Calendar | Ag News Elsewhere (fresh daily from the Web)

Logan County Fair | Logan County Extension Unit


Fall days ideal for chores       Send a link to a friend

By John Fulton

[SEPT. 28, 2005]  With the wonderful fall weather we've been having, the urge to get out and do something -- without driving -- is overwhelming. There are plenty of things to be done, if the body and soul are willing.

Let's start with the lawn. As mentioned before, the ideal seeding time is until Sept. 10. Bare soil rates are about 4 pounds of seed per 1,000 square feet, and overseeding existing grass is about half that. This is also an excellent time for fall lawn fertilizer. Apply enough to get about a pound of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet -- about 8 pounds of 12-12-12. Fertilizing and seeding can be done close together, as long as the fertilizer rates don't get out of hand. Too much salt in fertilizer can cause seed germination problems. A couple of weeks from now is also a great time to treat perennial broadleaf weeds in lawns, but you can't mix this operation with seeding. You'll have to wait until spring for the weed control operation. This is also a great time to aerate or dethatch.

[Sponsor of the Week]

Watering perennials should also be on the to-do list. Perennials that lose leaves each fall are putting their last bit of energy into the roots this time of year. After returning to dry conditions, watering is the best way to provide optimum conditions for the critical fall period. Evergreens are even more critical. It is a great idea to provide an inch of water each week for all evergreens until the ground freezes up for the winter. Evergreens continue to lose water through needles or leaves throughout the winter. A layer of mulch will help stabilize the ground temperatures, but wait until soils get cold to apply mulch. Mulch is intended to prevent wide swings in temperature.

We can also plant spring flowering bulbs. We may be a little on the early side, but it takes time to plan, obtain and plant bulbs. It's always better to have a bulb in the ground than to try and hold them for another growing season if the weather turns sour on us. Pay particular attention to some of the less common bulbs or colors. Summer flowering bulbs should generally be dug after the first killing frost, since they aren't hardy enough to survive the winter in the ground.

[to top of second column in this article]

Keep that garden going. It seems like we have entered the prime time this year for many of our garden staples. Tomatoes, squash and peppers have just hit their main stride in the last couple of weeks. Pay attention to insects and diseases to keep them productive until frost takes them out. You might even have some success with planting some leaf lettuce or spinach. Spinach sometimes doesn't get big enough for harvest in the fall, but in a mild winter it is ready to roll in the extreme early spring from your fall planting. Pay particular attention to vining crops for beetle control. Beetles are rapidly leaving cornfields and settling on pumpkins and squash. Controlling the beetles will help prevent the wilt virus that can be spread by them.

That should be a long enough list for a while. By the way, enjoy the fall weather.

[John Fulton, unit leader, University of Illinois Extension, Logan County Unit]

< Recent articles

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law & Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health & Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor