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Old 12-04-2007, 01:19 AM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
Kyle Boatright Kyle Boatright is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 31
Default Late frost and bermuda


"robv60" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Apr 10, 11:07 pm, "Kyle Boatright" wrote:
I'm in your same situation - late frost here in N. GA. The only
difference
is that I have Zoysia, which was mostly green.

The thing to remember is that it is almost impossible to kill bermuda.
The
only thing that seems to slow it down is shade. So, simply take out the
mower, mow the grass down low, and it'll come back in a week or two.
Once
it is nice and green, fertilize. In your bare spots, why are the spots
bare? Shade? Packed soil? Traffic? Unless something bad is happening
in
those spots or they are large (say a couple of feet across), the bermuda
will probably cover the areas this summer assuming you mow often,
fertilize,
and water.

If you need to re-seed bermuda, you probably need to wait until mid-May.
Right now, the soil temperatures probably won't give you a good
germination
rate.

KB


My guess is the bare areas are a mixture of shade and somewhat
compacted soil. There is a tree on either side of my yard that the
bermuda has trouble growing under. These areas are usually the slowest
to green up and tend to be somewhat thin, not bare, but thin, The
branches of the trees arent real low but do cast some "filtered"
shade. The trees are both in flowerbeds but the branches hang over the
grass some. I recently aerated the lawn, a little early I know, but it
was the only time I could get the aerator for a while and the grass
was growing pretty well already so I figured it would be ok (albeit
not the ideal time) to aerate. I have a feeling the bare spots will
never look like I want them to unless I have the trees taken out.
Worst case, I may eventually expand the flower beds out into the yard
to cover the areas where the grass in thin.



That's probably your solution...