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1. Pre-low nitrogen fertilizer with crabgrass reducer applied in Early Spring. This is a dry, granular treatment to the turfgrass, broadcast from a powered, push, or hand spreader. This contains a “pre-emergent” herbicide that will prevent the seeds of summer annuals like crabgrass and foxtail from germinating.
*note, this treatment will also prevent grass seeds from growing and can kill young seedlings.
**Note, as a pre-emergent, this treatment is not meant to control existing/established perennial weeds such as dandelion, likely to emerge later as soils warm.
2. F1 – slow-release fertilizer with micronutrients applied in Late Spring. This is a dry, granular treatment to the turfgrass, broadcast from a powered, push, or hand spreader. Additional nutrients are needed to stimulate shoot growth and maintain health through the coming heat and dryness of summer.
3. F2 – slow-release fertilizer with micronutrients applied in Early Fall. This is a dry, granular treatment to the turfgrass, broadcast from a powered, push, or hand spreader. Additional nutrients are needed to recover from summer stress. Fertilizer works with lower temperatures and moisture for healthy turfgrass.
4. Aer – Core aeration to correct compacted soil, improving drainage that reduces runoff, encourages deep roots for drought tolerance, regulates thatch and ads organic material to the soil. This is done in the fall season when soils are more stable and there is less pressure from weeds emerging from the exposed soil (holes/plugs).
5. Wint – Stabilized Nitrogen fertilizer applied late in the fall season. This is a dry, granular treatment to the turfgrass, broadcast from a powered, push or hand spreader. With warming soil, nitrogen encourages shoot growth and signals turfgrass to “wake up” after winter dormancy. Early growth means our lawns are thicker before weed pressure resumes, controlling weeds through competition.