Overseeding?
Never had a problem. Just how far north do you need to be. I am in mid
Ohio and while a few people have reported them around here, they have not
bothered me and it has been years since I have used any pesticide on my lawn
--
Joseph E. Meehan
26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math
"BT" wrote in message
...
If you have Chinch bugs then you either use tons of pesticide or you
overseed
every year just to try and keep up with the voracious insects. The
northern
chinch bugs tend to fly from one area to another quite readily unlike the
more
"stay in one place" ones in southern climes, so pesticides won't get rid
of
chinch bugs in the north anyways. Newer types of lawn grass seed with
endophytes
can be used to overseed infested areas and have proved to be very chinch
bug
resistant. You have to overseed every year though...
BT
"Joseph Meehan" wrote in message
...
In another thread "overseeding" was noted as if it were standard
maintenance practice.
My experience is limited to Ohio and I am sure there are differences
in
different areas, but is this standard practice? From personal
experience I
have never seen this useful except for specific problems.
Why would a healthy lawn require or benefit from overseeding?
--
Joseph E. Meehan
26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math
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