Fertilizer is one of the most important management practices used to determine turf grass quality. Fertilizer will affect the general health of the plant. The healthier the plant is, the better the turf grass stand can compete and tolerate competing pests, like weeds, disease and insects. A high quality dense turf will naturally out compete weeds and decreasing or even eliminating the need for herbicides. Also a greater number of insects can be tolerated before an insecticide application is needed. Diseases will also become less likely to occur and will have less of an impact on the aesthetic value of the turf. The nutrition of the plant will also control how often of mowing events are scheduled.
Target dates for a fert program with four applications of nitrogen a year at one pound of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft; early spring, summer, Labor Day, Thanksgiving.
Most weed seeds germinate by becoming exposed to the sun. A dense healthy canopy will provide shade to the soil with the leaf tissue of the turfgrass plant and prevent the weed seed from germinating. A turfgrass canopy can be thinned when an unfavorable environment emerges. A turfgrass stand can sustain up to three stresses before it declines. Some of these stresses are traffic, pH, soil moisture, light intensity, light duration, insect activity, nutrition availability, growth speed, mowing frequency, the height of cut, and water availability. To combat some of these stresses it is important to choose the correct turfgrass species for the environment it lives in, also choosing a proper mowing height, frequency of the cutting, and to provide effective nutrition throughout the growing season. Most cool-season turfgrass stands planted on a home lawn cut at 2½” -3 ¾” every seven days sustain a dense canopy with 3-5 lbs of nitrogen per 1,000ft2 per year.
Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium are the three macronutrients provided in common fertilizers. Often there are micronutrients provided in fertilizers as well. Both macro and micronutrients are essential in turfgrass development and growth. Different turfgrass stands need different amounts of each nutrient depending on their environment and plant species. Turfgrass managers should base there fertilizer program on the environment, plant species, and the function of the turf.
There are many types of fertilizers to choose from, form liquid to granular, quick release, slow release, coated, and organics. Each have pros and cons, again, the environment, turf selection, and function of the turf will dictate witch to use.