April gardening tips

Lawn care in April
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Lawn care in April

April is a good time to plant grass seed in zones 4-6. Grass likes cool, wet weather for germination. Even a little snow won’t hurt it. But do water it if spring is dry. If piles of snow lingered a long time or puddles of water sat for many days you may have dead areas on the lawn which will need to be re-seeded. If your lawn is up and growing mow it when it gets about 3 ½ inches long and only remove about a ½ to ¾ inch or a third of the grass blade at a time. This keeps the grass green, healthy and dense.

April is also a good month to fertilize lawns in zones 4-6. Apply 3 pounds per 1,000 square feet of a high nitrogen fertilizer, generally labeled lawn fertilizer. (Nitrogen percentage is the first number on a fertilizer bag.) Follow the label directions. Some fertilizers also contain weed killers or preventers, such as crabgrass preventers.

Lawn grub control tip. Some fertilizers also contain grub or insect controls. Do not apple these products unless you know you have a grub problem. However, in zones 4-6 grub control products containing imidacloprid, thiamethoxam,or halofenozide will not work to control grubs in the spring, regardless of what the bag says. By the time summer comes when they would work, their effectiveness has greatly diminished if applied in April. Apply these products in June or July for better results. Products containing chorantraniliprole can be applied now but won’t work until later in the summer. Read the label to find out what ingredients are in the bag.

If you feel you have a bad grub problem in early spring, because you can actually see grubs at the grass roots you can apply a product that has carbaryl ( Sevin) and/or trichlorfon as active ingredients. They will reduce the grub population but aren’t as effective as applying the correct product in June and July. Michigan State University turf experts say that these products; lambda-cyhalothrin, gamma-cyhalothrin, bifenthrin, deltamethrin, cyfluthrin or permethrin do not kill grubs, although they may kill other insects on the soil surface.

Remember that all pesticides can kill good as well as bad insects and other organisms such as earthworms. They can also be harmful to children and pets. Don’t use pesticides unless you absolutely have to, and then use them only as directed on the label. Don’t buy fertilizers with pesticides included “just in case.” You’ll save money and the environment.

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, Detroit Gardening Examiner

Kim Willis lives near Clifford, Michigan on a small farm that she shares with her husband and numerous animals. She works at the Lapeer County MSU Extension office and is a freelance country and garden writer. Her book Complete Idiots Guide® to Country Living was published in November 2008. Her...