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Turf: Selection, Establishment, and Maintenance

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Title: Turf: Selection, Establishment, and Maintenance


1
Chapter 13
  • Turf Selection, Establishment, and Maintenance

2
  • Turfgrasses are among the oldest species used by
    human beings to fashion the outdoors into
    residential and recreational areas that suit
    their needs.
  • Today, full-service lawn care corporations are
    leading profit makers among landscape
    professionals.
  • The main reason for the ongoing interest in
    turfgrass and improved turf care is because
    nothing has ever surpassed a top-quality lawn as
    the ideal outdoor surface.

3
  • Residential use is the term used to describe turf
    associated with private homes, estates, and
    apartment and condominium complexes.
  • Commercial use is the term used to describe turf
    associated with corporate landscapes, shopping
    centers, and office buildings.
  • Municipal is the term used to describe turf
    associated with civic buildings, community
    centers, highway dividers, and airports.
  • Recreational use us the term used to describe
    turf associated with parks, golf courses, country
    clubs, stadiums, and athletic fields.

4
Can you label these?
5
  • Correct selection of turfgrass for landscape
    requires knowledge of
  • Landscapes
  • Geographic regions
  • Soil types
  • Altitudes
  • Environmental conditions

6
  • Turfgrasses are monocotyledons, meaning they have
    only one seed leaf in the embryo, whose growing
    point is at the crown near the soil.
  • One of the objectives of good turfgrass
    management is to encourage growth as quickly and
    as uniformly as possible.

7
Different ways grass produce new shoots
  • Rhizome-producing (rhizomatous) the shoots
    produced beneath the soils surface and send new
    plants to the surface.
  • Stolon-producing (stoloniferous) the shoots
    produced extend outward from the parent plant
    along the surface of the soil.
  • Bunch-type new lateral shoots termed tillers
    are produced from axillary buds within the leaf
    sheath.

8
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9
  • Rhizomatous and stoloniferous grasses tend to
    reproduce more quickly and evenly than bunch-type
    grasses.
  • Leaf texture is mostly a measure of the width of
    the leaf blade. The wider the blade the coarser
    the texture.
  • Generally, fine textured grasses are considered
    more attractive.

10
  • Density refers to the number of aerial leaf
    shoots that a single plant or species produce.
  • Seed size varies greatly among grass species.
    Fine-textured grasses have small seeds
    coarse-textured grasses usually have much smaller.

11
Categories of Grasses
  • Cool-season grasses favored by daytime
    temperatures of 60 75 degrees F.
  • Warm-season grasses favored by daytime
    temperatures of 80 95 degrees F.

12
  • Purity the percentage, by weight of pure grass
    seed.
  • Percent germination the percentage of the pure
    seed that was capable of germination on the date
    tested.
  • Crop seed the percentage by weight of cash crop
    seeds in the mixture. These are undesirable for
    lawns.

13
  • Weeds the percentage by weight of weed seeds in
    the mixture.
  • Noxious weeds this is usually the number of
    noxious weeds per pound or ounce of weed seeds.
  • Inert material the percentage, by weight, of
    material in the package that will not grow.

14
  • Grass seed is commonly formulated as either a
    mixture or a blend. A mixture combines two or
    more cultivars of a single species. A blend
    combines two or more different species of grass.
  • 3 factors to consider when deciding installation
    method
  • Species of grass
  • The type of site
  • Immediacy of the need for usable turf

15
  • Four methods of installing turfgrass
  • Seeding
  • Sodding
  • Plugging
  • Sprigging and stolonizing

16
  • Seeding is the most common and least expensive
    method of establishing a lawn.
  • A hydroseeder is a spraying device that applies
    seed, water, fertilizer, and mulch
    simultaneously.
  • Sod is established turf which is moved from one
    location to another.

17
  • Plugging is the most common method of installing
    lawns in the southern sections of the U.S.
  • A sprig is a piece of grass shoot.
  • Stolonizing is a form of sprigging. The sprigs
    are broadcast over the site, covered slightly
    with soil, then rolled or disked.

