Olds College LHAP Mowing -
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Mowing -

turf/Mowing - .pptx

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Slide 1 LHAP 207 Turfgrass Regular Maintenance: Mowing Slide 2 Maintenance Fertilizer Mowing Watering Raised up or down depending on: Environment Plant Growth Stage Slide 3 Turfgrass Mowing: Removes parts of the foliage by: Tearing or slicing Affects the plant’s physiology: Slide 4 Turfgrass Mowing: The Effect Fluid exudes from the leaf This fluid is water and organic compounds (guttation and exudation) The plant tries to repair the wound Open wounds create entry points for pathogens Plant tries to replace lost tissue Carb usage for repair causes energy dips! Weak plants are easy pickings for pathogens Additional stresses can be enough to severely damage a plant Root growth stops while the plant fixes the wound Slide 5 Mowing: Turf Responses Continued Mowing Increases: Shoot growth and Density Tillering, Rhizome and Stolon formation Overall amount of chlorophyll Increased succulence in the shoots Continued Mowing Decreases: The overall size of the plant Shorter root systems and plant heights Slide 6 Mowing Heights Definition: Distance above the soil surface at which the turf is mowed Mowing heights of turfgrass are determined by: Natural growth habit of the turf Health and condition of the turf Purpose for which the turf is used Slide 7 Mowing Height Ranges Kentucky Bluegrass: 20-75 mm Perennial Ryegrass: 20-75 mm Creeping Red Fescue: 20-50 mm 1mm 20 mm 40 mm 60 mm 80 mm Slide 8 Mowing Height The Unbreakable Rule: Never remove more than ⅓ of the leaf tissue in one mowing What is your Home Lawn made of? Ideally it can increase in height by ⅓ and still be competitive at any stage in the mowing cycle. (50 mm / 3 = 16.7 mm. 16.7mm x 2 = 33 mm) A home lawn polystand SHOULD range between 33 - 50 mm (around 2” in height maximum) Slide 9 Mature Kentucky Blue Mowed @ 7 day intervals during peak growth Not Frequent Enough. Slide 10 Scalping Occurs when too much foliage is removed in a single mowing Uneven ground, excessive thatch, infrequent mowing intervals Grass turns brown, stubby Most of green tissue has been removed Plant chopped back to the sheath and crown Not used to exposure and dries out Slide 11 Scalping Slide 12 Mowing Quality Dull mowers: shred leaves Plants take much longer to recover Grass may discolour Puts extra strain on your engine Slide 13 Mowing Quality Good quality cuts produce: A sharp, even cut to reduce sealing and recovery period Prevention of desiccation and disease, etc. Balanced relationship between fertility and cutting quality Slide 14 Mowing Frequency Frequency can be determined using the ⅓ Rule and this question: Are there clippings produced when I mow? How often you mow? Determined by shoot growth rate, function of turf, cutting heights, environmental conditions Slide 15 Types of Mowers Slide 16 Types of Mowers Reel Scissor action of blades mounted on a cylinder and rotate against a fixed bed knife Expensive to purchase and maintain Slide 17 Reel Slide 18 Reel Slide 19 Types of Mowers Rotary Horizontal blades spinning at high speeds and the action tears off the blade of the grass Inexpensive to purchase and maintain Does not always produce a fine and clean cut Articulating mowers are useful on areas with undulations ~ Versatile Slide 20 Rotary Slide 21 Rotary Slide 22 Flail Spins a cylinder with sharpened knives that hang from a pivot Types of Mowers Slide 23 Flail Used for rough cutting Tears the grass plant Slide 24 Slide 25 Slide 26 Hover Mower / Fly Mower Robotic Mower Slide 27 SAFETY MOMENT Beware of flying debris from ejection ports!!! Slide 28 Clippings Removing clippings may: Reduce disease Reduce injury from clipping ‘piles’ Less interference with play Removal: Vs No Removal: Frequency reduces need to remove clippings Reduces fertilization requirements Clippings can be ‘mulched’ Insulation layer to moderate temperatures Increase wear tolerance Adds to humus layer & mat Slide 29 Mowing Height Summary Low Maintenance Polystand with CRF: Mowing at the high end is most realistic for Lawn Grade turf (closest to once per week) Increase your relative percentage of CRF for slower re-growth Set your mower at 1” - 1.5” (as close to 3.3 cm as possible) Check before you mow - are you over the 2” (5 cm) mark? Increase your mowing frequency if so… or evaluate the health of the turf and suggest a reduction in fertilizer and water. Mulch your clippings whenever possible.

Slide Outline

Extracted text and images from the presentation.

