|
A native seashore plant, St. Augustine grass has been popular
along the lower Atlantic and the Gulf Coasts for several decades.
It has broad blades and large, coarse stems, but produces
a fairly compact sod.
The most redeeming features of St. Augustine grass are its
attractive color and vigorous year round growth in frost-free
climates. It is a rapid grower requiring frequent mowing,
but is easy to mow.
St. Augustine grass is the most shade tolerant of all permanent
hot climate grasses and performs well in wet soils and under
salt spray. Basically a tropical plant, St. Augustine is ill-adapted
as far north as Atlanta and will usually be killed by cold
in the middle South.
It is highly susceptible to serious or fatal damage by chinch
bugs. Good commercial spray applications and fertilizers containing
the proper insecticides can control chinch bugs, but the bother
and expense of continued control and preventative measures
make the desirability of St. Augustine grass questionable
where another grass will do as well or better.
|
Few seeds are commercially available and St. Augustine grass
must be propagated vegitatively. Sprigs are easily established
and grow off readily, and St. Augustinegrass sod is inexpensive.
Characteristics
- attractive color and vigorous year round growth in frost-free
climates
- easy to mow
- most shade tolerant of all permanent hot climate lawn
grasses
- performs well in wet soils even under salt spray
- ill-adapted as far north as Atlanta and will usually be
killed by cold in the middle-South
- St. Augustinegrass is most often propagated as sod
Back to the St.
Augustinegrass Sod Page
|