18
Six steps to a successful lawn
  • Plant at the proper time of year.
  • Provide the proper drainage and grading.
  • Condition the soil properly.
  • Apply fresh, vigorous seed, sod, plugs, or
    sprigs.
  • Provide adequate moisture to promote rapid
    establishment of the lawn.
  • Mow the new lawn to its correct height.

19
  • Grading can alter level land so that is slopes
    slightly.
  • Proper drainage permits the water to move slowly
    into the soil to the turfs root system where it
    can be absorbed, yet pass beyond the root zone
    before it collects and does harm to the plants.
  • Drainage is critical to the survival of the lawn,
    no matter what the species.

20
  • Most turfgrasses grow best in a loam or sandy
    loam soil with a pH that is neutral to slightly
    acidic. (7.0 to 6.5)
  • Proper seeding is applied to the prepared soil in
    a manner that will distribute the recommended
    quantity evenly otherwise, a patchy lawn
    develops.

21
  • Proper installation of sod includes installing
    sod as soon as possible to its cutting. Keep the
    soil moist, and do not try and stretch the
    strips.
  • Proper plugging includes setting them into the
    conditioned soil at regular intervals (12-18 in.)
    and in staggered rows to maximize coverage.
  • Proper sprig installation requires planting two
    to three inches deep in rows 8 to 12 inches
    apart. Distribute evenly over the prepared soil
    and push down into soil with a stick.

22
  • The soil and developing grasses should not be
    allowed to dry until the new grass is about two
    inches tall.
  • The first objective when mowing a lawn for the
    first time is to encourage horizontal branching
    of the new grass as quickly as possible.

23
Two types of spreaders
  • Rotary dispenses the material from a closed
    hamper onto a rotating plate that then propels it
    outward in a semicircular patter.
  • Drop spreader dispenses the material through
    holes in the bottom of the hamper as it is pushed
    across the lawn.

24
  • Windy days are not suitable for calibration.
  • Patching is warranted where bare spots are at
    least one foot in diameter.
  • Aeration of the lawn is the addition of air to
    the soil.
  • Proper aeration cuts into the soil about three
    inches deep and either removes plugs of the soil
    or slices it into thin furrows. These holes allow
    for better air flow into the soil.

25
  • Vertical mowing is a technique that can break up
    the soil plugs left by an aerator or even remove
    excess thatch if necessary.
  • Lawns should be fertilized just before they need
    the nutrients for their growth.
  • Cool-season grasses should be fertilized early
    spring and early fall.
  • Warm-season grasses should be fertilized in late
    spring.

26
  • To obtain the fullest benefit from fertilizer, it
    should be applied in an amount the turfgrass can
    use fully before it reaches beyond the root zone.
  • Turfgrasses are among the first plants to suffer
    from lack of water since they have shallow roots
    as compared to trees and shrubs.
  • The best time of day to water lawns is early in
    the morning.

27
  • Watering early morning is most efficient because
    watering late in the day will result in greater
    evaporation. Watering in the early evening or
    later can promote disease because turf pathogens
    thrive in lawns that remain moist late in the
    evening.

28
Three types of Mowers
  • Flail used for utility and stabilization
    turfgrasses that are only cut a few times a year.
  • Reel blades rotate in the same motion as the
    wheel.

29
Cont.d
  • Rotary blades move like a ceiling fan, cutting
    the grass off as they revolve.

30
  • Not to be confused with patching, overseeding is
    the planting of new seed into an established turf
    area to extend its time of use.
  • Selectivity is an important characteristic of
    turf herbicides so that the desirable grasses are
    not damaged by the control effort.

31
  • Weeds are only one of the pests that affect turf
    installations.
  • With turf, as with any crop, the best defense
    against most pests is the selection of resistant
    varieties and the creation of a growth
    environment that favors the turfgrass more than
    pest.
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