9 Things You Can Do to Use Less Water and Have a Green Lawn (2024)

Less Water More Green
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9 Things You Can Do to Use Less Water and Have a Green Lawn

  1. Core Aerate Your Lawn.This is the simplest and least expensive thing you can do. I get asked all the time, "how many times a year should I core aerate my lawn?" There is no "one" answer to that question. I would say that you should aerate, organically fertilize, (and water your lawn on the same day or next day), at least once a year.

    I will tell you this, last year I started rehabbing a repo property that had sat empty for 3 years. Because it was my property and I didn't have time or energy to topdress the lawn, I would aerate, put down an organic fertilizer, molasses and humate once every two or three months during the summer, fall, and twice this spring. There are still some areas that need improvement due to poisons and neglect for the 3 to 4 years this house sat empty, but the lawn has done a 360 degree turnaround in terms of health, color, and water retention. As of June 1st of this year, we had not irrigated our lawn one time since last fall. The only water our lawn had received was what nature provided during the 4th driest winter and spring in North Texas on record. Yet this lawn is unbelievably green.

    Core aerate your lawn on or the day of or the day before your scheduled watering day once every two or three months. To get the best results of your aeration: (1) Water your lawn briefly in the morning to soften up the ground. Don't over water because we don't want to aerate in mud. This could tear up your lawn. (2) When your lawn is aerated, add organic fertilizers and soil amendments such as molasses and humate. This process will deep root feed your turf and the organic fertilizers will help hold water around the root zone of your grass. Beware of chemical fertilizers that will burn the roots and kill your grass when you combine them with lawn aeration. Also beware of natural based fertilizers that use high concentrations of urea. This also could burn the root system of your turf. Use OMRI certified organic fertilizers when aerating your lawn. (3) Water that evening or the morning after the lawn aeration to deep water the turf root system. This process will improve the density and color of your lawn if you do it on a regular basis.

  2. Topdress Your Lawn. The #1 thing you can do to improve the water holding capacity of your turf is to amend the hard clay and rock soil that most of us inherited with a 3/8ths to 1/2 inch layer of topdressing. Topdressing will: (1) Act like a sponge and allow your turf to hold more water before run off. (2) Your grass will retain moisture longer. (3) It will keep the root zone of your turf cooler in the hot summer months and warmer in the winter months. (4) With the right soil amendments, topdressing is the best fertilizer you can use to feed your lawn. Spriggs Brothers has developed and improved upon a topdressing formula over the past 15 years that we think is the absolute best thing you could do to improve the health of your soil and lawn. During these drought conditions and water restricted days, topdressing is the best thing to save and preserve your lawn. We use molasses, humate, zeolite turf aid, worm castings, compost, Actino-Iron, lava sand, green sand and corn gluten meal in our topdressing formulation. Every one of these ingredients has a specific purpose in greening up your lawn and helping it maintain soil moisture.
  3. Spriggs Brothers Texas Turf & Garden Tea.Our Texas Turf and Garden Tea is one of the secret weapons that we have to keep your lawn green during the summer months. You can use our Texas Turf and Garden Tea in conjunction with any (chemical or organic) fertilization program you may be on. Those of you on our annual organic program already receive 4 applications of our Texas Turf and Garden Tea. If you are not on one of our annual fertilization programs, we have a 4 spray summer special package that you can add to your current lawn and landscaping feeding program. That's right, we will spray your lawn, garden and flowerbeds and it won't burn or hurt your plants in the summer heat!
  4. FourPlay is a patented blend of liquid humectant and hygroscopic compounds that attract and hold moisture like tiny water magnets within soil. Golf course managers have used a similar product called "Hydretain" to reduce water uses for up to 50% the past few years. FourPlay incorporates seaweed extract biostimulant with a potassium humate soil conditioner along with the patented liquid humectant. Tests have shown that FourPlay enhances root growth, aids in penetrating moisture absorption and water holding capacity of soils and increases nutrient availability to your turf and plants. FourPlay extends watering intervals of indoor and outdoor plants, flowers, vegetables, shrubs, trees and grasses by as much as 2 to 3 times. This is a break through product for those of you on once a week or once every two week watering schedules. Nature's Guide, a Fort Worth company that is a leading innovator of developing and bringing organic products to the general public, is working with Ecologel Solutions, to bring this product to the market place.

