Crabgrass preventers showed up in the stores in February, and people started asking if it was time to use them. Nope. March offered us some up and down temperatures, but also some nice days. Again the question came; should we put down the crabgrass preventer? Nope. April is just around the corner and the forecast for the first few days is a little below normal. Still we must wait. Hopefully as we get to mid-April, we may finally be able to apply crabgrass preventers. Why the wait? 

It is important to apply preemergent herbicides when soil temperatures are at 55 degrees, to make sure the product is applied before the seeds have time to germinate when the soil temps reach 62 degrees. After the seeds have germinated, a preemergent (before the plant emerges from the soil), will no longer be effective. Crabgrass preventers disappear after 60 days so applying them too early can also prevent good control.

In an ‘average’ year we might be applying crabgrass preventer mid-to-late April, but with the warming climate, it may be as early as April 1 Don’t use ornamental blooming plants such as forsythia, redbud or lilac to predict when crabgrass emerges.  Don’t use ornamental blooming plants such as forsythia, redbud or lilac to predict when crabgrass emerges. Depending on the weather, plants can start to flower any time between December and April. 

Michigan State University has a great website that takes the guesswork out of preemergent timing for you. Simply choose Crabgrass PRE on the right-hand column, type in your zip code and follow the star to tell you the optimal time (green band), when it’s too early when it’s too late.