We are a Euless Texas owned and operated lawn care service company providing Lawn Fertilization and Weed Control services to Tarrant County homeowners
The show control can be difficult, even by professionals. Understand more about how it develops will help you understand why this can be a big problem in your lawn.
Nutsedge, also known as the Sede or Nutgrass, is an eternal plant that is reproduced, especially by small underground tubers, called walnut nuts, formed at the bottom of the underground rod. The underground stem is called Rhizome. A bean plant can produce several hundred tubers during the summer. In one year, the reproduction of a tuber has the potential to produce 1,900 new factories and 7,000 new tubers. The yellow walnut can also be spread by rhizomes. Now you can see why it's so hard to control and why it spreads on your page. Fortunately, individual tubers do not live more than 3 years.
There are several ways to identify sedges and distinguish them from grasses. Sedge can be identified by the triangular shape of its stem. You can feel the shape by rolling the stem in your fingertips. Sedge leaves are arranged in groups of three, which also distinguishes them from grasses. The leaves are light green to yellowish, and each leaf has a long, tapered tip. The yellowish color is usually easy to see in a green lawn as being different. Each leaf also has a prominent midrib and has a slick, shiny, or waxy appearance.