In climates typified by long, hot, dry summers, it is
not possible to grow a beautiful lawn without an automatic irrigation
system, designed, installed, and operated to professional standards.
Neither is success likely if certain essential, seasonal tasks are not
carried out, especially dethatching in the spring, and feeding at the
onset of autumn as well as in spring. There remain therefore the
"ordinary" tasks that need to be routinely performed during the grass's
primary growing season - the summer.
The most essential job apart
from watering, is mowing. A lush, green, healthy, and beautiful swathe
cannot be attained without mowing that is both as regular as clockwork,
and carried out at the correct height. Actually, the two go together,
because infrequent, irregular mowing invariably entails that the lawn
is cut at an inappropriate height.
At what height then should the
grass be cut? One sometimes comes across guidelines detailing specific
heights for different varieties; 6cm for St. Augustine, or 4cm for
Bermuda grass, as though anyone actually measures the leaves with a
tape measure before mowing! A simpler approach is to hold fast to a few
golden rules, and to understand that consistently removing excessive
amounts of green leaf significantly reduces the energy level of the
plants.
*Never remove more than about 40% of the height of the
leaf at any particular mowing. It is important here to emphasize the
word leaf, for the stem, to which the leaf is attached, should never be
mowed. Therefore, the height of the lawnmower's blade should be set
high enough to avoid cutting the stems.
*The grass should appear
as green after mowing as it was beforehand. This is a very simple, but
effective rule of thumb. If the lawn's color is paler following the
mowing, it means that the blade has been set too low, the grass has
been scalped, and the stems exposed. This has serious consequences for
the health and vitality of the lawn in the long term, although the
degree of damage inflicted varies according to the variety of grass.
*Following
these two rules leads automatically to the question of how frequently
the lawn should be cut, for the longer the interval between mowing, the
larger amount of leaf will be removed, and the greater the likelihood
that the lawnmower's blade will sink and scalp the grass.
*The
correct mowing frequency is therefore one that avoids that happening.
In practice, the interval differs from species to species, and even
between lawns of the same variety that grow under different conditions.
Lawns that grow rapidly clearly have to be mowed more frequently than
those that do not. So it may be necessary to mow every five days in
certain circumstances, while a regime of once every 10 days may suffice
in others. Remember that the greens on golf courses, the ultimate
benchmark standard in turf management, are mowed at least once a day
during the growing season.