I explain how liquid aeration works, demo a product and show you my lawn before and 20 hours after use. Here is are liquid Lawn Aerator that I have used and are sold on Amazon: USA: www.amazon.com... Canada amzn.to/4b3zQUw
Great info. Thank you. In fact I just watched a soil scientist discuss this very topic and she said exactly what you did concerning active ingredients that are negatively charged. You apparently know what you're talking about.👍
Seems. Like a better test would be to aerate part of yard and water all then test both sides. Otherwise you don’t know how much watering affected test.
The area you you did the after test seemed to be scarified? As in small plugs of soil were removed. Do i need to scarify the lawn before using the liquid airrater
The process of putting small holes in the lawn and pulling up plugs is called core aeration. I didn’t core aerate or scarify before using this product.
@@JeffSeetonLawnCare Right, as a lawn it is well irrigated. Minus the pre-post test compacted dead patch with the repeat run off - resultant hard/dry which is the point I guess. The pre-test two handed triceps ~80lb press almost lifting your torso was something. Would be cool to see a 1:1 - similar compacted area with only water + 20 hours, same °C, same RH% etc... vs. compacted area +20hrs, same °C, same RH% with treatment. I guess I will have to get some and try that out. Thanks for the video !🙂
Isn't that product concentrated? I thought it was supposed to be 1 oz mixed into 1 gallon, then have the 1 gallon solution spread over 1000 square feet?
Negatively charged particles interact with other particles in the soil and move them away. Microorganisms are not involved the process. The negatively charged particles already exist in the liquid aerator.