What is up everybody!?
Thanks for coming back for another Do My Own Lawn Care video.
Before we get into today's subject I wanted jump into the back yard and do a follow up
on our button weed problem video.
So, let's go back there.
Overall, really great success with the post emergent that I mixed up and sprayed back
here.
Or I should say spot sprayed back here.
And I don't know if you can tell on camera but these bare spots and kind of thinned out
areas that you're seeing is where a lot of the button weed was.
So, again, the post emergent that I mixed up and spot sprayed back here in the back,
did a really great job of kicking the crap out of the button weed.
I waited about a week, I busted out my mower, gave it a fresh cut, and my button weed problem
was almost, ALMOST, all gone.
I noticed there was a few fresh new patches that popped up.
It's not a whole lot.
It's just right in there is a little bit, and right in here is a little bit as well.
But overall, post emergent worked, it did what it needed to do, cutting it down helped,
and it is pretty much all gone!
Ok, so on the last video, I gotta call myself out.
I learned a valuable lesson.
See, I was going for convenience and ease of use, which is why I used my battery powered
backpack sprayer.
And while that's great because you don't have to pump and it keeps a consistent pressure,
the problem with using that one is, I keep a fan tip nozzle on it at all times, because
that's what I primarily use to do my pre and post emergent blanket applications over the
whole yard every year.
And that's not really what you want.
What you really need is a one gallon hand pump sprayer that's got an adjustable cone
nozzle on the end, so that you can go through a lightly spritz the weeds for these spot
treatments.
And the reason I say that, what I noticed after about a week, is the four gallon back
pack sprayer, the battery powered one with that fan tip nozzle, although it did put a
good amount of chemical down in the yard, what it did is it kind of just burnt up some
of the areas back here in the back.
Now since then, those areas have bounced back because we've had a good amount of rain, but
what I learned from that is, the constant pressure of a battery powered sprayer and
that fan tip nozzle, just puts too much out to be doing spot spray treatments.
So again, do yourself a favor, just use a one gallon hand cannon with that adjustable
cone nozzle.
So on today's video and why I'm making it.
I went out of town for a week, and I came back, the yard hadn't been mowed, and, well,
it looked like this.
And because of that, I noticed this lovely little problem.
And that lovely little problem are suckers that are coming from, my crepe myrtles here
in the front yard.
And before we talk about how to deal with this problem from the crepe myrtles here in
the front, let's first talk about what causes suckers in the first place.
Alright, so what causes suckers?
Generally there's two main reasons.
One, the tree or the shrub is under stress or two, a graft has failed.
And before explaining those two reasons, if your trees like my crepe myrtles back here
are just starting to look like shrubs because they've got a whole bunch of bushy clumps
of young stems sprouting from either at the base or a spot up on the tree, those are suckers.
Those are what we're talking about.
And why are they called suckers?
That clump of stems or anything that's coming from the base or the trunk, they're called
suckers because they zap water and nutrients from the main tree.
They're unhealthy, they're unsightly, they just look bad and they're kind of just sucking
the life out of the tree.
So going back to our two main reasons, reason number one, stress.
So suckers are a tress attempt at growing more branches.
Most often because it's had some kind of injury.
If you have exposed roots that are on top of the turf or on top of the soil, and those
roots have been damaged, most often the tree's going to sprout suckers from that area.
If the suckers are growing higher on the trunk, we call those water sprouts and those most
often show up because of some kind of pruning injury or crack on the tree trunk or other
some kind of damage.
So you want to make sure you prune these off when they're really young because if you wait
until they get older their tender skin can turn to bark, and if you try to prune them
off then, you could risk damaging the trunk of your tree.
Suckers are a sign of age.
When your trees are starting to get older, they might start to decay, and that's when
they tend to sucker more.
If you've got a wood boring insect, that's probably going to disrupt the tree's ability
to get water and nutrients up to its branches and instead its going to send it off to those
suckers.
Now on to the second reason, grafts.
And grafts for those who don't know are the trunk and branches of one kind of tree spliced
onto the roots of another.
Now sometimes those grafts fail at the base of the trunk and when that happens, the root
stock is going to start sending out shoots of it's own, those are suckers.
And if you don't prune out those suckers, the root stock of the flowering tree can actually
over take the tree that it was grafted to.
Now tree suckers are not really that huge of a problem, but you want to deal with them
early on so that you can preserve the long term health of the tree.
Or in my case, it's just making your yard look terrible!
So let's talk about how to deal with them.
Right here's a really good example of what I'm talking about.
This is at the base of one of my crepe myrtle trees right here in the front.
I usually don't let them get this out of control and big but I wanted to give you a really
good visual and a really good example of what suckers look like.
So again, you can see this is at the base of the tree.
Looks like there use to be some significant branches coming off right here and somebody
has pruned that back.
I didn't do that.
Somebody previous to me did.
But uh, the tree is kind of stressed out right here and it's trying to regrow those branches
into these little suckers.
Now as for the suckers that you saw at the beginning of this video, I can't really tell
where there at anymore because, well, yeah, I busted out my mower and I went through and
mowed my yard.
