Michigan State University Extension
Ornamental Plants plus Version 2.0 - 00001557
01/01/98

Selecting Lawn Grasses


A beautiful lawn is not maintained year after year without  
some effort.  Before planting a lawn, consider whether or   
not it's worth the time and expense required to keep it     
beautiful.                                                  

A lawn can be as low maintenance as mowing whatever grows   
and letting nature do the rest.  At the other end of the    
spectrum is the lawn that needs monthly fertilization and   
regular watering.  If the lawn is watered and fertilized    
regularly it will need more mowing and dethatching.  The    
maintenance required for these two types of lawns is        
vastly different.                                           

The maintenance level of the lawn is determined by the      
grass selected, the desired lawn quality and the site.  Be  
aware that some landscape features are incompatible.  For   
instance, you can have a very shady landscape or a high     
quality lawn but not both.  Grass does not grow well in     
the shade.                                                  

A good lawn becomes possible when a proper mix of grasses   
is planted.  Most lawns are combinations of Kentucky        
bluegrass, creeping red fescue, and perennial ryegrass.  A  
mixture of three different grass species  provides the      
maximum amount of pest resistance and environmental         
adaptability.  Each of these three grasses has distinct     
traits.                                                     

Kentucky bluegrass is the most common lawn grass.  Blends   
of Kentucky bluegrass cultivars can provide a very          
high quality lawn but such lawns usually require above      
average maintenance levels.  The spreading growth habit     
helps fill in bare spots but the grass goes dormant during  
hot, dry, summer weather.                                   

Creeping red fescue has thread-like leaves and is the       
most shade tolerant lawn grass.  This does not mean the     
grass grows only in shade or that it will tolerate total    
shade.  It grows well in full sun and in fact requires      
some sun during the day.                                    

Only named cultivars of perennial ryegrass should be        
used in lawns.  Common perennial ryegrass often dies        
during the winter and does not mow well.                    

A fairly adaptable mix is listed below.  It is unlikely     
that it can be matched exactly but a number of  mixes will  
come close.  This mix will provide a good quality lawn      
with below average to average care.  The mix will provide   
a lawn suitable for sun or partial shade.                   
     50% creeping red fescue                                
     30% Kentucky bluegrass                                 
       (can be 15% each of two cultivars)                   
     20% named perennial ryegrass                           

Under some conditions the mix can be varied.  If the lawn   
will be subjected to heavy traffic increase the bluegrass   
to 50% and reduce the fescue to 30%.                        

Less desirable grasses are available and should be          
avoided.  Here are the most common problem grasses.         

Annual ryegrass is often sold as the major component of     
some very low priced grass seed.  It will die out during    
the winter so forms a lawn that lasts for a single season.  

Rough bluegrass is often found in shady grass mixes.        
It has a light green color and does not blend well with     
other lawn type grasses.  It does however do well in        
moist, shaded sites.                                        

Tall fescue is one of the two worst lawn weeds.  Yet        
seed is available in most stores.  The grass blades of a    
clump of tall fescue always seem to stay taller than the    
rest of the lawn.  There is no selective control for this   
grass as the chemicals that kill tall fescue also kill      
other lawn grasses.  Pure stands of this wear tolerant      
grass are often used on playgrounds or roadsides.           

Zoysia is a warm season grass that turns brown early in     
the fall and stays brown until late into the spring.  It    
is not better than the cool season grasses more commonly    
used in Michigan.                                           

Bentgrass becomes established in a lawn and is the          
other of the two worst lawn weeds.  The grass can tolerate  
very low mowings as on golf greens.  At normal lawn         
heights it is shaggy and often kills out during the winter  
or during hot dry weather.  There is no selective control   
for the problem.                                            


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