| 
            Dealing with the drought By John 
			Fulton 
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            [April 
			04, 2013] 
            It's been said the effects of 
			drought linger for up to seven years. After the scorcher we had last 
			year, effects can already be seen. Most of the ill effects are seen 
			on lawns, trees and shrubs. Here are a few early spring pointers for 
			dealing with the damage done. | 
        
            |  For lawns, what you see is what you get as far as live plants 
				and dead ones. We had an amazing recovery in most lawns last 
				fall. Hurricane Isaac saved the day in the "nick of time." A few 
				more weeks, and we truly would have been starting from scratch. 
				For now, assess the size of dead areas. Areas larger than about 
				a foot across will not fill in this year on their own, so some 
				additional seed should be planted quickly. Scratch in 2 to 4 
				pounds per 1,000 square feet by using a garden rake. Start by 
				raking, spread the seed, rake again, then tamp it down and hope 
				for better growing conditions this year. Just make sure you 
				don't apply crabgrass preventer, since it will kill the seeds 
				you want to germinate as well as the crabgrass. 
				
				 As for trees 
				and shrubs, some damage is already evident. Other damage is 
				going to become apparent over the next few years. If plants 
				don't leaf out by mid-May, the story is probably written (and 
				that means they are history). The best thing to do is to keep 
				them growing aggressively by applying fertilizer at the lawn 
				rate -- about 8 pounds of 12-12-12 per 1,000 square feet of drip 
				area. If you are fertilizing the entire lawn, that is 
				sufficient. The trees will actually get the nutrients before the 
				grass. Garlic mustard Garlic mustard is considered an invasive species, and some 
				states have declared it a noxious weed. Illinois hasn't declared 
				it such, at least not yet. The problem with garlic mustard is 
				how quickly it spreads. It spreads so quickly it tends to choke 
				out much of the desirable undergrowth in timber areas. At this 
				time of year, the plants are still in the rosette stage 
				described below, but they will soon begin to extend their flower 
				stems if they are in their second year of growth. 
              
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			Garlic mustard is a cool-season biennial herb with stalked, 
			triangular to heart-shaped, coarsely toothed leaves that give off an 
			odor of garlic when crushed. First-year plants appear as a rosette 
			of green leaves close to the ground. Rosettes remain green through 
			the winter and develop into mature flowering plants the following 
			spring. Flowering plants of garlic mustard reach from 2 to 3 1/2 
			feet in height and produce buttonlike clusters of small white 
			flowers, each with four petals in the shape of a cross.  Control of garlic mustard is somewhat difficult. Seeds can remain 
			viable in the soil for at least five years. Small amounts, including 
			the roots, can be pulled up. Garlic mustard can regrow from root 
			material. For herbicides, glyphosate (Roundup) is the most often 
			recommended. Remember, glyphosate kills broadleaves and grasses it 
			gets on. There has been some success with 2,4-D LV400 where there 
			aren't concerns with other understory plants. Very large patches 
			have been controlled with fire, but that completely destroys the 
			understory of timbers. Remember to monitor areas for at least five 
			years due to the seed dormancy period. 
              
            [By 
			JOHN FULTON, 
			University of Illinois Extension] 
              
            
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