GARDEN COLUMN FOR THE SALISBURY POST
Darrell Blackwelder
August 22, 2003
Weed control is an important
aspect of establishing any lawn, especially cool season fescue lawns. Bermuda
and crabgrass dominate lawns in late summer and must be killed before seeding in
September. These grasses are entirely different and have differing methods of
control. Correctly identifying the grass is an important part of controlling the
weed.
Bermuda grass invades weak or thinned fescue lawns during the
summer months when fescue becomes semi-dormant, becoming established via seed,
stolons (above ground stems) or rhizomes (underground stems). Roots form at the
nodes or joints allowing the grass to become well established over a short
period of time. Bermuda grass propagates itself from these specialized stems and
seed are often introduced in lawns by contaminated topsoil.
Bermuda grass turns brown and becomes dormant after the first
hard frost. The grass remains dormant until the return of warm weather in early
summer. Patches of "dead" Bermuda grass give fescue a spotty and
unsightly appearance during the winter months. Systemic herbicides containing
glyphosate controls bermuda grass. Repeated applications may be needed to
control this aggressive grass. Herbicides become ineffective as the soil
temperature drops in September.
Crabgrass is lawn weed often confused with bermuda grass. It
is a warm season annual grass, which also thrives, in hot weather. This grass is
endogenous to our area easily adapting to both wet or dry summer conditions. It
is the first grass in early summer to invade thin or weak fescue lawns.
Crabgrass grows in clumps, similar to fescue, but with a faint blue color to the
leaf blade. A single crabgrass plant produces thousands of minute seed remaining
in the soil for years.
Crabgrass is best controlled with preemergence herbicides in
early spring or with post emergence herbicides during the early summer. It is
too late to control crabgrass with preemergence herbicides. Post emergence
herbicides kill young seedling crabgrass, but do poorly on well established
plants. Post emergence herbicides such as MSMA may burn established fescue in
hot, dry weather. Crabgrass dies out completely with the first killing frost.
Dead plants can be raked and fescue can be seeded to fill the void. Glyphosate
or herbicides containing diquat easily kills crabgrass clumps before planting.
Bermuda grass is a perennial returning each season from
underground stems. Conversely, crabgrass is an annual germinating from seed.
Bermuda grass must be completely destroyed this month before reseeding fescue in
September. Make certain that the Bermuda grass is dead before reseeding. Your
effort will be in vain if the grass is not completely killed.
Darrell Blackwelder is an agricultural agent in charge of horticulture with the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service in Rowan County. For archived garden columns or other information, visit the Rowan County Master Gardener web site at www.rowanmastergardener.com , e-mail Darrell_Blackwelder@ncsu.edu or phone at 704-633-0571.