How to keep landscapes looking lovely in the heatBy Kelly Kopp and Taun Beddes

The heat is on, and many lawns are struggling. Consider these suggestions for keeping your landscapes and gardens healthy while also saving water.

In almost all circumstances, plants tolerate or prefer to have variations in soil moisture. This means that it is perfectly fine for soil to dry out moderately between irrigations. Soil that is kept overly wet reduces vigor and can actually harm plants.

Do not rely on a sprinkler clock or irrigation controller to irrigate lawns on a set schedule. Instead, determine when the lawn actually requires irrigation, and manually activate the system as needed. A common sign of drought stress in turfgrass is grass blades not quickly springing back upright when walked on, leaving a trail of footprints in the lawn. Additionally, walking on a lawn barefoot can let you feel how dry the soil is. Relatively dry soil under the grass is hard, does not “give” when stepped on, and is slightly uncomfortable to walk on. Wetter soil depresses a bit when weight is applied.

Do not water between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. During this period, up to 50 percent of water emitted from sprinklers is lost to evaporation. Instead, irrigate when the sun is down or low in the sky.

Small areas of the lawn can brown during hot weather because of variations and inefficiencies in sprinkling systems. Instead of increasing the amount of time the entire sprinkling system irrigates, supplement water to the brown areas with a small hose-end lawn sprinkler, or water by hand with a hose.

Mow the lawn to a height of at least 2 inches. This allows roots to penetrate deeper into the soil and increases overall drought hardiness.

When irrigating turf, water long enough for the water to penetrate 6 to 12 inches into the soil. This encourages deeper root development and reduces the frequency of required irrigations.

Irrigate shady and sunny areas according to need. Shady areas require much less irrigation than sunnier areas.

Cover bare soil in the garden and flower beds with 2–3 inches of mulch. Not only does this save water, it greatly reduces the need for weeding. Inexpensive mulch can be obtained from many local green waste recycling centers. Grass clippings also work well and are free.

Hand-water or use drip irrigation to irrigate flowerbeds, vegetable gardens, and shrub beds. Water should be placed near plants and penetrate the soil 6 inches deep for flowers and veggies and 2 feet into the soil for established trees and shrubs.

Kelly Kopp is a Utah State University Extension water conservation and turfgrass specialist, and Taun Beddes is a USU Extension horticulturist.

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