I didn’t mean to come across like that. I know very little about a lot . I’ve always had areas of moss and the grass has always managed to grow and sort of win out in the grand scheme of things. But the last year of wetness and maybe just not enough sunlight has left a huge area of my side lawn full of moss and the nice grass that had been there has all but vanished. It’s a bit of a slope so it does drain. I think erosion also may be washing some of the soil away and since it’s under Oaks, it just is finally succumbing. It’s not a super thick canopy. Some sunlight does get thru. It really bothers me. I guess I’ll wait until September, but it’ll bother me all summer.
It seems weird me asking advice. But the wet last year or so has transformed my shady area of lawn under Oak canopy into a moss playground. I have limed it so ph is fine. It’s just wet and not much sun. Should I get the moss killer and spread it do it turns black and rake it all out.? There’s a lot of it. And that would mean a core aeration and reseed of the area. Or should I just hit it with the moss killer fert and hope that works?
Making a run at 70 today in SNE .. the snow has finally melted fully as of yesterday other than piles and banks. Today is lawn cleanup day. Backpack leaf blow the whole lawn to lose the Oak debris and thatch. A new season is here .
The time has arrived . As the snow begins to melt to the resorts and trails next week, our thoughts turn to lawns, spring cleanups, mulching, raking, blowing and most importantly fertilizing with Lesco. It won’t be long until we this.
That’s a really dumb policy considering meteorology is science and elevation differences are everywhere and the reason for the differences is scientific in nature. And for an organization that touts they are scientific , that’s pretty sad that they would cherry pick to make pretty maps.
I lol at that GFS comment. Time after time over the years we see people say that. If they shut down the entire Gfs suite, no one would notice or even blink