Archive for the ‘Pest Control’ Category

What ’s Up with this Pre-Emergent Herbicide?

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Spring is coming–I hope.  The calendar says it’s March next week, but it still feels like December.  One way we know spring is actually coming isall the lawncare trucks (especially those clean LawnAmerica trucks) driving around, with all the little lawncare flags sticking up along home lawns.  Your 2010 lawn starts in February, with a pre-emeregent weed-control treatment applied.  This really does set the stage for successful weed-control in a home lawn.  So how do they work anyway?  And, if a pre-emergent is supposed to stop weeds, why do weeds come up anyway during the season? 

Pre-emergents have come along way in the 26 years I’ve been applying them.  Back in the 80’s, we had products such as Balan, Betasan, and Surflan to name a few.  As is the case in all pest-control products, the new chemistry is so much better, safer, more effective, and with lower use rates.  They often are more expensive also, but I’ll take that if they work better and safer.

Any pre-emergent can be appied in the granular or liquid form.  Most homeowners apply a granular, which has been coated with a pre-emergent.  Professional companies, such as LawnAmerica, will mix the product into a liquid solution, while adding other products andeven fertilizer to the mix.  The liquid is then sprayed in a drench application over the lawn.  With either method, the pre-emergent needs to be watered into the soil within a few day, where it binds to the soil surface, and stays active for several months.  Once in the soil, as small weed seeds such as crabgrass germinate late in spring, the weeds are killed as they shoot up through the herbicide barrier. 

Three  keys to good crabgrass control are:

  1. Use a quality product.
  2. Apply it properly at the right time, at the proper rate.
  3. Water in the product.

At LawnAmeirca, we use the best pre-emergent available–Barricade.  This product can be purchased in the granular form at garden centers, along with other products.  The chemical name is Prodiamine, so if you’re doing your own lawncare, look for a product with this chemical.

This young crabgrass would not have germinated if a good pre-emergent would have been applied earlier.

In Tulsa, pre-emergents need to be applied and into the soil at least a week prior to crabgrass germination.  Crabgrass will germinate when the 4″ soil temperatures stay at about 54 degrees for about four consecutive days, and withadequate soil moisture.  With the winter we’re having, we’re along way from soil temperatures that high, so we have plenty of time left.  We generally have our  customers serviced with their pre-emergent by around March 26thor so.  Very seldom will I see crabgrass germinating before that, unless it’s along a concrete curb, in bare ground, which will heat up faster in the spring.  Even good products such as Barricade will not work though if they are not applied at a good rate, and with a good application covering all areas of the lawn.  Older products often required two applications, since they only lasted about 2-3 months in the soil before breaking down.  Newer products, such as Barricade, will provide weed-control for up to 7 months, as long as the proper rate is used.   Therefore, only one good treatment is required for season-long control of crabgrass and grassy weeds.

One of the things that really chaps me about some of my competitors, especially that big national company that claims how true they are are and how green they are, is that they apply two pre-emergent treatments, with a much lower rate of product (with a lower cost in their tank), in the same time that I apply one!  Some folks think they are getting such a good deal with a cheaper application cost, but they charge double to get the same results we provide with one treatment!  I know–as I’m one of their customers, and I’ve competed against them for years, with their 8-step program.  I’m looking at a card now, that they’ve sent me, showing my first treatment applied last week, and my 2nd (of 6) coming on March 26th–before crabgrass even germinates!  Maybe they just want to make sure that the 2nd guy may hit some of the areas their first guy missed, since he was in such a hurry.  They also do the same technique in fall, apply two fall pre-emergent treatments, when only one is needed to do the job, assuming that one is applied at the full rate.

Barricade won't stop a dandelion and most other broadleaf weeds from germinating. They need to be controlled with a liquid post-emergent spray.

If applied properly, at a good rate, you only need one pre-emergent.  It also needs to be watered into the soil within a few days.  In fact, if it’s not watered in, and we have one of those dry spells that are common in early spring, some of the product will break down from the sunlight.  Therefore, the pre-emergent barrier will not last as long into the summer, leading to more weeds coming up in mid to late summer.

