The fertilizer bags are now available at many stores
and garden centers in the area. Many
people dream about the “golf course” lawn.
But, that picture-perfect green lawn sometimes comes at the expense of
our surface and ground waters that can absorb nitrate from the nitrogen that's
meant for our lawns. Learning how and
when to apply fertilizers is the key to protecting our groundwater and surface
water supplies.
A national EPA study has found nitrate, a form of
nitrogen fertilizer, in groundwater around many urban areas. Although lawn fertilization is only one
possible source, chronic exposure to high nitrate levels has been shown to have
adverse health effects, particularly among pregnant women.
Nitrate runoff in surface water alters the
population balance of algae and other microflora
in rivers causing disruptions of living organisms up
and down the food chain. How can you
fertilize the lawn to grow healthy grass while reducing the potential for
contamination of groundwater and river ecosystems?
The foremost turf fertilization tip involves the
amount applied. Don't overload your lawn's system with more nitrogen than the
turf can use at one time! Recommended amounts are given on a yearly basis but
should be spread over several fertilizations of no more than one pound of
nitrogen per 1,000 square feet each, the standard rate given on fertilizer
products. Using more fertilizer than is recommended increases the potential for
soil microbes to convert nitrogen into the easily dissolved nitrate form. This
form can quickly bypass grass roots and move into water supplies.
The recommended amount for bluegrass, the most
popular lawn in Colorado,
is 2 to 4
pounds of nitrogen annually per 1,000 square feet.
This means 2 to 4 fertilizer applications timed as follows: April, late May,
late August, early October. Apply only in late May and early October with two
applications and add late August with three. The fourth application (April) is
only necessary for people desirous of growing extremely high quality turf
requiring lots of mowing.
Skipping the April application is just one of the
many advantages to what is now regarded as the most important lawn
fertilization application time of the year - fall. If you leave grass clippings on the lawn when
you mow, you can apply less fertilizer than if you collected clippings.
A particular caution must be given if you grow a
lawn on sandy soil. Sands don't hold
fertilizer nutrients in the same way as clay soils
do. This means you should use nitrogen fertilizers that are slowly available
such as the sulfur-coated ureas, IBDU, and natural organic fertilizers (in
warmer months). These types of fertilizers will reduce the potential for
fertilizer movement from the turf into surface or groundwater. The same
fertilizer recommendations also apply to those with turf over or near wells.
For more information regarding lawn care, contact
the extension office at 539-6447 or come visit us at the fairgrounds.
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