I asked my wife. She is a horticulturist at a Botanical Garden. Fungicides may help, but it is difficult to remediate once established. It is fungi in the soil so aeration and fungicide is the best option.
Thanks. I will see what kind of juice I can get on it.I asked my wife. She is a horticulturist at a Botanical Garden. Fungicides may help, but it is difficult to remediate once established. It is fungi in the soil so aeration and fungicide is the best option.
Will the peat bales you get at the store work ?You can also try spreading out peat. Then mow it over so it will spread and drop into the grass. Peat is a natural fungicide and probably cheaper than buying chemicals
It's worth a try before putting chemicals out I guess.I was reading where warm water & dish soap could possibly fight fungus on trees. I wonder of this would work in this application ? It surely would not hurt anything.
I wouldn't be scared to even try bleach. Maybe aerate the ground first. I have used bleach water on grass before. It never seemed to hurt it any.It's worth a try before putting chemicals out I guess.
Or I could just get buddy's mini hoe and dig the SOB up and be done with it haha.
Quadris= heritage/greencastYou need to read the label on those products closely.
Many times they are the exact same as we use on row crops, but if there is "lawn", "turf" or some kind of orchard intended specifically for it it's "labeled" use, the price will be exponentially higher.
That's the same azoxystrobin, guys.Quadris= heritage/greencast
And I thought it might be related to carbon ring.I thought we were going to be knocking a certain brand of scope again
Not sure, I've never tried it for rings, but the bails are what I'm talking about about. You will have to research it a bit.Will the peat bales you get at the store work ?
liberal rings/ fungusDoes anybody have any old tricks to get rid of
Fairy Ring.
I've read you can dig them out but I don't really wanna dig my front lawn up.