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Nancy Pollard
Cook County Extension
Horticulture and Environment Educator
Greenovations
Each month, staff from the University of Illinois will
provide answers to commonly asked questions related to gardening,
flowers, vegetables and home owner plants.
Q. The water bill is too high.
I want to cut back on my
lawn watering. How much
water does the grass actually need?
A. Consider allowing your lawn to go
dormant in heat of summer. While this practice seems to have lost
favor, it was the only practice some decades ago. Letting the lawn
go dormant will be a huge savings in water bill, and your lawn will
green up just fine when the weather gets cooler.
Only be careful to keep the grass crowns
alive. The crowns just need just ½" water every other week to
keep from dehydrating.
The problem can be more severe in Use a rain
gauge to chart it during hot dry weather. Do
not fertilize a dry
or dormant lawn. Wait until around Labor Day before you fertilize again
or do any renovation. Our cool season grasses prefer to take the
summer off.
If you want to coax your lawn into staying green during the heat of
the summer, you can still save on your water bill. Only water as
needed, not on a schedule. When is water needed? The grass will
start to turn a bluish-grey, and the leaves curl or cup. Catch it
at this stage, and water, before it turns brown. If you step on the
grass blades, they will not spring back as well. When the leaf edges
starts to curl, that is the best time to water.
Water half an inch, measured by an empty straight-sided container,
wait three hours and water an inch more. Watering longer in one
spot when it is dry, is often wasted, as it runs off rather than sinking
deep to replenish the root zone. Our clay soils only absorb 1/2"
per hour. Wetting the ground first, then watering it well allows
moisture to sink in better. Watering
deeply, encourages deep roots that can go longer between watering.
A sprinkle every evening encourages surface roots that will dry out
quickly. Mow the grass high (Kentucky Blue
3") to encourage deeper rooting.
Large sprinkler droplets, low to ground conserves water. Much
better than a fine aerial mist that evaporates too much before it
reaches the soil. Watering early in the day can also reduce water loss
due to evaporation, and allows the blades to dry before evening,
minimizing lawn diseases. It is a myth that
watering in the middle of the day will
"burn" the grass.
Q. The bottom of my beautiful tomatoes became leathery and inedible
as they ripened last year. Why? I don’t want that problem again!
A. You are describing blossom-end rot. This disorder is usually most
severe following extremes in soil moisture (either too dry or too wet).
These conditions result in a deficiency of calcium available to the
maturing fruit, at the spot where damage becomes apparent.
This happens when tomatoes are watered shallowly and often, or the
soil in the container they are in dries out. The rapid wetting and
drying of the soil inhibits the uptake of calcium – leading to
blossom-end rot. However, adding calcium is not the answer.
Even soil moisture is. Mulch the soil area where the tomato roots
are growing. Water deeply and less frequently to avoid blossom-end rot.
If your tomato is in a container, be sure the container is at least 5
gallons in size. Don’t forget to have someone water while you are
on vacation.
Q. My cucumbers and squash has flowers but no fruit?
A. Many vine crops like cucumbers and squash have male flowers
separate from the female flowers.
Typically, they produce all male flowers at the
onset of flowering and gradually start alternating male and female
flowers. Only the female flowers have fruit. Failure to set fruit
early on may be due to lack of female flowers. Be patient, and you
will see fruit appear.
Have other garden questions? University of Illinois Extension is
available 24/7 on the web. Individual questions will be answered by our
trained volunteers and reviewed by Horticulture Educators.
Ask a University of Illinois Extension Master Gardener Electronic
Plant Clinic:
http://web.extension.uiuc.edu/cook/urbanhort.html
Ask a Master Gardener offices, April to November, hours vary week
days.
773-233-0476 (Chicago)
847-298-3502 Friendship Park (North & West Suburbs)
708-720-7510 (South & West Suburbs)
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