Slide 1

LHAP 207

Turfgrass Regular Maintenance:

Mowing

image5.jpg image16.jpg

Slide 2

Maintenance

Fertilizer

Mowing

Watering

Raised up or down depending on:

Environment

Plant Growth Stage

image12.png

Slide 3

Turfgrass Mowing:

Removes parts of the foliage by:

Tearing or slicing

Affects the plant’s physiology:

image26.png

Slide 4

Turfgrass Mowing: The Effect

Fluid exudes from the leaf

This fluid is water and organic compounds (guttation and exudation)

The plant tries to repair the wound

Open wounds create entry points for pathogens

Plant tries to replace lost tissue

Carb usage for repair causes energy dips!

Weak plants are easy pickings for pathogens

Additional stresses can be enough to severely damage a plant

Root growth stops while the plant fixes the wound

Slide 5

Mowing: Turf Responses

Continued Mowing Increases:

Shoot growth and Density

Tillering, Rhizome and Stolon formation

Overall amount of chlorophyll

Increased succulence in the shoots

Continued Mowing Decreases:

The overall size of the plant

Shorter root systems and plant heights

Slide 6

Mowing Heights

Definition:

Distance above the soil surface at which the turf is mowed

Mowing heights of turfgrass are determined by:

Natural growth habit of the turf

Health and condition of the turf

Purpose for which the turf is used

Slide 7

Mowing Height Ranges

Kentucky Bluegrass: 20-75 mm

Perennial Ryegrass: 20-75 mm

Creeping Red Fescue: 20-50 mm

1mm

20 mm

40 mm

60 mm

80 mm

Slide 8

Mowing Height

The Unbreakable Rule:

Never remove more than ⅓ of the leaf tissue in one mowing

What is your Home Lawn made of?

Ideally it can increase in height by ⅓ and still be competitive at any stage in the mowing cycle.

(50 mm / 3 = 16.7 mm. 16.7mm x 2 = 33 mm)

A home lawn polystand SHOULD range between 33 - 50 mm

(around 2” in height maximum)

Slide 9

Mature Kentucky Blue Mowed @ 7 day intervals during peak growth

Not Frequent Enough.

image2.jpg

Slide 10

Scalping

Occurs when too much foliage is removed in a single mowing

Uneven ground, excessive thatch, infrequent mowing intervals

Grass turns brown, stubby

Most of green tissue has been removed

Plant chopped back to the sheath and crown

Not used to exposure and dries out

Slide 11

Scalping

image15.jpg

Slide 12

Mowing Quality

Dull mowers:

shred leaves

Plants take much longer to recover

Grass may discolour

Puts extra strain on your engine

image6.jpg image4.jpg

Slide 13

Mowing Quality

Good quality cuts produce:

A sharp, even cut to reduce sealing and recovery period

Prevention of desiccation and disease, etc.

Balanced relationship between fertility and cutting quality

image7.jpg

Slide 14

Mowing Frequency

Frequency can be determined using the ⅓ Rule and this question:

Are there clippings produced when I mow?

How often you mow?

Determined by shoot growth rate, function of turf, cutting heights, environmental conditions

image14.jpg

Slide 15

Types of Mowers

Slide 16

Types of Mowers

Reel

Scissor action of blades mounted on a cylinder and rotate against a fixed bed knife

Expensive to purchase and maintain

image8.jpg

Slide 17

Reel

image1.png

Slide 18

Reel

image25.png image10.png image11.jpg

Slide 19

Types of Mowers

Rotary

Horizontal blades spinning at high speeds and the action tears off the blade of the grass

Inexpensive to purchase and maintain

Does not always produce a fine and clean cut

Articulating mowers are useful on areas with undulations ~ Versatile

image17.jpg

Slide 20

Rotary

image23.jpg image3.jpg

Slide 21

Rotary

image9.jpg

Slide 22

Flail

Spins a cylinder with sharpened knives that hang from a pivot

Types of Mowers

image18.jpg

Slide 23

Flail

Used for rough cutting

Tears the grass plant

image19.jpg image20.png image21.jpg

Slide 24

image27.jpg

Slide 25

image28.jpg

Slide 26

Hover Mower / Fly Mower

Robotic Mower

image13.jpg image22.jpg

Slide 27

SAFETY MOMENT

Beware of flying debris from ejection ports!!!

Slide 28

Clippings

Removing clippings may:

Reduce disease

Reduce injury from clipping ‘piles’

Less interference with play

Removal: Vs No Removal:

Frequency reduces need to remove clippings

Reduces fertilization requirements

Clippings can be ‘mulched’

Insulation layer to moderate temperatures

Increase wear tolerance

Adds to humus layer & mat

Slide 29

Mowing Height Summary

Low Maintenance Polystand with CRF:

Mowing at the high end is most realistic for Lawn Grade turf (closest to once per week)

Increase your relative percentage of CRF for slower re-growth

Set your mower at 1” - 1.5” (as close to 3.3 cm as possible)

Check before you mow - are you over the 2” (5 cm) mark?

Increase your mowing frequency if so… or evaluate the health of the turf and suggest a reduction in fertilizer and water.

Mulch your clippings whenever possible.

image24.png

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