better luck with “brush killer” which has 2-4D and triclopyr. Bomgaars stocks a couple brands and it looks like you can find it in the big box stores as well.
The kind I got allowed me to mix it a little hot and spot apply. Even with the rain, it went to work quick and I am already seeing the results.
2-4D works too, but having used both, I will tell you the stuff with the triclopyr is better.
Clover can be tough and a couple of applications may be needed.
I am having better luck with “brush killer” which has 2-4D and triclopyr. Bomgaars stocks a couple brands and it looks like you can find it in the big box stores as well.
The kind I got allowed me to mix it a little hot and spot apply. Even with the rain, it went to work quick and I am already seeing the results.
2-4D works too, but having used both, I will tell you the stuff with the triclopyr is better.
Clover can be tough and a couple of applications may be needed.
I am having better luck with “brush killer” which has 2-4D and triclopyr. Bomgaars stocks a couple brands and it looks like you can find it in the big box stores as well.
The kind I got allowed me to mix it a little hot and spot apply. Even with the rain, it went to work quick and I am already seeing the results.
2-4D works too, but having used both, I will tell you the stuff with the triclopyr is better.
Clover can be tough and a couple of applications may be needed.
Thanks for the tips as I noticed this weekend I have more than I thought so I want to hit it. Also noticed creeping charlie that is coming in from neighbor yards.
Thanks! Will try soon!
OK, I may get buried alive for this, but I have to ask, and maybe someone here has some experience with it.
The gf is not a fan of manicured lawns- having grown up on a farm, she likes the wildness. So she has a mess of a yard: clover, creeping charlie, violets. And she wants it that way - prefers that to a golf course look. Plus it is good for the bees.
In fairness, it would be hard to make it perfect anyway, with two huge shade trees that dominate both front and back yard, and neighbors on all sides with crappy overrun lawns too. She has some bare spots too, at the moment, from heavy rains.
So my question: is there a process or system to manage this kind of lawn? I'd like to have some healthy grass to coexist with the other stuff, and be more green and lush, even if there is a lot of the other "weeds" in it. And healthy grass will just out-compete some of that too, which is fine and dandy. Are there specific types of grass that would work better?
I was pretty good with what, when, and how on my old lawn to make it look traditionally nice. But this is a different deal...
OK, I may get buried alive for this, but I have to ask, and maybe someone here has some experience with it.
The gf is not a fan of manicured lawns- having grown up on a farm, she likes the wildness. So she has a mess of a yard: clover, creeping charlie, violets. And she wants it that way - prefers that to a golf course look. Plus it is good for the bees.
In fairness, it would be hard to make it perfect anyway, with two huge shade trees that dominate both front and back yard, and neighbors on all sides with crappy overrun lawns too. She has some bare spots too, at the moment, from heavy rains.
So my question: is there a process or system to manage this kind of lawn? I'd like to have some healthy grass to coexist with the other stuff, and be more green and lush, even if there is a lot of the other "weeds" in it. And healthy grass will just out-compete some of that too, which is fine and dandy. Are there specific types of grass that would work better?
I was pretty good with what, when, and how on my old lawn to make it look traditionally nice. But this is a different deal...
May not be completely helpful but can try to point in the right direction. Find a grass that will take extreme shade and hopefully a slower grower so it stays shorter for a longer period of time. Mowing your grass higher will help to establish the grass, so that allows you to make her happy by having a look or more unkept. Unless you are using a push mower then you will be cursing this style.
Use that grass seed to fill in the areas by the trees and then keep moving killing off and reseeding areas on the outside perimeter of what you have established, keep going until she finally puts her foot down and see how far you get.
I was thinking the same thing - seed the lawn with a shade grass. Maybe one of the fine fescues? Creeping red or chewing fescue come to mind. I guess tall fescues would work in shade as well, but those might look too "golf course"-ish.
I dug up some sod today to resod the side of my driveway and notice a couple of grubs. When is the best time to apply grub control? only saw a couple in a 2' x 7' area.
So, late last year I noticed some dead spots starting on one side of my property. This year, the 3 main spots all seem similar in that it is just DEAD - no weeds, nothing. I took a photo of one because there seems to be some coaxial cable hardware that was just below the surface - thinking of contacting mediacom about that..
Anyway, any ideas on what caused this? Or what kinds of things to check for? View attachment 64336
We had a large tree in our back yard cut down last fall and the guy mulched the tree and left it in a pile where the stump was. He said it would settle over the winter. A couple of weeks ago I took 25 wheelbarrows of the crap out of it, and leveled the area out. Put the wood mulch around the back of the garage. Wife is hoping she can plant some type of flowers in it.
My wife talked to the gal that sprays our yard today, and she said that I have to get all the old ground up tree mulch out of the hole, and fill it in with dirt to get grass to grow there.
My question is will grass grow in this ground up mulch or do I have a ton more work to do, digging it out and filling in the hole with dirt.