Posts Tagged ‘lawn’

Tips on Tools – Just in Time for Father’s Day

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Do you hear it? The hum of lawn mowers on a summer afternoon…it’s practically a national anthem for a few short months as homeowners across the country put mowing into high gear on a weekly basis. We’ve already discussed how short to cut your lawn in this post. But when should you begin to mow a newly sodded lawn? You can mow when you can pull up on an individual piece of sod and feel that it has been rooted down. This may take two weeks or two months, depending on how well you maintain the lawn.

Photo by Kelly Burke

What to mow with? Riding mower vs. walk-behind vs. rotary…This question and other tool tips are addressed in a great blog post by Kelly Burke. We’re sharing it here because our goal at Bethel Farms is to provide you with an exceptional product and great service and arm you with the knowledge you need to create the outdoor space of your dreams. We’re all about Improving America’s Outdoor Experience.

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What does green do for you?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Are you seeing red today? Feeling blue?  The psychological association of a color is often more meaningful than the visual experience.

Color is light and light is energy. Scientists have found that actual physiological changes take place in human beings when they are exposed to certain colors. Colors can stimulate, excite, depress, tranquilize, increase appetite and create a feeling of warmth or coolness. What does green do for you?

Green is one of the most-often cited favorite colors, second only to blue. It represents nature, environment, health, renewal, youth, vigor, spring, and generosity, among other things. It occupies more space in the spectrum visible to the human eye and is the easiest color on the eye. It is a calming, refreshing color. People waiting to appear on TV sit in “green rooms” to relax. Hospitals often use green because it relaxes patients.

So it comes as no surprise that an expanse of lush green lawn proves restful and inviting. Still in doubt? Gaze at the header photo on this page…even the various shades of green can elicit different reactions. The bright, yellow-greens are whimsical and happy, full of energy and promise. The deeper tones of the foliage draw you in, suggesting quiet, strength, shade, protection, providing a landscape for relaxing.

Are you craving a little peace and rest today? Seek out green!

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The Long and Short of It – Grass That Is!

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

It’s mowing season again, but before you start your engines, take a look at the chart below for recommended mowing heights and frequencies for the most common grasses in North American lawns. The “rule of thumb” is not to remove more than 1/3 of the leaf surface area each time the lawn is mowed.

Turfgrass Optimum Height Mow When It Is
Bluegrass 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
Perennial Ryegrass 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
Tall Fescue 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
Fine Fescue 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
St. Augustine 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
Buffalograss 2.0 inches 3.0 inches
Bermudagrass 1.5 inches 2.25 inches
Centipede 1.5 inches 2.25 inches
Zoysia 1.5 inches 2.25 inches
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Is your lawn contributing to global warming? Not according to new research!

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Florida Turfgrass Association logoMisconceptions can spread on the Internet like dollar weed spreads through a lawn! In its newsletter for March, the Florida Turfgrass Association alerted members to an article published on January 22, 2010 in Geophysical Research Letters by researchers at the University of California, Irvine. The article was about carbon sequestration in turfgrass and the amount of carbon resulting from the care and maintenance of turf. Carbon sequestration is a geoengineering technique for the long-term storage of carbon dioxide or other forms of carbon, for the mitigation of global warming. The article reported conclusions that were fundamentally the opposite of previous research findings.

The FTGA explained the Californians’ research process and their conclusion, “Focusing on four parks in the Irvine area, the study found that greenhouse gas emissions from fertilizer production, mowing, leaf blowing and other lawn management practices were four times greater than the amount of carbon stored by grass in parks and lawns.”

Media attention to these findings was extensive, but the study contained errors and miscalculations. The FTGA reported that “Dr. Thomas Rufty and two graduate students at North Carolina State University took apart all of the assumptions and calculations in the research report and found mistakes. Their corrected calculations showed that CO2 generation was 122 g m-2 yr-1 rather than 1238 g m-2 yr-1, a miscalculation of 10X in the original paper.”

The authors of the original article have acknowledged that the new data is the correct data, according to the FTGA. “Unfortunately the corrected data has not generated any media interest. The fact that turfgrass has a positive impact on the environment when it comes to carbon sequestration is not new, hence it is not newsworthy.”

Growing a reputation is just like growing turfgrass – you have to be vigilant about eradicating the weeds! Many thanks to the FTGA for keeping watch. Now, go out and enjoy your lawn, knowing you have a positive impact on the environment!

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