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#1
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Alien? grass
Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like:
"What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer |
#2
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JKevorkian wrote:
Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer It sounds like nutsedge. (also called nutgrass) -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#3
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"JKevorkian" wrote in message ... Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer I think I have that, too. The weeds I have fit your description and seem to be a bulb. You can pull them up individually like a bulb and they sprout in June/July and go down with the first frost. I tried to spot kill them with weed-be gone type stuff but no luck. Roundup barely kills them and that is ineffective in the lawn but works when it spreads to the beds. Grinch |
#4
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"Grinch" wrote:
I tried to spot kill them with weed-be gone type stuff but no luck. Roundup barely kills them and that is ineffective in the lawn but works when it spreads to the beds. Grinch Try something that's listed for nutsedge control. do it when it's below 85 degrees and no rain in the forecast within 12 to 24 hours. -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#5
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Sound like annual bluegrass. There is no selective herbicide available that can
deal with that stuff. It usually dries out when it gets hot.. JKevorkian wrote: Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer |
#6
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Sir Topham Hatt wrote:
Sound like annual bluegrass. There is no selective herbicide available that can deal with that stuff. It usually dries out when it gets hot.. Even after reading this from his description? --------------------------------------- They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, JKevorkian wrote: --------------------------------------- It sounds like nutsedge. Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#7
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If the tips of the grass looks like the bow of a boat, its poa annua (annual
bluegrass) http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu...LC:en%26sa%3DN Steveo wrote: Sir Topham Hatt wrote: Sound like annual bluegrass. There is no selective herbicide available that can deal with that stuff. It usually dries out when it gets hot.. Even after reading this from his description? --------------------------------------- They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, JKevorkian wrote: --------------------------------------- It sounds like nutsedge. Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer |
#8
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If the tips of the grass looks like the bow of a boat, its poa annua
(annual bluegrass) The stuff growing in my yard is not poa. It is some kind of bulb-like stuff. Much thicker (wider blade) than poa and clumpier. |
#9
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Sir Topham Hatt wrote:
If the tips of the grass looks like the bow of a boat, its poa annua (annual bluegrass) http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu....edu/teaching/ NRES300/weed%2520photo3/poa%2520annua%2520mature.gif&imgrefurl=http://www .turf.uiuc.edu/teaching/NRES300/fall%2520weeds.htm&h=330&w=500&sz=85&tbni d=Cpo8T6Q7GzoJ:&tbnh=83&tbnw=127&hl=en&start=3&pre v=/images%3Fq%3Dpoa%2Ba nnua%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26rls%3DGGLC,G GLC:1969-53, GGLC:en%26sa%3DN Steveo wrote: Poa DOES NOT grow twice as fast or have an extremely wide blade. In fact poa is for the most part dead right now! It will be germinating again soon. Read the OP before making a guess diagnosis, or explain how his poa is growing twice as fast as his desirable turf at this time of year? (top posting blows) Sir Topham Hatt wrote: Sound like annual bluegrass. There is no selective herbicide available that can deal with that stuff. It usually dries out when it gets hot.. Even after reading this from his description? --------------------------------------- They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, JKevorkian wrote: --------------------------------------- It sounds like nutsedge. Some time ago, I read an article in this group titled something like: "What grass is this?", where the poster asked about a strange grass that was coming up in his newly planted lawn. For the life of me, I've Googled for that, or any article similar to no avail. This past spring I dug up my entire backyard, tilled it, and spread new topsoil and grass seed from our local nursery. The seed was a mixture of blue, rye and fescue and started to sprout within 8 days of sowing. At first, it showed great promise, within a month was looking quite lush and dark green, with an occasional light green blade popping up here and there. Now, 2-½ months later, those light green blades are spreading everywhere. They grow twice as fast as the dark green stuff, the blades are extremely wide in comparison, and really detract from the appearance. I just mowed on Saturday evening, and already those buggers are ½ to ¾ inch taller than the surrounding grass. So, what grass is this, and how can I get rid of it? Tom & Donna Flyer -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#10
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"Grinch" wrote:
If the tips of the grass looks like the bow of a boat, its poa annua (annual bluegrass) The stuff growing in my yard is not poa. It is some kind of bulb-like stuff. Much thicker (wider blade) than poa and clumpier. Does it look like nutsedge? http://tinyurl.com/9jl4d -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#11
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Does it look like nutsedge? http://tinyurl.com/9jl4d Congrats Steveo. That's the stuff. Selective killers don't kill it and Roundup barely kills it and destroys the rest of the lawn. It's fairly easy to pull and I've pulled 326 with just 3,442,993 to go. Any way to keep this from coming back next year ? |
#12
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On Wed, 03 Aug 2005 04:29:45 GMT, "Grinch" wrote:
Congrats Steveo. That's the stuff. Selective killers don't kill it and Roundup barely kills it and destroys the rest of the lawn. It's fairly easy to pull and I've pulled 326 with just 3,442,993 to go. Any way to keep this from coming back next year ? I'm the OP, and yes, that's the stuff alright. Tried Bayer's crabgrass killer, which has little affect. Fortunately, we have a smallish lawn, and there's only 2,334,582 plants to pull.. As Grinch asked, "Any way to keep this from coming back next year ?" Tom & Donna Flyer |
#13
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"Grinch" wrote:
Does it look like nutsedge? http://tinyurl.com/9jl4d Congrats Steveo. That's the stuff. Selective killers don't kill it and Roundup barely kills it and destroys the rest of the lawn. It's fairly easy to pull and I've pulled 326 with just 3,442,993 to go. Any way to keep this from coming back next year ? Not really, spraying with Manage nocks it down fairly well with minimal turf damage. -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
#14
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JKevorkian wrote:
On Wed, 03 Aug 2005 04:29:45 GMT, "Grinch" wrote: Congrats Steveo. That's the stuff. Selective killers don't kill it and Roundup barely kills it and destroys the rest of the lawn. It's fairly easy to pull and I've pulled 326 with just 3,442,993 to go. Any way to keep this from coming back next year ? I'm the OP, and yes, that's the stuff alright. Tried Bayer's crabgrass killer, which has little affect. Fortunately, we have a smallish lawn, and there's only 2,334,582 plants to pull.. As Grinch asked, "Any way to keep this from coming back next year ?" Tom & Donna Flyer Manage or MSMA works ok on it. Don't do it if your turf is already stressed from heat/drought tho. Follow the label closely. (you have them counted?) -- http://NewsReader.Com/ |
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