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kjackson227

(2,166 posts)
Wed Jan 4, 2012, 05:36 PM Jan 2012

St. Augustine Lawn Help

My St. Augustine grass looked awful last year. I think the winter of 2011, the summer drought of 2011, grasshoppers, and maybe a few grubs have caused havoc. Half of the lawn is okay, but the other half is a mess. I've been trying to go the organic route, but I don't think it's working very well, so any suggestions in this area are appreciated for 2012.

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St. Augustine Lawn Help (Original Post) kjackson227 Jan 2012 OP
Can you give us details of what is wrong? Curmudgeoness Jan 2012 #1
By "mess", I mean... kjackson227 Jan 2012 #2
You have definitely had a bad year in Dallas. Curmudgeoness Jan 2012 #4
Check out zoysia grass. They have come a long way with it. Lochloosa Jan 2012 #3
Thanks so much for the responses :) kjackson227 Jan 2012 #5

Curmudgeoness

(18,219 posts)
1. Can you give us details of what is wrong?
Wed Jan 4, 2012, 09:11 PM
Jan 2012

"A mess"---brown spots? All dead? Weeds? Where are you and what conditions have you endured?

Does the grass pull up like the roots have been eaten and the grass is just laying on top of the ground? Does it need thatched?

Often St. Augustine will revive if the weather gets better---not too dry, not too wet. So you will have to determine if this is dead or just has gone dormant.

kjackson227

(2,166 posts)
2. By "mess", I mean...
Thu Jan 5, 2012, 02:34 PM
Jan 2012

scorched/or burned spots. I think half of it is dead and not dormant since it started looking this way before the end of the season. I'm in Dallas, TX, and we had a pretty bad winter in 2011, and a very hot summer (this area is in a drought). I watered at least two times per week for about an 1 1/2 hours each time, but it didn't do any good at all. I also saw quite a few small green grasshoppers this past summer.

Curmudgeoness

(18,219 posts)
4. You have definitely had a bad year in Dallas.
Thu Jan 5, 2012, 09:41 PM
Jan 2012

I lived in Houston for several years and had St Augustine there. I still have friends and family in Houston, and I have heard from several of them that the drought has destroyed their grass and they are figuring that they will have to resod it. They are waiting to see if the drought breaks before they do anything, since a new grass will not make it in these conditions.

It sounds like you did what you could, and that is what you should have done, but I don't know just how dry it was and how far the water actually soaked into the ground. If it did not get below an inch into the soil, you may have caused all the roots to be too close to the surface, which made it more possible for it to dry out the roots and kill the grass. If the conditions were as dry as I have heard, I would think you may have needed to water longer at one time. But if that is the case, it is too late for that.

One good thing is that St Augustine is pretty tough, and if you still have good grass, the runners may spread into the dead areas if they are not too big and if you get rain before it all dies. That may be a tough call with no break in the drought. Just know that you are not alone---I am surprised that you have any grass left from what I have been hearing. You may want to start saving money to have it resodded if you ever get a lot of rain.

The good news is, you don't have to mow dead grass. Seriously though, your next problem will be keeping weeds from taking over in those dead spots---somehow they can still grow! Sorry I don't have better news or more help.

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