East Idaho News on MSN
Stop the yellow: When and how to apply iron for greener lawns, trees, and gardens
If your trees or lawn start the season looking more lemon than lime, you may be seeing iron chlorosis—a common nutrient ...
I was at one of your talks and heard you mention that "chelated iron" can kill weeds (specifically clover). I went to Highland Gardens, and their chelated iron is a nutrient supplement! Obviously, I ...
Weed. It’s one of the more unseemly four-letter words in every gardener’s vocabulary — and for good reason. Weeds are capable of outwitting even the most diligent gardeners, but there are some ...
A lawn care aficionado has discussed a product he has used to prepare his lawn in quick time, making the grass greener with one application in just two hours. Sam is a lawn care guru at JayRock ...
The heat is here, which means a little more maintenance - especially mowing. Good mowing practices are an important key to a healthy lawn and often go overlooked. Improper mowing can lead to thatch ...
Many of the plants we use in our landscapes have trouble taking up iron from our alkaline soils. There is a lot of the mineral in our soils, but it is locked up in relatively insoluble compounds and ...
It is time to fertilize the lawn. Fertilization in the fall can green up the lawn, but it does not stimulate much grass growth. The grass growth response to fertilizer changes in the fall and the main ...
LIME-INDUCED chlorosis of fruit trees is a serious problem on calcareous soils in Great Britain, and until recently the only practical means of correcting this disorder was a combination of grass ...
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