I mean I can't have that thing looking like trash, I've got to crush my competition around
me so, got to stay on top of my lawn game.
So I've got to wait for those to sprout back so I can pinpoint exactly where they're at.
Pull them out at the root system and use my Sucker Stopper RTU on it or ready to use spray.
This is what I'm going to be using to try and prevent these things from popping up in
the yard.
I'm not even going to try and pronounce the active ingredient in this product, because
I would just fail miserably.
But it's most commonly known as NAA, so this is what we're going to use and I'm going to
show you how to spray this on the areas where the suckers are sprouting out.
I do have one area where I can most definitely see a sucker sprouting up.
That's this little clump right here.
Underneath it is a root to my crepe myrtle.
Because it keeps getting hit with the mower, every time I go and cut the front yard, this
is an area where it's sprouting one of those suckers to get water and nutrients to it.
So, in order to get these out, what you've got to do is pull them out by the roots as
best as you can.
Pull them out the best you can.
Like so.
And we're going to take our spray, spray the area they use to be.
So right here's another example and another clump.
Do my best to pull it out.
Freaking suckers are hard.
There we go.
Got a bit of grass in there.
That's okay.
Just going to take our spray.
Spray that in the little surrounding area, and should be fixed.
Right here's another one.
I'm going to try and get all the way down to the root here.
Push the grass back a little bit.
There's the root.
Go in, pull it out.
Put our sucker stopper on it.
Check out how gnarly and deep the roots were on the sucker.
There is a Bermuda runner in there, so, ignore that.
But, just look at this.
This is why it was so hard to yank out of there.
Look how intertwined and deep it was.
Crazy.
I know it's one of the suckers from the crepe myrtle because it's got the reddish green
leaves coming out on the top and that's what these suckers looked like at the base of the
tree here when they were first starting out.
So, I know this comes from these guys right here.
Alright so there you go.
That's suckers in a nut shell.
I'm going to keep my eye on the front yard here and as I see those little suckers, I'll
pluck them out and spray them like I just showed you and, yeah!
Try to get rid of that little problem here in the front.
Getting up into the high 90s with a bout 1,001 percent humidity today so, I'm going to hurry
up and get my hand cannon out and mix up some herbicide, post emergent, and spot spray some
weeds I'e got going on in the front.
If you have any other questions on the product I used, links in the description box below
so you can go over to Do My Own dot com, read more about that.
If you have any other questions on suckers, leave those in the comments section below,
email them over to the customer service staff, or pick up the phone, give us a call.
And if you're not already, subscribe to the channel by clicking this button right here,
you can click this link to watch the previous episode in the lawn care series and if you
want to watch all of the episodes in the lawn care series, click this playlist right here.
And as always, thanks for watching!
For more infomation >> How to Get Rid of Tree Suckers - Lawn Maintenance Tips | DoMyOwn.com - Duration: 10:26.-------------------------------------------
Where to rob Museum and how to escape the Museum! - Duration: 8:53.
Hi guys! It's me, Roblox Duy
Now I will show you how to get to the museum (New Update)
Just follow my lead and you will come to it
Lol
Here we go!!
This requires two players to rob
Now we have to wait anyway, I'll cut the video
Lol my bike is gone and no vehicle for me
Good Bye Life
X_X
Bye!!
-------------------------------------------
FluteTips 43 How to Get Good Tone From Low to High Leaps - Duration: 2:57.
FluteTips 43 How to Get Good Tone From Low to High Leaps
Today's FluteTip is how to get good tone from low to high leaps.
When you're playing low to high leaps such as what I was just playing in Mozart's Concerto
in G. But they're spread out in a lot of different solos you have big leaps and sometimes what
happens is that our low register notes get lost. The tone dissipates it gets airy they
just don't come out as strong as the high ones. So, here's how you have to approach
that. What is really happening when you're doing low to high leaps is you're changing
your embouchure to the high embouchure and then you're keeping it as a high embouchure
and then trying to get the low notes. When really you have to do the opposite. You have
to have a low embouchure and then reach for the high note with that low embouchure.
Now you can't fast passages you can't change back and forth. You can't have a high embouchure
and then a low and then change and be you moving in and out air stream high air stream
low air stream high. It's too fast for that. So, the key here is to do the opposite of
what usually happens meaning you keep your high embouchure. What you have to have is
the low embouchure. Aim for the low note and then make the high note come out. So, if I'm
playing I've just chosen a passage in Mozart's Concerto in G in the first movement. If I
aim for this Low D
I can get the high note out with the same embouchure
And then F#
G
If I keep that low one I'm going to get all
my low notes out and the benefit will be that my high notes generally will be better in
tune. You can check that with a tuner because your flute may be slightly different. But
generally it's going to help with that. So, I want to keep the low embouchure.
If I had a lot of time between that
I might be shifting my embouchure.
When you have to go fast keep
the low embouchure and then just get the high note to come out with the low embouchure.
Practice that you'll see that that really works well.
That's today's FluteTip.
If you like this video press the like button
comment below share it with your friends and subscribe.
FluteTips 43 How to Get Good Tone From Low to High Leaps
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét