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#1
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overwater after fertilizing ?
I fertilized my fescue lawn, just as it began to rain Monday. So far, it has
rained 12 inches in the last two days in my area. Would the chemicals have sunk too far into the ground, or will it work ? I'm in the foothills of LA. |
#2
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More likely the fertilizer got washed away.
"Me" wrote in message ... I fertilized my fescue lawn, just as it began to rain Monday. So far, it has rained 12 inches in the last two days in my area. Would the chemicals have sunk too far into the ground, or will it work ? I'm in the foothills of LA. |
#3
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In article , "Me" wrote:
I fertilized my fescue lawn, just as it began to rain Monday. So far, it has rained 12 inches in the last two days in my area. Would the chemicals have sunk too far into the ground, or will it work ? The fertilizer is probably in somebody's drinking water by now. In other words, it either went into the soil if you have good percolation, or it went down the road if you don't. 12 inches is very extreme. -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman |
#4
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I don't believe it went down the road by the design of the house. However, I
wasn't sure if it went too deep into the soil from the amount of water. |
#5
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Me wrote:
I don't believe it went down the road by the design of the house. However, I wasn't sure if it went too deep into the soil from the amount of water. If you had 12" of rain in two days, and it didn't run-off someplace, then you live on sand. Not sandy soil. Sand. No other ground type could absorb that much water in such a short period of time. Whether that run-off was to the "road" or some other drainage path isn't the point. The point is that most of what you put down has run-off. It didn't go "too deep into the soil". -- Warren H. ========== Disclaimer: My views reflect those of myself, and not my employer, my friends, nor (as she often tells me) my wife. Any resemblance to the views of anybody living or dead is coincidental. No animals were hurt in the writing of this response -- unless you count my dog who desperately wants to go outside now. Spend your Amazon Gift Certificates at my site: http://www.holzemville.com/mall/ |
#6
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On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 13:04:26 -0800, "Me" wrote:
I fertilized my fescue lawn, just as it began to rain Monday. So far, it has rained 12 inches in the last two days in my area. Would the chemicals have sunk too far into the ground, or will it work ? I'm in the foothills of LA. That's a lot of rain. How much washed away will depend on many factors. If your lawn greens up in a week, you'll know it's working. |
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