    Spriggs Brothers Texas Tea Turf Plus 4 combines all the great ingredients of our regular Spriggs Brothers Texas Turf & Garden Tea plus the added water features of FourPlay. We have put together a 4 spray program over the course of the summer and early fall months when we still have typically 90 degree plus heat and warm nights. Because FourPlay needs to be watered in to get the product into the soil to be effective, we need to schedule treatments on your scheduled watering days or the afternoon or evening before watering. So please call ASAP so we can coordinate with you on your city's mandatory watering schedule.

  5. Organic Granular Fertilizers. One of the great benefits of using organic fertilizers is that they don't have to be immediately watered in order to not burn or destroy your turf. Organic fertilizers do not have to be watered in to be effective either. They are not a water soluble product like chemical fertilizers, but rather compost into your soil and feed your grass like mulch does in your flowerbeds.

    Even an organic lawn will need some additional fertilizer to stay green in drought conditions. Organic fertilizers are slow release in form, providing a long-term green up of the lawn. Organic lawn care is based on the premise of feeding the soil as well as the grass, trees and landscaping. The "soil food web" is a complex ecosystem of microorganisms and macroorganisms. It is a scientific fact that lawns grown in soils with rich organic matter require much less water.

  6. Proper Lawn Maintenance. Mow your lawn at 3 to 3 inches. The added blade tissue aids in water storage in theblades of grass and photosynthesis. Also, taller grass will create shade which will reduce evaporation of water from thesoil and protect the roots from excessive heat.
  7. Have an Annual Irrigation Tune Up. I am by nature a DIY type of person. But there are some areas of expertise thatyou need a licensed professional to do for you. One of those areas is with your irrigation system. Please hire a Texaslicensed irrigator who specializes in wise water management. You should have your automatic irrigation system checkedout once or twice a year. Irrigation systems have moving parts and without your knowledge your sprinkler heads may bewatering the street or your neighbor's yard. Ask your irrigation specialist about updating your sprinkler heads to onesthat use less water but give you better coverage and a deeper soaking.

    Spriggs Brothers has licensed irrigators on staff and we offer a tune up where we go through your system, adjust yourheads and make recommendations for any repairs or upgrades that you might need in order to save water and money onyour utility bills. The cost is $79 for average size lawns for an irrigation tune up.

  8. Mulch and Organic Soil Amendments in your Landscaping. One of the big mistakes I see over and over in customers'landscaping is that there is not a good 3 inch layer of native hardwood or cedar mulch. Mulch will hold in moisturelonger and moderate the soil temperatures, keeping your plant's roots cooler in the summer. A good layer of mulch willhelp keep your plants from stressing out in the hot Texas summer sun.

    Another mistake I see is customers raking out their old mulch before they put down a new layer of mulch or they just putdown layer after layer of mulch on top of one another. The old mulch should be turned and worked into the landscapingsoil. You want the partially decomposed mulch to break up the clay soil and allow the decomposing mulch to feed yourplants. On the other hand, I see customers who just add new mulch on top of the old mulch. Adding layer after layer ofnew mulch on top of the old mulch leads to further soil compaction and your shrubs roots can't breathe. You need toregularly work and loosen the soil in your flowerbeds to keep from having soil compaction.

    To have proper soil drainage and for your plants to breath and have proper soil cation exchange capacity, you need toadd soil amendments regularly to your landscaping. Some of the items we suggest to work in are lava sand, greensand,expanded shale or zeolite, horticultural molasses, compost and corn meal.

    In problem landscape settings, the use of soil amendments can dramatically help to revitalize a challenging area. The long termmaintenance costs will be lower as well since the problems associated with an unhealthy landscape or turf area will decrease ifsoil problems are resolved. A properly balanced and biologically active soil provides the key to your landscape success.

