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Make plans now to join Melinda on her famous Garden Walks at Boerner Botanical Gardens in 2013! Download the schedule here.
Nationally renowned garden expert Melinda Myers helps everyday gardeners find success and ease in the garden through her Melinda’s Garden Moments radio segments. Melinda shares “must have” tips that hold the key to gardening success, learned through her more than 30 years of horticulture experience. Listeners from across the country find her gardener friendly, practical approach to gardening both refreshing and informative! On this page, Melinda shares some more extensive garden tips, which expand on the information provided in her one-minute radio segments.
New tips are added throughout each month, providing timely step-by-step tips on what you need to do next in your garden! Visit Melinda’s website www.melindamyers.com for more gardening tips, how-to videos, podcasts and answers to your questions.
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Fall Lawn Fertilization
by Melinda Myers
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posted Aug 13 2012 11:58AM
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Fall is the perfect time to help your lawn recover from the stressors of summer and prepare for winter.
Fall fertilization with a low nitrogen slow release fertilizer, like Milorganite, helps lawns recover from summer stress, encourages root growth, thickens your grass stand, and prepares the lawn for winter. Plus, it won’t damage already stressed lawns.
Northern gardeners growing cool season grasses like Kentucky bluegrass, fescue, and ryegrass should make one application around Labor Day and their last application sometime between Halloween and Thanksgiving, but before the ground freezes.
Those in the south growing Bermuda, St Augustine and other warm weather grasses can make their last fertilization about one month before the lawn goes dormant. That’s about the time of the first killing frost. Fertilizing later can result in winter damage.
And always sweep any clippings, fertilizer and other debris off walks and drives to prevent them from entering our waterways and eventually our drinking water.
A bit more information: Continue to mow your lawn high and for as long as it continues to grow in fall. There’s no need to cut the lawn shorter for winter unless you are in an area subject to winter diseases.
For more gardening tips, how-to videos, podcasts and more, visit www.melindamyers.com
Tags : Locations : Kentucky
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