1 / 26

Presented by Dr. Teri Hamlin Georgia Department of Education

Landscape Management Practices. Mulching, Watering, Staking, Fertilization, Weed Control. Presented by Dr. Teri Hamlin Georgia Department of Education Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office July 2001. Mulch A tree’s best friend. Insulates soil Retains moisture Keeps weeds out

pepper
Download Presentation

Presented by Dr. Teri Hamlin Georgia Department of Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Landscape Management Practices Mulching, Watering, Staking, Fertilization, Weed Control Presented by Dr. Teri Hamlin Georgia Department of Education Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office July 2001

  2. MulchA tree’s best friend • Insulates soil • Retains moisture • Keeps weeds out • Prevents soil compaction • Reduces lawn mower / weedeater damage • Adds an aesthetic touch

  3. Mulch

  4. Mulch • Max depth of 2-4” • Do not touch the trunk • Mulch too deep can lead to • trunk & crown rot • poor root ball aeration

  5. Type of Mulch • Bark • Pine Straw • Grass Clippings • Leaves • Rock • Synthetic Materials

  6. Ground Cloth under Mulch ???

  7. IrrigationHow much ? How often? • During establishment • Minimum of 1” of water per week • Water between 9 p.m. - 9 a.m.

  8. Types of Irrigation • Sprinkler • Micro Sprinkler • Drip Irrigation

  9. Drip Irrigation Uses 30-50% less water Efficient and effective application Fewer pest problems Fewer weeds No wind effects Easily automated Economic to install

  10. Drip Irrigation

  11. Time Clock

  12. XeriscapeWater Management Practices

  13. Staking • Good - quality trees do not require staking • When to stake: • Windy Location • Top Heavy • Plants 8’ or taller • Weak Trunks • Small Root Ball • Evergreens

  14. Types of Staking • Support weak trunk • Root ball anchorage

  15. Staking

  16. Staking • Rubber straps are nicely suited for attaching stakes to trunks • Wire threaded through hose can girdle plant if left to long • Never leave a plant staked for more than one growing season

  17. Trunk Protection • Little protection against insect & disease • Some sun scald protection for thin bark plants • Uneven wraps w/exposed bark = temp difference in trunk tissue • Products : • Paper Wrap • Burlap • Plastic • White Latex Paint

  18. Trunk Wraps • If used, wrap from the bottom of the tree toward the top overlapping material • Use electrical tape or flexible adhesive versus string

  19. Fertilizer • Nitrogen • Phosphorus • Potassium Landscape plants needs should be based on Soil Sample

  20. Forms of Slow-release Nitrogen Ammoniacal nitrogen IBDU (Isobutylene diurea) Sulfur-coated urea Ureaformaldehyde

  21. General Recommendation

  22. Types of Fertilizer • Sources: • Inorganic • Organic • Formation: • Dry / Granular • Liquid • Slow-release

  23. How to Apply Fertilizer

  24. Fertilizer Burn

  25. When to Fertilize • Main Meal • Slow Release ( 1 time per year) • General Purpose (2-3 x per growing season) • Dessert • During active growth (Spring-Summer) • Liquid • Soil drench • Foliage Spray

  26. Weed Management • Mechanical • Chemical • Pre-emergent Herbicide • Surflan, Treflan, Ronstar, Balan • Post-emergent Herbicide • Selective • Kills grasses in shrubs & flowers (Poast) • Kills broadleaf weeds in lawns (MSMA, Trimec) • Non-Selective (Round up)

More Related