August is the doldrums of our humid Southern summers. Yet . . . September is only four weeks away and it marks the beginning of glorious, uplifting Tall Fescue Time.
If you're eager for Tall Fescue Time, you can prep by measuring your lawn to determine how much Tall Fescue seed or sod to order to refresh it for the cool months ahead.
Continue to hold off fertilizing your Tall Fescue with high nitrogen until it gets cool out in September. To help your Tall Fescue do its best right now, we recommend fungicide to prevent brown patch.
Order fungicide online for direct shipment or local pick up. Or let us plan ahead for you . . . sign up for Lawn Coach "Champ" and we'll stick it in the mail at the right time.
>> Read about the importance of fungicide for Tall Fescue during warm months
🌡️ Nina Johnson, our Lawn Coach marketing manager, reminded me to remind you that heat stress can cause grass to change color - not just brown, but sometimes a grey-blue color.
💦 She noticed a couple bluish patches in her lawn last weekend and got the hose out right away!
Read our tips on how to care for your lawn when it's hot >>
💧 Tall Fescue lawns like 2" of water a week during summer. That's up from 1" a week during the cool months.
Water your lawn in the morning: Why the fuss? Water sitting around on leaves promotes diseases. When you water in the morning, moisture rapidly dries from the leaf blades when the sun is out. If you water in the evenings, moisture may not evaporate from the leaves until the next day. Watering in the evenings promotes diseases.
Fall Armyworms love, love, and I mean LOVE Tall Fescue Lawns. Besides the fact that they devour lawns, there are two annoying things about the name of this creature:
🐛 It's not a worm. It's a caterpillar.
🐛 They are called "fall" armyworms. It's not fall yet, it's the doldrums of summer, but this caterpillar doesn't know that "fall" (or worms) is in their name, so you could see them any day now until frost.
Since Tall Fescue lawns are food of choice for fall armyworms, we recommend preventative insecticide for both new and established Tall Fescue lawns.
If areas of your lawn look mysteriously brown and chewed on, it might be these caterpillars. >>Read up on fall armyworms
I have to get a shovel and dig up goosegrass - large clumps are tenaciously rooted and I cannot pull them up by hand. The best control is mowing and pre-emergent herbicide.
Mowing Height: You should already be mowing at 3 to 4" height for the warm months; we'll remind you in the fall when it's time to lower the height back down to 2.5-3" for the cool months.
Mowing Frequency: During spring you were probably mowing on a once-a-week frequency (we recommend every 5 to 7 days when Tall Fescue is actively growing). During the hot days of summer, your Tall Fescue lawn will slow down, so you'll probably need to mow less frequently. You can keep on a weekly schedule to keep down any weed pressure you may experience, even though you may be mowing off very little of the Tall Fescue leaves.
To successfully plant Tall Fescue seed and sod, wait just one more month until September. We'll send an email letting you know it's time!
Prepare for overseeding Tall Fescue by cleaning up your lawn and spraying out weeds. This way, you'll have that task taken care of well before planting season and it won't be a last-minute problem to solve.
For tips on what to do for Warm Season lawns such as Bermuda, Centipede, Zoysia, peruse this page: August Warm Season Lawn Tips.
Got questions? Leave a comment below!
Come back next month for September's Lawn Tips for Tall Fescue lawns!
If you're new here, subscribe to our emails to get this information in your inbox every month.