Watering Tip #1
Pull back a corner of the turf and push a screwdriver or other sharp tool into
the soil. It should push in easily and have moisture along the first 7 to 10 cm. (3 or 4 inches),
or you need to apply more water.
Watering Tip #2
Make absolutely certain that water is getting to all areas of your new lawn,
regardless of the type of sprinkling system you use. Corners and edges are easily missed by many
sprinklers and are particularly vulnerable to drying out faster than the center portion of your
lawn. Also, areas near buildings dry-out faster because of reflected heat and may require more
water.
Watering Tip #3
Runoff may occur on some soils and sloped areas before the soil is adequately
moist. To conserve water and ensure adequate soak-in, turn off the water when runoff begins,
wait 30-minutes to an hour and restart the watering on the same area, repeating this start and
stop process, until proper soil moisture is achieved. For the next two weeks keep the below-turf
soil surface moist with daily (or more frequent) watering. Especially hot, dry or windy periods
will necessitate increased watering amounts and frequency.
Watering Tip #4
As the turf starts to
knit its new roots into the soil, it will be difficult, impossible and/or harmful to pull back a
corner to check beneath the turf (Watering Tip #1), but you can still use a sharp tool to check
moisture depth by pushing it through the turf and into the soil.
Watering Tip #5
Water as early in the morning as possible to take advantage of the daily start of
the grass's normal growing cycle, usually lower wind speeds and considerably less loss of water
because of high temperature evaporation.
Watering Tip #6
If the temperature approaches 37° C (100° F), or high winds are constant for more
than half of the day, reduce the temperature of the turf surface by lightly sprinkling (syringe)
the area. This sprinkling does not replace the need for longer, deeper watering, which will become
even more critical to continue during adverse weather conditions. During the rest of the growing
season most lawns will grow very well with a maximum total of one inch of water a week, coming
either from rain or applied water. This amount of water, properly applied, is all that is required
for the health of the grass, providing it is applied evenly and saturates the underlying soil to
a depth of 10 to 15 cm (4 to 6 inches).
Watering Tip #7
Infrequent and deep watering is preferred to frequent and shallow watering
because the roots will only grow as deeply as its most frequently available water supply. Deeply
rooted grass has a larger "soil-water bank" to draw moisture from and this will help the grass
survive drought and hot weather that rapidly dries out the upper soil layer.
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