|
Home > Archive > Austin Gardening > August 2007 > Lawn
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
|
|
|
| No pictures available.
Have some kind of foliage that is very similar to St. Augustine. However,
it grows much taller/quicker. Its seems to be a grass type. Blades of it
are sectionalized into 3 sections, vice 2 for St. Augustine. Grows about
twice the rate for the blades/leaves, but, does not seem to spread the same
way. Is localized, not prolific. Color is virtually idential to St.
Augustine.
What is it?
How do I get rid of it?
Dave
| |
| Omelet 2007-08-25, 9:25 am |
| In article <13cvellddppl559@corp.supernews.com>,
"Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote:
> No pictures available.
>
> Have some kind of foliage that is very similar to St. Augustine. However,
> it grows much taller/quicker. Its seems to be a grass type. Blades of it
> are sectionalized into 3 sections, vice 2 for St. Augustine. Grows about
> twice the rate for the blades/leaves, but, does not seem to spread the same
> way. Is localized, not prolific. Color is virtually idential to St.
> Augustine.
>
> What is it?
> How do I get rid of it?
> Dave
Johnson Grass?
--
Peace, Om
Remove _ to validate e-mails.
"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a XXXXX" -- Jack Nicholson
| |
| Pat Kiewicz 2007-08-25, 9:25 am |
| Dave said:
>
>No pictures available.
>
>Have some kind of foliage that is very similar to St. Augustine. However,
>it grows much taller/quicker. Its seems to be a grass type. Blades of it
>are sectionalized into 3 sections, vice 2 for St. Augustine. Grows about
>twice the rate for the blades/leaves, but, does not seem to spread the
>same way. Is localized, not prolific. Color is virtually idential to St.
>Augustine.
>
>What is it?
Blades in triplets makes it sound like some sort of sedge grass.
If it were in my lawn (in Michigan) I'd be thinking nut sedge.
>How do I get rid of it?
Googling nutsedge, St. Augustine, and lawn popped up this
answer early in the results:
Use imazaquin (Image).
Cannot vouch for it personally, though. I had a section of the
lawn torn up and reseeded when we has street improvements
put in, and I eliminated the nutsedge in that section by hand pulling.
--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)
Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)
| |
| cat daddy 2007-08-25, 9:25 am |
|
"Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote in message
news:13cvellddppl559@corp.supernews.com...
> No pictures available.
>
> Have some kind of foliage that is very similar to St. Augustine. However,
> it grows much taller/quicker. Its seems to be a grass type. Blades of it
> are sectionalized into 3 sections, vice 2 for St. Augustine. Grows about
> twice the rate for the blades/leaves, but, does not seem to spread the
same
> way. Is localized, not prolific. Color is virtually idential to St.
> Augustine.
>
> What is it?
> How do I get rid of it?
Dallisgrass? If it is, you pull it up by hand.
http://ipm.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/pasdi.htm
| |
| trader4@optonline.net 2007-08-25, 1:25 pm |
| On Aug 25, 7:12 am, "cat daddy" <furball@.myhouse.com> wrote:
> "Dave" <spamyours...@virus.net> wrote in message
>
> news:13cvellddppl559@corp.supernews.com...
>
>
> same
>
>
> Dallisgrass? If it is, you pull it up by hand.http://ipm.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/pasdi.htm
How anyone can expect anyone to identify a grass/weed without even a
picture is beyond me. Many times, even with a picture it's
impossible to tell for sure.
| |
|
|
"cat daddy" <furball@.myhouse.com> wrote in message
news:hZSdnXUQmKQck03bnZ2dnUVZ_hynnZ2d@giganews.com...
>
> "Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote in message
> news:13cvellddppl559@corp.supernews.com...
> same
>
> Dallisgrass? If it is, you pull it up by hand.
> http://ipm.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/pasdi.htm
>
>
Not it, but found this interesting if you have cattle.
http://www.ncsu.edu/forage/dallis.htm
The foliage in question is almost identical to St. Augustine blade-wise.
Before I cut one area around a water faucet, was over a foot long.
Extremely little drooping, no wavy feature as I saw in many pictures of
dallisgrass. No seeding features, just blades. Doesn't appear in clumps
like pictured in Dallisgrass. I do have some Dallisgrass around here, along
with buffalo grass. Both are clumpers. This breed doesn't appear to be so.
Cue me in how to upload pictures, and what websites support that? Would
like to provide weblink to pictures for your gander.
Dave
| |
| cat daddy 2007-08-26, 3:25 am |
|
"Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote in message
news:13d21u9rj3evsae@corp.supernews.com...
>
> "cat daddy" <furball@.myhouse.com> wrote in message
> news:hZSdnXUQmKQck03bnZ2dnUVZ_hynnZ2d@giganews.com...
it[color=darkred]
about[color=darkred]
>
> Not it, but found this interesting if you have cattle.
> http://www.ncsu.edu/forage/dallis.htm
>
> The foliage in question is almost identical to St. Augustine blade-wise.
> Before I cut one area around a water faucet, was over a foot long.
> Extremely little drooping, no wavy feature as I saw in many pictures of
> dallisgrass. No seeding features, just blades. Doesn't appear in clumps
> like pictured in Dallisgrass. I do have some Dallisgrass around here,
along
> with buffalo grass. Both are clumpers. This breed doesn't appear to be
so.
>
> Cue me in how to upload pictures, and what websites support that? Would
> like to provide weblink to pictures for your gander.
> Dave
I'll just cut and paste Omelet's excellent advice: [clicking the news:
link should open up the group in OE]
news:alt.binaries.pictures.gardens
If you want to post them here, post them at http://www.tinypic.com
harvest the URL's and post those links here.
| |
|
| "cat daddy" <furball@.myhouse.com> wrote in message
news:rIKdnYcQ78vYkUzbnZ2dnUVZ_rmjnZ2d@giganews.com...
>
> "Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote in message
> news:13d21u9rj3evsae@corp.supernews.com...
> it
> about
> along
> so.
>
> I'll just cut and paste Omelet's excellent advice: [clicking the news:
> link should open up the group in OE]
>
> news:alt.binaries.pictures.gardens
>
> If you want to post them here, post them at http://www.tinypic.com
> harvest the URL's and post those links here.
>
>
Thanks.
I generally stay away from binaries for 2 reasons. Potential infection
problem, and I only have dial-up.
Thanks for the weblink. I'll go out and take some pics for more descriptive
info. Will repost, as I cut the front lawn very recently. Will let the
stuff grow back so its easily visible.
Dave
| |
| Omelet 2007-08-26, 1:25 pm |
| In article <13d33365fph4hd7@corp.supernews.com>,
"Dave" <spamyourself@virus.net> wrote:
>
> Thanks.
>
> I generally stay away from binaries for 2 reasons. Potential infection
> problem, and I only have dial-up.
Understood.
>
> Thanks for the weblink. I'll go out and take some pics for more descriptive
> info. Will repost, as I cut the front lawn very recently. Will let the
> stuff grow back so its easily visible.
> Dave
Tinypic has been a godsend.
And it makes it so I don't have to burn the limited space on my personal
webspace.
Plus it's anonymous. ;-)
--
Peace, Om
Remove _ to validate e-mails.
"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a XXXXX" -- Jack Nicholson
|
|
|
|
|