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            Nuisance fruit prevention and lawn updates By John 
			Fulton 
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            [April 
			18, 2013] 
            One of the main things to 
			discuss in this column is the removal of nuisance fruit. You may be 
			thinking about those apples or peaches, but really the nuisance 
			fruit category includes things that are much more a nuisance, like 
			sweet gum balls, maple seeds and crabapples.  | 
        
            |  Several products are available to eliminate nuisance fruit. The 
				most common is ethephon, and it is used as a foliar spray to 
				reduce or eliminate undesirable fruit or seeds. A couple of the 
				trade names are Florel and Ethrel. The product is effective at 
				eliminating much of the fruit without affecting leaf growth and 
				color, and it does not harm other plants that get some spray 
				drift on them. It also does not affect the actual flowering of 
				the treated trees. With ethephon, the key is in the timing. 
				The application must be made during flowering but before the 
				fruit set in. For most flowering trees there is a 10- to 14-day 
				window of opportunity. Sweet gums are a little tricky since 
				there are no showy flowers involved, so effective sprays should 
				occur just as new leaves begin to emerge. Sprays should leave leaves wet, but not to the point of 
				dripping. Good coverage of the tree is needed, so keep in mind 
				the size of the tree when you are weighing this option. 
				 Injectable products are available, but they must be applied 
				by a professional. The injectable products have not been as 
				effective as the sprays. This product is a growth regulator that naturally occurs. Its 
				natural production is stimulated by stress, so make sure you 
				aren't treating a tree that is under stress from drought, high 
				temperatures, diseases or other environmental stresses. Treating 
				stressed trees can cause severe injury to the plant, such as 
				leaf loss or scorching. Lawn updates Crabgrass seed has already germinated and will continue to do 
				so throughout the spring and summer months. Preventive 
				treatments will still do some good for seed that will germinate 
				over the next six to eight weeks, but treatments won't get seeds 
				that have already germinated. The organic arsenicals, such as 
				DSMA and MSMA, will control newly germinated grass. Remember, 
				you should have a second preventive application around June 1 
				for summer control of crabgrass and other annual grasses. 
              
                [to top of second column] | 
 
			The time to begin mowing has already arrived in some areas, and 
			there are a few very simple rules for mowing grass. The first is to 
			use equipment that is ready for the job. Make sure the mower has 
			sharp blades. Dull blades will show up as injury on the grass 
			blades, like brown tips and jagged edges. Blades can be sharpened in 
			several ways. Using a file or grinder are the more common methods. Next is the rule of one-third. Never remove more than one-third 
			of the leaf blade at any one time. This rule must be followed if you 
			don't want to catch or rake the grass. A good general mowing height 
			for combination bluegrass and fine fescue is about 2 inches. This 
			would mean that you would need to mow every time the grass reaches 3 
			inches in height.  Bagging grass clippings may actually add to the buildup of thatch 
			-- that dead, matted layer on the soil surface. Thatch is broken 
			down by microbes at the soil surface. Without a food source, the 
			microbe numbers crash, and any clippings remain without breaking 
			down. Mulching is OK. It isn't a cure-all, and it does take quite a bit 
			of extra power to accomplish. The final word is that grass mowed on 
			the one-third rule doesn't need to be caught or mulched. Bagging 
			takes time and the clippings must then be disposed of. Mulching 
			takes extra power and fuel. 
			
			 Mowing intervals depend upon grass growth rather than a calendar 
			schedule. The spring and fall periods will require more frequent 
			mowing than during the summer. That is in a "normal" year. 
			Frequent mowing 
			really reduces the labor needed for overall operations. 
              
            [By 
			JOHN FULTON, 
			University of Illinois Extension] |