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Feed Your Lawn Naturally by Topdressing with Compost

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A healthier lawn comes with healthier soil, and there is no better way to improve soil health than by adding compost. You can feed your lawn naturally by topdressing it with compost.

Compost contains the primary nutrients — nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium — and an array of micronutrients to naturally feed a lawn. But there are many other benefits as well.

Topdressing a lawn with compost adds organic matter to the soil, which provides for proper drainage and better tilth.  That organic matter also hosts beneficial microorganisms that turn organic fertilizer and minerals in the soil into plant-available nutrients that can be taken up by roots.

You can topdress with compost at any time when the ground is not frozen, but if you topdress right after aerating a lawn, you will see even better results. Another great time to topdress with compost is when overseeding a lawn. Applying compost and seeds at the same time will improve germination and moisture retention.

 

Joe Lamp'l topdresses his lawn with compost

By following proper lawn management like topdressing with compost and applying organic fertilizer, my lawn areas remain healthy and green all year. I never treat them with a chemical, and I don’t have to provide supplemental water.

 

Step 1: Determine How Much Compost You Need

 

When topdressing a lawn with compost, you want to use enough compost to be effective but not so much that the compost smothers the grass. Aim to use between a quarter inch and a half inch layer of compost. For the maximum depth, that is one cubic foot of compost for every 25 square feet of lawn.

One cubic foot is a popular size for bagged compost, but bags can be smaller or larger. But no matter the bag size, when you find you need more than 10 bags of compost for a project, it generally makes more sense to buy bulk compost. Bulk compost is sold by the cubic yard, and there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard.

 

Step 2: Choose the Compost

 

Choose compost that was produced through a hot composting process, in which the heat given off by the biological activity of microbes reached more than 140°. The high temperature ensures that weed seeds and pathogens that were in the compost inputs have been neutralized. If you buy commercial compost or use municipal compost, you should be all set in that regard. If you plan to use your home-made compost, test the compost pile with a soil thermometer while it is still active.

You should see and touch the compost yourself before placing an order. It is free of rocks, glass and plastic. Does it have that earthy smell? When you squeeze the compost in your hand, does it clump together well but also break apart easily? If the compost doesn’t pass these tests, don’t buy it.

 

Step 3: Distributing the Compost

 

Fill a wheelbarrow with bags or loose compost, and dot the lawn with small piles of compost, evenly distributed. The piles should be no larger than three or four shovelfuls each. The idea is to space the piles so that once the compost is spread out, the lawn has full coverage, with no gaps.

 

topdressing with compost

My lawn has never looked better since I’ve been consistently adding a topdressing of horse manure and certified compost each fall.

 

Step 4: Rake the Compost into the Lawn

 

You can spread the compost with just about any rake, but a metal rake with sturdy tines will work best to scratch up the soil surface and incorporate the compost. At each pile, rake the compost out in all directions, 360°. Rake until the point that the grass blades are almost fully visible through the compost.

 

Step 5: Water In

 

Water in the compost with a sprinkler. A gentle application of water will help the compost work its way down to the soil and will expose grass blades that are covered, so they won’t be smothered. It’s important not to apply a heavy amount of water over a short period of time because that should cause the compost to run off instead of staying where the lawn needs it.

 

lawn irrigation after topdressing with compost

After applying compost, be sure to water in with a sprinkler.

 

Other Natural Nutrients to Feed Your Lawn

 

One of the best nutrient sources for the grass in your lawn is the grass itself. Recycling grass clippings can provide 25% of your lawn’s nutrient needs over the course of a year. It’s obvious when you think about it: Grass clippings contain the exact ratio of nutrients that grass requires. Plus, the clippings help the lawn retain moisture while shading out weed seeds, which keeps those seeds from germinating.

Recycling grass clippings is actually less labor-intensive than the alternative. While bagging and disposing of or composting grass clippings takes extra work, using a mulching mower means you don’t have to carry around and empty heavy bags of clippings. The clippings remain in place, exactly where they can be put to work feeding the lawn.

You may already be mulching your grass into the lawn, but did you know that you can also use a mulching mower on leaves? When leaves drop on the lawn in autumn, even an average mulching mower can chop them up to a size at which they will decompose quickly, feeding the lawn as they do. A thick layer of leaves will take quite a few passes with the lawnmower before the leaves are reduced to a size that disappears into the lawn, but if you mow frequently, falling leaves will be easier to manage. You’ll also save yourself a lot of work on raking!

 

grass clippings and compost

When you incorporate grass clippings into your compost heap, they will transform into a rich source of nutrients for your garden.

 

When to Supplement with Organic Fertilizer

 

Though adding compost and mulching grass clippings and leaves will reduce the need for supplemental fertilizer, these practices cannot completely replace fertilizer. A slow-release, organic fertilizer like Milorganite will feed the lawn continuously for many weeks, with none of the nutrient-burn concerns that come with synthetic fertilizers.

Fertilizer will help grass grow and will give the lawn that deep, emerald green color. The lawn will be denser, which withstands foot traffic and stops weeds from taking hold.

In northern regions, where cool-season grasses dominate, apply Milorganite once or twice between Labor Day and Thanksgiving, waiting 10 weeks between applications. Apply again, once or twice, between Memorial Day and the Fourth of July.

In southern regions, where warm-season grasses thrive, apply in the spring after the grass breaks its winter dormancy, and then again around Memorial Day. In the fall, apply once or twice between Labor Day and early October.

 

Lawn

Fertilizer will help the grass grow and will give the lawn that deep, emerald green color.

 

Do you feed your lawn naturally by topdressing with compost? Let us know in the comments below.

 

Ready to have more of your lawn and garden questions answered? Sign up to receive gardening resources, eBooks, and email updates on the joegardener podcast and more.

 

Links & Resources

074-How to Have and Care for a Healthy Lawn: Top 7 Non-negotiables

joegardener Blog: Backyard Composting: A Simple Recipe for Making Great Compost

joegardener Blog: Organic Lawn Renovation for Spring: 5-Steps To Your Best Lawn Ever

joegardenerTV YouTube: How to Apply Natural Lawn Fertilizers & What to Use

joegardener Online Gardening Academy: Popular courses on gardening fundamentals; managing pests, diseases & weeds; seed starting and more.

joegardener Online Gardening Academy Perfect Soil Recipe Master Class: Learn how to create the perfect soil environment for thriving plants.

joegardener Online Gardening Academy Growing Epic Tomatoes: Tomato expert Craig LeHoullier joins me in leading this course on how to grow healthier, productive tomato plants and how to overcome tomato-growing challenges.

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Disclosure: Some product links in this guide are affiliate links, which means we get a commission if you purchase. However, none of the prices of these resources have been increased to compensate us, and compensation is not an influencing factor on their inclusion here. The selection of all items featured in this post and podcast were based solely on merit and in no way influenced by any affiliate or financial incentive, or contractual relationship. At the time of this writing, Joe Lamp’l has professional relationships with the following companies who may have products included in this post and podcast: Rain Bird, Corona Tools, Milorganite, Soil3, Exmark, Greenhouse Megastore, Territorial Seed Company, and TerraThrive. These companies are either Brand Partners of joegardener.com and/or advertise on our website. However, we receive no additional compensation from the sales or promotion of their product through this guide. The inclusion of any products mentioned within this post is entirely independent and exclusive of any relationship.

About Joe Lamp'l

Joe Lamp’l is the creator and “joe” behind joe gardener®. His lifetime passion and devotion to all things horticulture has led him to a long-time career as one of the country’s most recognized and trusted personalities in organic gardening and sustainability. That is most evident in his role as host and creator of Emmy Award-winning Growing a Greener World®, a national green-living lifestyle series on PBS currently broadcasting in its tenth season. When he’s not working in his large, raised bed vegetable garden, he’s likely planting or digging something up, or spending time with his family on their organic farm just north of Atlanta, GA.

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