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Old 29-02-2004, 04:28 PM
Suzie
 
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Default getting rid of rust on the lawn

I've been told by my garden centre guy that I've got rust on my lawn.
He's given me ant killer as he reckons this is the cause - not over
watering or lack of nutrients.
I've followed the instructions yet have seen no improvement (over 2
months) Nor have I seen many ants!
The symptoms are as follows, the blades of the grass get small marks on
them and then seem to lose their colour until finally dying.
I have two variants of lawn and only the Kikuyu lawn seems affected
whereas the Buffalo isn't effected at all.

Does this sound like lawn rust? Any idea as to what I can do to over
come the problem. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in Advance,
Suzie.



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Old 01-03-2004, 01:18 AM
Drew Jaegle
 
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Default getting rid of rust on the lawn

Don't know if it is rust or not. When you walk through the grass with white
tennis shoes, does the front of them turn orange? That is a sure sign of
rust. Rust is a common signal of low nitrogen. I would fertilize.

Good luck!
"Suzie" wrote in message
...
I've been told by my garden centre guy that I've got rust on my lawn.
He's given me ant killer as he reckons this is the cause - not over
watering or lack of nutrients.
I've followed the instructions yet have seen no improvement (over 2
months) Nor have I seen many ants!
The symptoms are as follows, the blades of the grass get small marks on
them and then seem to lose their colour until finally dying.
I have two variants of lawn and only the Kikuyu lawn seems affected
whereas the Buffalo isn't effected at all.

Does this sound like lawn rust? Any idea as to what I can do to over
come the problem. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in Advance,
Suzie.





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Old 01-03-2004, 01:22 AM
Drew Jaegle
 
Posts: n/a
Default getting rid of rust on the lawn

Don't know if it is rust or not. When you walk through the grass with white
tennis shoes, does the front of them turn orange? That is a sure sign of
rust. Rust is a common signal of low nitrogen. I would fertilize.

Good luck!
"Suzie" wrote in message
...
I've been told by my garden centre guy that I've got rust on my lawn.
He's given me ant killer as he reckons this is the cause - not over
watering or lack of nutrients.
I've followed the instructions yet have seen no improvement (over 2
months) Nor have I seen many ants!
The symptoms are as follows, the blades of the grass get small marks on
them and then seem to lose their colour until finally dying.
I have two variants of lawn and only the Kikuyu lawn seems affected
whereas the Buffalo isn't effected at all.

Does this sound like lawn rust? Any idea as to what I can do to over
come the problem. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in Advance,
Suzie.





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Old 29-03-2004, 07:05 AM
Graeme Nichols
 
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Default getting rid of rust on the lawn

Suzie wrote:
I've been told by my garden centre guy that I've got rust on my lawn.
He's given me ant killer as he reckons this is the cause - not over
watering or lack of nutrients.
I've followed the instructions yet have seen no improvement (over 2
months) Nor have I seen many ants!
The symptoms are as follows, the blades of the grass get small marks on
them and then seem to lose their colour until finally dying.
I have two variants of lawn and only the Kikuyu lawn seems affected
whereas the Buffalo isn't effected at all.

Does this sound like lawn rust? Any idea as to what I can do to over
come the problem. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in Advance,
Suzie.


Suzie, I don't want to be the bearer of bad news but you MAY have a
fungus disease known as "kikuyu yellows". As a retired grazier whose
improved pastures were kikuyu I have never heard of 'rust' on kikuyu
BUT.... it is susceptible to kikuyu yellows for which there is no cure.
It comes from apparently nowhere, kills off a lot of grass and then goes
away. The thing to watch is to NOT walk on the yellow patches and then
on the unaffected lawn, you'll only spread the spores all over. We had
to remove all stock from affected paddocks and keep our fingers crossed.
Kikuyu yellows is becoming all to common these days. When I was a kid it
was said that kikuyu was indestructable. Well, kikuyu yellows can wipe
out acres of the stuff in only a few months in a bad infestation.

--

Kind regards,

Graeme Nichols

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