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The instructor 21-04-2014 06:29 PM

How often should I put iron on my lawn
 
In the professional turf. Industry iron is applied every 4- 6 weeks how often do you think a household lawn needs it?

Moe DeLoughan[_2_] 22-04-2014 02:21 PM

How often should I put iron on my lawn
 
On 4/21/2014 12:29 PM, The instructor wrote:
In the professional turf. Industry iron is applied every 4- 6 weeks
how often do you think a household lawn needs it?


It depends upon your soil. Iron tends to be fairly plentiful in most
soils, but its availability to plants is dependent mainly upon soil
pH, and to a lesser degree on the soil temperature and degree of root
development. Before adding a soil amendment, it is always recommended
to have a soil sample tested to determine what, if anything, you need
to add.

Soils with a higher pH tend to tie up more iron in the soil, so
supplementing with iron can be useful. If your soil isn't in the
alkaline range, adding iron may make little to no difference to the
lawn. In the long run, you'd see better results by lowering the soil pH.

Adding an iron supplement to an higher-pH soil through a top-dressing
treatment, such as an iron-supplemented fertilizer, works only for a
few weeks because the added iron will quickly be tied up in the soil.
Thus, if soil conditions require it, it may need to be regularly
applied through the growing season. However, as the soil warms and
bacterial activity and root growth increases, the amount of iron
uptake in plants increases. For that reason, a home owner with an
alkaline soil may be satisfied with limiting iron supplementation to
the spring season.

Tl;dr: don't assume you need to add iron until you have had your soil
tested and have determined its pH.

mike[_9_] 22-04-2014 04:31 PM

How often should I put iron on my lawn
 
On 4/22/2014 6:21 AM, Moe DeLoughan wrote:
On 4/21/2014 12:29 PM, The instructor wrote:
In the professional turf. Industry iron is applied every 4- 6 weeks
how often do you think a household lawn needs it?


It depends upon your soil. Iron tends to be fairly plentiful in most
soils, but its availability to plants is dependent mainly upon soil pH,
and to a lesser degree on the soil temperature and degree of root
development. Before adding a soil amendment, it is always recommended to
have a soil sample tested to determine what, if anything, you need to add.

Soils with a higher pH tend to tie up more iron in the soil, so
supplementing with iron can be useful. If your soil isn't in the
alkaline range, adding iron may make little to no difference to the
lawn. In the long run, you'd see better results by lowering the soil pH.

Adding an iron supplement to an higher-pH soil through a top-dressing
treatment, such as an iron-supplemented fertilizer, works only for a few
weeks because the added iron will quickly be tied up in the soil. Thus,
if soil conditions require it, it may need to be regularly applied
through the growing season. However, as the soil warms and bacterial
activity and root growth increases, the amount of iron uptake in plants
increases. For that reason, a home owner with an alkaline soil may be
satisfied with limiting iron supplementation to the spring season.

Tl;dr: don't assume you need to add iron until you have had your soil
tested and have determined its pH.


I had the same question, but for a different reason.
I have a lot of moss.
Iron gets rid of it.
But I expect too much harms the grass???
How much is too much?


Moe DeLoughan 22-04-2014 10:04 PM

How often should I put iron on my lawn
 
On 4/22/2014 10:31 AM, mike wrote:
On 4/22/2014 6:21 AM, Moe DeLoughan wrote:
On 4/21/2014 12:29 PM, The instructor wrote:
In the professional turf. Industry iron is applied every 4- 6 weeks
how often do you think a household lawn needs it?


It depends upon your soil. Iron tends to be fairly plentiful in most
soils, but its availability to plants is dependent mainly upon soil pH,
and to a lesser degree on the soil temperature and degree of root
development. Before adding a soil amendment, it is always
recommended to
have a soil sample tested to determine what, if anything, you need
to add.

Soils with a higher pH tend to tie up more iron in the soil, so
supplementing with iron can be useful. If your soil isn't in the
alkaline range, adding iron may make little to no difference to the
lawn. In the long run, you'd see better results by lowering the soil
pH.

Adding an iron supplement to an higher-pH soil through a top-dressing
treatment, such as an iron-supplemented fertilizer, works only for a
few
weeks because the added iron will quickly be tied up in the soil. Thus,
if soil conditions require it, it may need to be regularly applied
through the growing season. However, as the soil warms and bacterial
activity and root growth increases, the amount of iron uptake in plants
increases. For that reason, a home owner with an alkaline soil may be
satisfied with limiting iron supplementation to the spring season.

Tl;dr: don't assume you need to add iron until you have had your soil
tested and have determined its pH.


I had the same question, but for a different reason.
I have a lot of moss.
Iron gets rid of it.
But I expect too much harms the grass???
How much is too much?


A better (longer-term) solution to your moss problem is to improve
soil drainage by reducing compaction. Core aeration helps. You'll hear
talk about applying gypsum to loosen soils; realistically, that only
works when applied (and mixed into) the soil at a heavy rate.
Top-dressing a lawn with gypsum won't cut it.

As for iron applications and potential harm to the lawn, most types of
iron supplements won't have a harmful effect, with the possible
exception of ammonium sulphate. That's a nitrate fertilizer that will
also lower soil pH; over-apply any nitrogen fertilizer and you risk
burning the lawn.

Remember, iron is the fourth most common element on earth; so it's
almost never an issue of there being insufficient iron in the soil.
It's that other circumstances - usually soil pH - limit the amount of
that iron that plants can take up.


The instructor 22-04-2014 10:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike[_9_] (Post 1001149)
On 4/22/2014 6:21 AM, Moe DeLoughan wrote:
On 4/21/2014 12:29 PM, The instructor wrote:
In the professional turf. Industry iron is applied every 4- 6 weeks
how often do you think a household lawn needs it?


It depends upon your soil. Iron tends to be fairly plentiful in most
soils, but its availability to plants is dependent mainly upon soil pH,
and to a lesser degree on the soil temperature and degree of root
development. Before adding a soil amendment, it is always recommended to
have a soil sample tested to determine what, if anything, you need to add.

Soils with a higher pH tend to tie up more iron in the soil, so
supplementing with iron can be useful. If your soil isn't in the
alkaline range, adding iron may make little to no difference to the
lawn. In the long run, you'd see better results by lowering the soil pH.

Adding an iron supplement to an higher-pH soil through a top-dressing
treatment, such as an iron-supplemented fertilizer, works only for a few
weeks because the added iron will quickly be tied up in the soil. Thus,
if soil conditions require it, it may need to be regularly applied
through the growing season. However, as the soil warms and bacterial
activity and root growth increases, the amount of iron uptake in plants
increases. For that reason, a home owner with an alkaline soil may be
satisfied with limiting iron supplementation to the spring season.

Tl;dr: don't assume you need to add iron until you have had your soil
tested and have determined its pH.


I had the same question, but for a different reason.
I have a lot of moss.
Iron gets rid of it.
But I expect too much harms the grass???
How much is too much?

Yeah too much will weaken and thin out the grass. Every 4-6 weeks was for high intens sports turf on a sandy rootzone which is prone to losing nutrients. While I agree with the answer given, it is always a good starting point to know ur soil PH, I don't know of many people who would do it to determine iron use, most people like yourself only apply it to. control Moss. If you are applying Iron Sulphate then 15g per meter squared is adequare to control a minor Miss problem. If you have lots of Mossi then you can apply iron to weaken it but it will not get rid of it. Physical removal through scarifying will have to be done..


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