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Old 30-03-2005, 04:55 AM
Phisherman
 
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I applied crabgrass preventer 7 days ago. The guideline is to apply
it within 5 days of seeing the first dandilion blooms. I might see one
or two dandilion blooms on my yard, but lots more in the
neighborhood--that tells me it's the right time. Today's crabgrass
preventer has a slightly different directions than those used years
ago. I'm in zone 7 and usually apply the crabgrass preventer close to
March 20.

On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 15:36:52 -0600, "Play4abuck"
wrote:

x-no-archive: yes


I bet this is an annual question. I think I have been applying mine to
early, usually after my grass has started to grow and I have mowed it once
or twice.

Here is what I found during my quest for knowledge today! I was hoping to
find a straight forward answer, like some soil temp, but even that advice
varies.

-Start taking your lawn soil's temperature early in the morning. When it
reaches 55 degrees, apply crabgrass preventer.

-Apply crabgrass preventer as soon as established tall fescue and Kentucky
bluegrass lawns green up and start growing well.

-Crabgrass preventer halts the seed-sprouting process. If applied after this
year's crabgrass germinates, it will have no effect. The only exception to
this rule is a rather new product - dithiopyr - sold in a
herbicide-fertilizer mix called Dimension.

-Apply when temperatures reach around 70 degrees for a consistant period of
time, typically for more than 2 or three days.

-Apply in early spring before weeds sprout (before temperatures are
regularly in the 80's).

-When the forsythia bushes starting to flower, or the redbud trees start to
bud, or before the dandelion weed puffs and spreads. (Hell, I don't have
any of these in my yard!)

Anyone want to add their $.02?

Cheers,
Jim