  9. Choose the right turf or turfs for your lawn and the right plants for your landscaping. Time and space do not allowus the opportunity to discuss this point in this newsletter. When it comes to grasses, do a web search on zoysia grassesfor Texas, particularly Palisades Zoysia or Zorro Zoysia. We also like to recommend Celebration Bermuda. These grassesuse significantly less water and are hardier than the typical "builders model" turf. Second, look up drought tolerant perennialsand shrubs for zone 7. When you are ready to make changes in your landscaping or turf, give Spriggs Brothers acall and we can discuss your options.

    It's been interesting to watch the industry the last few years and the pendulum shift of the chemical guys starting toswitch over to organic products and practices. The move to being organic has nothing to do with their concern withtheir customers' health and the environment, but that organic fertilizers are proving to work better over the long term oncustomers' lawns. We are convinced that you can retain your home's curb appeal, value and beauty by adhering to thesepractices during these difficult days of temperatures and drought.

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9 Things You Can Do to Use Less Water and Have a Green Lawn (2024)

FAQs

9 Things You Can Do to Use Less Water and Have a Green Lawn? ›

Adding organic matter can help. The next time you aerate the lawn, fill in the holes with some compost or peat moss. In clay soils, this organic matter will open the soil, helping water infiltrate rather than run off. In sandy soils, this organic matter will help the soil hold onto the water before it drains away.

How to make a lawn hold more water? ›

Adding organic matter can help. The next time you aerate the lawn, fill in the holes with some compost or peat moss. In clay soils, this organic matter will open the soil, helping water infiltrate rather than run off. In sandy soils, this organic matter will help the soil hold onto the water before it drains away.

How to green up a lawn from drought? ›

Get your green grass back by overseeding, reseeding, or resodding your lawn. You can sprinkle new grass seed by hand in the bare patches, or apply a new layer of grass seed across your lawn. Give your lawn a complete makeover by reseeding, maybe this time opting for a drought-tolerant grass type.

How do I stop my lawn from watering? ›

Gradually reduce watering until the average nighttime temperatures are in the low 30s, then stop. Water won't penetrate once the ground freezes. “Watering in colder climates can lead to disease, so it is critical to reduce how often and how long you water your lawn,” Rossi says.

How is water loss prevented in grass? ›

For example, some grasses have a folded structure that reduces water loss. Alternatively, other grass species undergo a rolling of the blade to protect against evaporation. Some desert-dwelling plants have leaves coated in microscopic hairs that trap water vapor, therefore reducing evaporation.

What makes the green grass grow? ›

The four major factors that determine turf grass growth are sunlight, moisture, carbon dioxide and soil temperature. Other growth influencers include the: Amount of nutrients available in your soil.

How to use less water on a lawn? ›

Deep and infrequent watering from the start. Watering your lawn properly at the beginning of the season sets the routine and will make watering less over time feel easy. Water between 1/3-1/2 inches per session in most conditions - shady areas may require less water and sunny/exposed areas may need more.

How often should you water grass to keep it green? ›

Water Wisely

Many of us water too often and too long. Most lawns need to be watered no more than three days a week in the spring as well as in the summer and two days a week in the fall. This watering schedule is recommended under normal water supply conditions.

Will grass recover from lack of water? ›

Individual grass plants can recover and green up again, once the plants get sufficient water. The crown of the plant can remain alive for up to three weeks without any water. Then, as little as 0.2” of rainfall or irrigation can rehydrate the crowns and help to keep them alive.

How do I keep my grass green in hot dry weather? ›

An inch of water a week serves as a good rule of thumb for keeping your lawn green during the hot summer. Just be sure to water as early as possible in the morning, between 6AM and 10AM, to help reduce wasteful evaporation.

Why does my grass hold so much water? ›

If water stands in your yard for hours or even days after a moderate rain, you have poor drainage, which can be caused by heavy, compacted soils or improper grading.

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