2. Install Your Blade Properly
Aside from ensuring that you’re working with a sharp blade, it’s critical to make sure your blade is properly installed. When a blade is installed upside down on a mower, it causes the blunt backside of the blade to be used as the cutting edge. Once again, this will result in a ragged cut, rendering your lawn prone to insects and disease.
3. Know Your Species of Grass
There is no universal mowing height for grass – each species thrives at different heights based on its physiology. For this reason, you’ll want to become familiar with your variety of grass before you take your John Deere mowers to it. Finer bladed grasses can be mowed shorter, for instance, while wide-leafed species tend to thrive with a little extra height.
4. Set the Mower Deck Height
Ideally, you should avoid removing more than one-third of the leaf tissue present in a single mowing. In addition, it’s best not to allow your grass to grow out and cut it back dramatically – this can potentially stress the grass, causing it to pull nutrients from the root system.
5. Plan Ahead for Your Clippings
Lawn clippings can be extremely beneficial when deposited back onto the lawn. If you’re staying on top of mowing so there are no big clumps of material left behind by the mower, there is no need to remove clippings. Leaves can be mulched and left to feed the soil as well.