I think you want something with 5% iron right?
I think you want something with 5% iron right?
Last edited by Irving; 05-13-2018 at 16:28.
"There are no finger prints under water."
doesn't matter much. Ironite is the local brand, everyone makes/sells something similar. It's not fertilizer, it's just iron and some other minerals.
https://www.pennington.com/all-produ...-by-pennington
oh and make sure you get it off the concrete. it stains. (rust color, imagine that. :-) )
Brian H
Longmont CO
"I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do."
I mowed grass for a living back in my late teen years.. Mulch it, we never picked it up, in the spring do a deep clean/raking and aeration, the mulch will protect the grass/roots during the colder/dryer winter months. We even mostly just mulched the leaves in the fall unless there was an extreme amount of them. If the grass is really long it's best to cut it once at a higher height and take a second cut a little shorter. Change your mowing directions each time you mow. When it's dryer out cut it at a longer length, it will put less stress on it, it kills me when people cut their grass as if it's a putting green during the heat of the summer then have to water it daily to keep it from dieing.
Last edited by def90; 05-13-2018 at 19:37.
I heard if you get picked up with bagged grass you can get busted for intent to distribute.
"There are no finger prints under water."
I used to bag all of the time because the wife made me do it.
Now she’s starting to learn who the boss is and I can get away with doing things my way.
I haven’t bagged the grass for about three years now and the only difference that I can tell is yard work takes less time and I don’t have an entire trash can full of lawn clippings to roll out to the curb every week.
Other than that I don’t see a difference in my lawn either way.
I do like to think my “mulch layer” helps to hold moisture in the soil on those hot days.