The grass may not be growing, but what lies beneath could be active and setting up turfgrass for a tough spring start.
Many lawn diseases you manage in late first quarter have been manifesting since the previous fall. When the snow melts or the daffodils bloom, that’s when the damage is revealed.
In our January issue, we highlight this topic in the feature Seize the disease. Click here to read it on our site, and here to read it on the new digitial edition.
Latest from Lawn & Landscape
- Develon unveils -9 Series heavy excavators
- News you might've missed last week
- Lifescape Colorado's Hupf moves to regional role as Ostheimer becomes president
- Your most reliable predictor of success
- LandCare names McCallon, Miller as branch managers
- Takeuchi-US names Paul Wade, Eric Wenzel as dealer development managers
- CASE continues partnership with country artist Jon Pardi
- Greenlee debuts new battery-powered remote pruner