MANY COMPANIES OFFER aeration, but it's not always an overnight success. To ensure repeat business, a savvy contractor has
to educate the customer and perform the service properly.
 Generally, a lawn needs to be aerated once a year. But a lawn on clay soil might need to be aerated more frequently. (PHOTO
COURTESY: EARTH & TURF PRODUCTS)
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"There are different reasons for aeration, so a landscaper can't just tell a customer he wants to poke holes in his lawn,"
says Bob Brophy, director of lawn products for Minneapolis-based Turfco.
While aeration is beneficial, few homeowners have it done regularly. Managed properties usually are more aggressive.
 Warm-season grass should be aerated in the fall. Cool-season grass can be aerated in the spring. (PHOTO COURTESY: TURFCO)
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Aeration helps water infiltration, which reduces chemical runoff into streams and keeps the product where you need it, says
John Bentley of Earth & Turf Products in New Holland, PA.
Aeration holes need to be spaced properly and uniform in depth, says Michael Hileman, sales rep for Clemmons, NC-based tine-maker
JRM. "If you emphasize uniformity with chemical applications, you should do the same with coring," he says.
A typical landscaper uses a 7.5-in. coring tine, and depth is key with coring tines, Hileman says. "You have to be consistent
for the whole job," he says.
One aeration a year is enough generally, Bentley says. A lawn with tight roots should be aerated three or four times the first
season, then aeration can be done annually. A lawn on clay soil might need more frequent aeration. By contrast, a lawn on
sandy loam can be aerated once a year.
Bermudagrass lawns should be aerated in the fall because the grass emerges from dormancy in the spring, and it's important
to allow the roots to grow with minimal disturbance, Hileman says. Cool-season grasses can be aerated at a season's start.
A second aeration might be appropriate for heavier soils.
Anywhere a pristine look isn't required, it's good to aim for about 15% removal, Hileman says. A 7.5-in. tine will plug to
a depth of 4.5 to 5 in. in loose soil. Once the tines begin to wear and that depth decreases, it's time for new tines.
"You can't go across the lawn once and think you're done," Bentley says. "The lawn should look like you've just about killed
it." He recommends 18% to 20% soil disturbance.
Many lawns allow an inch or two of penetration, Bentley says. These need to be worked frequently. Newly constructed lawns
require aeration because topsoil usually is scraped off, and the subsoil is used to cover the ground, Bentley says.
"It's difficult to core aerate subsoil," he says, recommending shatter tines. "Even if you don't get much of a core, it's
better than none at all."
Different tines serve different purposes. Don't slice home or business complex lawns.
"In a running grass such as Bermuda or zoysia, you're cutting the runners and getting new shoots," Brophy says. On home lawns,
the intention of most aerations is different.
Spiking – a solid piece of steel pushed into the ground, which fractures the soil and breaks up thatch and the soil beneath
– is more appropriate.
"It's a short-term solution for soil ventilation where you don't want to pull up a core and leave it on the ground," Brophy
says. An example is a sod area around a swimming pool.