Goodluck!
--
Wanda
aka Willow
The missing and definitely not to be taken seriously under any circumstances
garden gnome
http://www.2000cn.com.au/~willow
~~faeries are able to fly because they take themselves lightly~
Phill Lee <phil...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
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If you always put the dog out just before you water the lawn (assuming you
have popup sprinklers) then at least some of the wee will get washed in
without you having to wait and watch.
--
Wanda
aka Willow
The missing and definitely not to be taken seriously under any circumstances
garden gnome
http://www.2000cn.com.au/~willow
~~faeries are able to fly because they take themselves lightly~
silvasurfa <eric...@bigpond.blah.com> wrote in message
news:LniP9.11379$jM5....@newsfeeds.bigpond.com...
Unrealistic for stopping all the urine spots, but realistic to stop some of
them.
Other than that, then as others have said, about watering it in and so on,
but I can see how that would be time consuming and you would have to see the
dog doing it.
What about the old trick of softdrink bottles full of water in the garden? I
remember my Father used to do it, but I can't quite remember if it was to
stop dogs or cats, digging or urinating or crapping? Also, I can't remember
if it worked. However it may refresh some peoples memories here and they can
give more info on that?
Just curious as the type of lawn you have. What is it? Anything other than
Buffalo?
Yesterday we went to visit some friends.
I was asked about how they can give new life to the lawn. Lawn was mostly
couch, with some buffalo runners in it. Buffalo runners had gone wild around
and into the pond.
I told them to spray sections of the lawn, then plant the buffalo runners,
if they wanted a buffalo lawn.
Then he showed me a section off the back step, where he had his nightime
cigarettes, and a leak if need be. The urine had killed the couch, but not
the buffalo, in this one area about the size of a dinner plate.
I found it interesting, that in a similar way, it worked like fusilade. A
chemical that will kill grasses (monocots), and not dicots(many plants).
Not sure what buffalo is, (dicot or mono?), but as broadleaf weed killer
"can" kill it, then I would say it's a dicot.
So could it be, that urine, well human urine anyway, is a cheap form of
"grass" only killer?
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Remove "not" from start of email address to reply
Why is it that the dog wees on the lawn and it dies... yet to get lush
growth we scatter urea - seems odd!
I was told that the dog's urine is far more concentrated in urea BUT if I
water it in then it would beneficial to the lawn rather than detrimental. I
was also told about the dog biscuit scenario...that they tend to make the
urine more 'lawn unfriendly'.
I guess I havent helped at all... but instead just wanted to share my
thoughts.
"Phill Lee" <phil...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
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"Phill Lee" <phil...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
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(Yahoo/MSN/Hotmail/Windows Messenger)
"Phill Lee" <phil...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
news:3e0d3f2b$0$7817$afc3...@news.optusnet.com.au...
When the topic of dog urine killing lawn arises on pet programs on the
radio, frequently advice is given to provide the dog with more of a
vegetarian style diet. Feed it less meat, and bulk this out with rice,
pasta and cooked vegetables. This results in less corrosive urine. (It's
probably less pongy, too.)
I have seen vegetatarian dogs featured on a tv program, where the dogs
were hoeing into a plate of washed lettuce leaves, so you have no worries
about the dog not being adequately nourished with less meat and more
vegetables.
>Other than that, then as others have said, about watering it in and so on,
>but I can see how that would be time consuming and you would have to see the
>dog doing it.
The solution is to teach the dog to turn the sprinkler on after it pees
on the lawn, and have a timer turn it off after a few minutes. Once your
pooch has mastered this manoeuver, YOUR LAWN PROBLEM WILL BE SOLVED!
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John Savage (for email, replace "ks" with "k" and delete "n")