Best Lawn Food for Winter
There is very little leaf growth in winter but plenty of root growth as the soil at root depth is invariably warmer than the air. This means keeping the roots fed. In addition, you don’t need to have a shabby looking lawn over winter as many people do. It can and should be green, tidy and the best-looking part of the garden.
How do I Keep my Lawn Green During Winter?
Iron is the secret ingredient for a fantastic lawn over the cooler months. It doesn’t promote growth whilst enhancing the green colour of the lawn.
It comes in a couple of varieties:
- Green-up Ferrous Sulphate is the equivalent of a vitamin iron tablet to you and me. It doesn’t promote growth and is best applied as a liquid. It’s cheap, greens rapidly, can be applied frequently and stores well.
- Winter Green High Iron contains a large amount of Ferrous Sulphate but also some nutrients such as nitrogen (to feed the roots) and potassium. This is highly beneficial to replace lost nutrients in mild or wet winters which are becoming more and more common with climate change. Apply during a mild spell after a light topping with the mower, from late December to late February, and the lawn will be super green in a few days.
You’ll have less Moss with Winter Treatments
Applying our winter products will also have a very detrimental effect on the moss. Applied at slightly higher rates than for greening above, you can suppress the moss so that when spring comes you may find you don’t have much of a moss problem at all.
You’ll have Fewer Worm Casts
During wetter weather worms are able to surface leaving messy casts in the lawn. Ferrous Sulphate acidifies the soil surface making it less palatable to the worms so fewer surface meaning fewer squidgy casts.
In Summary
Many many benefits from using iron or a winter feed on your lawn. Mow on a relatively high setting prior to application and enjoy a tidy green lawn through winter.
Perfect for a Healthy Green Winter Lawn
More Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
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Follow a few simple rules to apply your lawn fertiliser and get the best results from your grass whether it's a spring, summer or an autumn feed
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For convenience you can fertilise the seeded lawn area on the day of sowing however, due to changing weather patterns this may not always be best.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
You can save time and money and get a better result if you use the correct fertiliser for your lawn. Adjust for these and your grass is 90% of the way there.
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The soil in your lawn controls the amount of fertiliser, air and water to the grass roots, therefore sandy and poor soils should be fed more than clay soils
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Knowing what to use to feed your grass in spring can make a big difference to your lawn whilst saving you time and money.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
In summer you can use a granular or liquid fertiliser. However, the conditions for application are very important during the warmer and dryer summer months.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Autumn fertiliser needs to be able to support the grass nutritionally, give maximum colour to make use of lower autumn light levels and promote deeper roots.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Clay soil tends to be heavy and dense, with poor drainage and good nutrient retention. Your lawn feed should take this into consideration.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Sandy soil tends to drain quickly and lacks essential nutrients, so the best lawn fertilizer should provide a generous level of prime nutrients to compensate.
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Seaweed promotes health, goodness and biological activity within the grass and the soil producing a greener, stronger and more disease resistant lawn.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Using a proven mix of nutrients you can rapidly enhance the green in your lawn in less than a day. Ideal for application between seasonal feeds or as a standalone fast green-up before an event.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Liquid feeding of the lawn is suitable from late spring to early autumn during the main growth period in warmer weather.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Here are two simple ways to use weed killer and soluble or granular lawn fertiliser that is easy for you, safe for the grass and deadly for the weeds.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
When spreading fertiliser on the lawn you need to do two simple things otherwise you'll damage the grass: spread the correct amount and put it on evenly.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
There is only one way to spread fertiliser on your grass safely and evenly and that is with a rotary or broadcast spreader; not by hand or with a drop spreader
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Watering-in a fertiliser treatment is necessary for fine powdery products such as weed and feed so try using a fertiliser that doesn’t need watering in!
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
There are three factors that control how long fertiliser takes to work. The availability of moisture, the temperature and the type of fertiliser.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Lawn fertiliser may not completely dissolve in to the grass for a variety of reasons. Most of them are good and better for a healthy lawn!
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Use a granular or pelleted feed without weed killer or iron that is slow-release. These settle deep into the grass pretty much out of reach of dogs and cats.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
Aftercut is very similar to ‘weed and feed’. There are those with weed killer and those without. Do not use the one with weed killer on a regular basis.
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
'Weed and feed' is a clever lawn care idea. The problem is, for most people it doesn't work leaving stripes, burnt grass and even bigger weeds
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Lawn Food Do's and Don'ts
The shelf life of fertilizers can vary widely based on type of fertilizer, storage conditions, and packaging. Here's a guideline for common types of fertilisers.