So why do you still have weeds if this fancy pre-emergent was applied you ask?  NO pre-emergent is perfect.  Things happen in nature to break it down quicker (such as months were it rains every day like last spring).  And pre-emergents are only effective on crabgrass and grassy weeds.  Some broadleaf weeds are on the label, but the control is very sporadic at best.  And then, with weeds such as Nutgrass, other specialty types of products are needed, which can act as a pre-emergent. 

With my next post, I’ll talk more about pre-emergent herbicides, and how to get the most out of a pre-emergent treatment.

The Fire Ants Are a-Comin’

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Last Saturday morning, with the sun being out for the first time in two weeks, I took off on the Tulsa Creek Turnpike Trail in south Tulsa going into Broken Arrow.  After dodging a few Lance Armstrong wanabees as they zoomed past in their bright spandex shorts (who are these guys trying to impress?), a little pile of dirt off the side of the trail caught my eye.  It wasn’t a mole pile of dirt, or a gopher mound, but had that disctinct look of another smaller, yet more troblesome pest in Tulsa lawns–the Imported Red Fire Ant.

A Fire Ant mound along the trail.
A Fire Ant mound along the trail.
 
Hundreds of angry fire ants looking for me after I kicked their mound!

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Being in the lawncare business for over 25 years, I’m somewhat familiar with these pests.  Go just down the road to Dallas and other Texas cities, and lawncare guys spend alot of effort and time in combating these dangerous pests.  Left untreated, they can take over a lawn, sports field, or park and cause serious injury to people and pets who disturb the mounds. 

Fire ants over the past few years have slowly marched northward from the southern states, and are reaching central Oklahoma it appears and even as far north as Tulsa.  I know, beacuse we confirmed some last year also, and even had to treat one commercial property.  The limiting factor to their spread north is cold winter temperatures, so the lack of severe winters lately in Tulsa  seems to be allowing their northward migration. 
 
I spotted about 10 different mounds along the trail, just east of Mingo.  The ants will colonize a small mound of dirt, about 8″-12″ in diameter, and mounding up a dirt area about 4″-6″ high.  When disturbed or knocked down, the hundreds of Fire Ants will go crazy, and can get very aggressive.  Hence the danger, because their bites can be very painful, and can cause serious medical problems and even death in some cases.  It is estimated the 14 million people are stung annually by fire ants, mostly in the southeastern and southern states.  
I don’t think we are going to be inundated by fire ants anytime soon, but they are here.  Just be aware and on the lookout for larger ant mounds, usually in sunny turf or field areas.  Fire ants can best be controlled with special insect bait products, which are applied just once per season.  So if they do become more of a problem in Tulsa, we’ll be on top of it at LawnAmerica and be able to help.  Don’t worry about them–there’s plenty of other stuff to worry about these days it seems.  Just be careful. 
For more information on fire ants, go to www.LawnAmerica.com/fireAntControl.html

Webworms

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

fall web worm nestsCertain species of trees are becoming covered with webs of Fall Webworms recently.  Every few years, we’ll have infestations of these pests.  It’s been several years since we’ve had a significant invasion, so we are due for one.  These are larvae of the Fall Webworm moth, which feed on the outer leaves of trees such as pecan, hickory, persimmon, river birch, sweetgum, redbud, and a few others.  We will probably see several generations this year, as they have come in early.  The larvae will pupate, with moths emerging soon, laying eggs and starting the cycle again.

Although unsightly, webworms do not significantly damage trees.  We can spray an insecticide on trees up to about 40’ high, which will help to lessen the further spread of the worms.  If it was my tree, I would not worry about spraying however.  The webs and damaged branches can be pruned out if they can be reached.  Sprays will not cause the webs to disappear, and the damage has already been done.  Sprays will only help to prevent further spread of the worms, and only for a few weeks.   Wind and rain will eventually cause the webs to dissipate in most trees.

Even if invasions later this summer strip the tree of most of it’s leaves, which is unlikely, the tree is not going to die.  It won’t be pretty, but it will be fine.  So it’s your call as to whether to spray or not.  Our minimum charge is $45, with an additional $5 per tree to spray.

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