The Lawn Care Life channel is equipping you for lawn care success. I'm Jason Creel and I am currently building my third lawn care business after moving to a new city in 2014. My channel is full of practical lawn business advice on how to start and build a better lawn care business based on my own real life experiences. I discuss equipment, marketing, maintenance, mowing, weed control, fertilization, dealing with customers, software, etc. I have been on youtube since 2011 and regularly upload new content. Subscribe to keep up with the latest. I enjoyed interacting with the subscribers. Join thousands who have benefited from the Lawn Care Life channel! Welcome!
Too early for grub damage, too early for warm season dormancy, too uniform for fungal damage. ARMY WARMS, id say, they will do damage very quick, bermuda is their favorite. Without being on the ground and looking at the plant hard to say 100% if its was environmental or manufactured
Id start with water most times we think it is so much more than it is after that if its not the worms whatever their called its a kind of worm that causes these dead turfs like this then check to see if hes had any chemicals sprayed leaked into this yard and if so be sure to flush it with water also lastly it could also be to much nitrogen
Does psi affect the droplet size or pattern on the z spray. I have found that to be a huge factor when increasing pressure on boomless nozzles. Seems like they dont care for 55+ psi.
Army worms! Got me too after the hurricane came through. Literally one week from green to brown. Look closely at the ground as it is moving. Treat the lawn and the grass will come back but it will be weak and patchy.
Looks like the concrete is really clean, I would guess the chems from pressure washing. Maybe the company didn't wet down the grass beforeand after using the chemicals.
The driveway one is not a mistake at all when used right and when necessary. Yet at the end of the mow, i still have barely anything to blow off.... The other two, I can agree with
I used to do this wen I started my buisness but now that I have a bunch of customers and more established I don't mess with this anymore, it messes up the machines or breaks them
Well, that is all fine if you have a business like yours. The average homeowner might use this equipment 1-2 times a week. I'll leave mine on. Thanks. Good vid.
This was helpful. I have both crab and bermuda in my lawn. Out of all the ones he showed they look the most similar to me. Beyond the shape bermuda heads are a bit darker whereas crab heads are light green. I'm not trying to eradicate my bermuda even though I'm mainly planting fescue. Crab grass is my enemy. I also have some goosegrass in compacted areas. Very distinctive plant, grows almost horizontal even the seeds with a pronounced whiteish center.
All very good skills to have as a landscaper for when it comes to weed eating. Though a good tip to keep in mind for edging beds (especially beds that have never had one), would be to establish the edge first with an actual edger tool to cut the deeper roots of grass types like Centipede & St. Augustine. This way (if legal in the state) chemical weed killers, or natural mixed weed killers can be carefully applied on the bed side to kill any shoots of grass that's invaded the bed. Allowing the beds defined edge to last just a bit longer.
Results didn't look 2 promising for 4 weeks after application in warm weather of September. I was expecting it to demolish most if not all those weeds in 4 weeks. I'd like to see if mowing 2 x over those 4 weeks helps kill the weeds more by removing follage and surpressing the growth of the plant further. Just a thought, especially bc that's real life scenario where you'd spray then wait a week then mow then wait a week then mow again.
Speaking of finding new products. I was shopping for Specticle Flo and came across Rezilon. Active ingredients are the same, but Rezilon has 19% Indaziflam.