Organic Lawn Care Products South Bend IN

Tips for getting started with eco lawn care include choosing the right grass for your climate, mow on a high setting since longer leaf surface can take in more sunlight and produce a strong root system, and mulch the lawn with its own clippings. Then, it’s on to green products. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to all the related products and services in South Bend, IN listed below.

Tom'S Lawncare
(574) 343-0301
2328 Mather Ave
Elkhart, IN

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Good Neighbor Lawn Svc
(574) 233-5287
116 S 34th St
South Bend, IN
 
Gavarretes Lawn Care
(574) 262-1727
126 Floyd St.
Elkhart, IN
 
Adams Eden
(574) 307-2686
51623 Winding Waters Lane North
Elkhart, IN
 
DC MOWING
(574) 302-4351
19822 Yoder St.
South Bend, IN
 
Dave Talboom Lawncare Inc
(574) 234-4883
26981 Kline Trl
South Bend, IN
 
Joeys Landscape & Lawn Care
(574) 255-6362
1516 Lynn St
Mishawaka, IN
 
Lawncraft Lawncare, LLC
(574) 584-5116
24625 Dover Court
Elkhart, IN
 
The Grass Butler
(574) 274-0455
2041 Parkview Pl.
South Bend, IN
 
DC Mowing
(574) 302-4351
19822 Yoder St
South Bend, IN
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Organic Lawn Care that Promotes Growth & Eliminates Weeds, Insects and Pests

Organic Lawn Care that Promotes Growth & Eliminates Weeds, Insects and Pests

August 22, 2009   Alli Marshall

A green lawn seems redundant, right? Short of a brown lawn (and no one wants that), what other kind is there? Yet many property owners are concerned that choosing environmentally friendly lawn products and services will leave their yards without the desirable weed-free thickness and (yes) greenness. Food for thought: Healthy grass provides plump worms and other insects for bird consumption. It also converts carbon to oxygen and absorbs air-born pollutants. Nice perks - especially since an organic lawn can do all of these things even more efficiently.

Tips for getting started with eco lawn care include choosing the right grass for your climate (Kentucky bluegrass works well in the North; Bermudagrass is a good choice for many Southern states), mow on a high setting since longer leaf surface can take in more sunlight and produce a strong root system, and mulch the lawn with its own clippings. Then, it’s on to green products.

According to The National Gardening Association, between 1998 and 2003 the number of households purchasing natural fertilizers jumped from 2.5 million to 11.7 million - often because homeowners didn’t want their children and pets coming into contact with dangerous chemicals; nor did they want to track such treatments into their homes. Woodstream’s Ringer Lawn Restore ($42.39) is a slow-release organic lawn fertilizer that encourages thick, green grass growth. A 40-pound bag covers 5,000 square feet. The fertilizer contains ingredients like poultry feather meal, bone meal, soybean meal and soil microbes; material safety data on the product reports no carcinogenicity or potential health hazards and it’s approved by the Organic Materials Review Institute.

Even the lushest lawns have the occasional uninvited visitor: Crabgrass and dandelions make the least-wanted list. Skip the scary backpack of pesticide and go after weeds with Weed-A-Tak from Natura ($12.99). The powerful spray bottle promises to take out annual weeds and grasses in a single treatment and perennials within two or three treatments. But for all that muscle (it can be used on broadleaf weeds, grasses, vines, brush and poison ivy), the organic herbicide could almost second as a salad dressing. The non-toxic, biodegradable active ingredients include citric acid, clove leaf oil and cinnamon oil.

If it’s not crabgrass threatening the yard, it’s pests. Fireants and caterpillars take a toll on lawns and gardens; mosquitoes and fleas annoy and harm the human and animal inhabitants. Deal with all of these critters with a natural pest control like Green Light Lawn & Garden Spray with Spinosad ($11.72). Spinosad is derived from a naturally-occurring soil-dwelling bacteria that is fermented. While it’s harmful when ingested by predatory insects, it has little or no effects on...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist