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St Augustine sod help
Posted on 7/16/17 at 12:36 pm
Posted on 7/16/17 at 12:36 pm
Got the house a couple years ago and just starting to get around to trying to get some grass going In the back. I have a ton of trees and basically have a majority dirt backyard. Got one pallet of st Augustine a couple months ago as a kind of test run to see if it could survive. it was doing great at first but recently has started to develop some brown areas and not look so hot especially in some fringe areas. I have been watering about 3 times a week for an hour or so. Do I need to water more? Do another round of fertilizer? Attached some pics before mowing, close ups, and after mowing


Posted on 7/16/17 at 1:01 pm to Bonjourno
I'd water it 30 mins a day in the evenings, set the blade a little higher on the mower and cut often. But I'm no grass expert
This post was edited on 7/16/17 at 1:02 pm
Posted on 7/16/17 at 1:42 pm to jpainter6174
You probably need to do a soil test. I'd bet that area under the trees is a little too acidic and requires some lime.
Posted on 7/16/17 at 2:37 pm to Bonjourno
Couple points.
1. May was a bad time to lay sod. Fall and winter are ideal since the roots grow and establish prior to the stress of summer heat.
2. Yes, water more. The grass blades should stand nice and tall prior to cutting.
3. Raise your blades and cut grass at highest setting. Let the grass shade the soil.
4. Hold off on fertilizer this year unless it's real low in nitrogen and slower release.
5. Next spring fertilize and weed control like established yard and it will really take off.
1. May was a bad time to lay sod. Fall and winter are ideal since the roots grow and establish prior to the stress of summer heat.
2. Yes, water more. The grass blades should stand nice and tall prior to cutting.
3. Raise your blades and cut grass at highest setting. Let the grass shade the soil.
4. Hold off on fertilizer this year unless it's real low in nitrogen and slower release.
5. Next spring fertilize and weed control like established yard and it will really take off.
Posted on 7/16/17 at 2:51 pm to Bonjourno
Is it wet and soft underneath the brown spots? Could be fungus. This has been a very wet summer.
Posted on 7/16/17 at 4:18 pm to Jcrew
Yep, applied fungicide last week at my house to tomatoes and lawn.
Not sure why any suplamental water would be needed right now
Not sure why any suplamental water would be needed right now
Posted on 7/16/17 at 4:36 pm to cave canem
Thanks for suggestions. It was really wet but over the last week or so I haven't gotten any rain so I was watering it but it did feel kind of mushy in spots which is why I was looking for suggestions here. When it was raining a lot is when it was looking best though. I do cut it on the second highest setting but probably need to do it more often
Posted on 7/16/17 at 8:43 pm to Bonjourno
Google Randy Lemmon Yard fertilization schedule and follow it. Also if you just laid it down put on a layer of Medina Soil Activator.
Posted on 7/16/17 at 11:54 pm to Bonjourno
was the ground that you laid the sod on very smooth? I laid some once over some clods and they held the sod up off the ground in places...those places felt mushy and dried up just like what you are showing. found out later, the way to fix it is to catch it after a good rain and roll it with a lawn roller to pack all of that down.
Posted on 7/17/17 at 6:56 am to jpainter6174
quote:
I'd water it 30 mins a day in the evenings, set the blade a little higher on the mower and cut often
IMO 30 minutes everyday is a little much and you should set your blade to the highest level possible. 15 or 20 minutes every other day IMO is better
This post was edited on 7/17/17 at 6:57 am
Posted on 7/17/17 at 10:46 am to Wtodd
IMO looks over watered, potentially mold or something like that. If its soft long term, that's definitely over watered.
If it doesn't get sun all day, be careful on watering it. St Aug takes heat very well. I'd reduce the watering slowly until you hit a point where it starts to weep from looking thirsty. Then you'll know you are under watering.
Have you applied any fertilizer? May need a light fertilizer also. I don't like to hit it hard mid summer because you can burn it up.
The longer the grass in general I've found the more flexible to issues it is. St Aug really likes to be long too, as said the highest or close to the top of your mower in the summer especially. Longer grass is better for root growth also as it has more energy to put into root growth compared to regrowing the grass.
If it doesn't get sun all day, be careful on watering it. St Aug takes heat very well. I'd reduce the watering slowly until you hit a point where it starts to weep from looking thirsty. Then you'll know you are under watering.
Have you applied any fertilizer? May need a light fertilizer also. I don't like to hit it hard mid summer because you can burn it up.
The longer the grass in general I've found the more flexible to issues it is. St Aug really likes to be long too, as said the highest or close to the top of your mower in the summer especially. Longer grass is better for root growth also as it has more energy to put into root growth compared to regrowing the grass.
Posted on 7/27/17 at 8:49 am to cave canem
What kind of fungicide do y'all recommend. I think it has been over watered. I haven't watered since I started this thread but we have gotten pretty frequent rain. It is soft and mushy in a bunch of spots
Posted on 7/27/17 at 12:44 pm to Bonjourno
I also planted some back in May; I have lost some of mine b/c of the amount of water that runs off my roof and pools up close to the sidewalk. Mine did just what yours did, started off beautifully, deep dark green, growing like crazy, but then all the rain hit and I'm pretty sure it drown and rotted it. In my case, I never considered fungus, I'm 99% sure mine just got over watered from the rain and it's brown, dead as dead can be.
Posted on 7/27/17 at 1:04 pm to Bonjourno
Based on your description and the photos it's likely overwatered.
St. Aug is incredibly heat resistant and your lawn is mostly shaded so watering should be minimal in out part of the country with as much rain as we get.
St. Aug is incredibly heat resistant and your lawn is mostly shaded so watering should be minimal in out part of the country with as much rain as we get.
Posted on 7/28/17 at 2:10 pm to jpainter6174
If the grass has been down for 3 weeks, you can cut watering back to one day a week. DO NOT WATER AT NIGHT. That will extend the amount of time the leaf is wet and you will end up with gray leaf spot and possibly brown patch. Fertilize it with 1lb of N/1000 sq ft. Lastly, DO NOT WATER AT NIGHT!!!
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