White Clover


White clover – also called Dutch clover – is found in lawns throughout the United States. It used to be considered an important part of lawn seed mixtures. Now, many consider it a weed because it is aggressive and has the ability to take over a lawn.

Characteristics:

  • Cool-season perennial
  • Creeping growth habit
  • Thrives in moist soils low in fertility
  • Spreading rhizomes
  • Compound leaves composed of three short-stalked leaflets
  • White flowers

Oxalis is often wrongly identified as clover.

A very important pasture legume that is an appetizing and nutritious forage for livestock. Commonly planted in pastures with orchardgrass, ryegrass, or tall fescue.

Legumes are able to take nitrogen from the air and convert it into a form that plants can use. White clover used to be added to grass seed mixtures as a nurse plant with the idea that grass seedlings can benefit from the nitrogen they produce. However, the nitrogen fixed by legumes is not normally available to other plants — the clover needs to be killed before the nitrogen is released into the soil for other plants to use.

Plant a clover food plot to keep deer out of flower beds:

Are deer eating your landscape plants? This works if you have enough land – plant a 5,000-square-foot clover food plot on the outskirts of your property. The deer will feed there and leave your flower beds alone.

White Clover Weed Control

lawn weed blurb
Lawn overtaken by white clover in large patch
White clover in lawn thumb
White clover leaf closeup
White clover flower white with slight pink center
White clover illustration black and white
Illustration courtesy of USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database

The ability to generate nitrogen allows it to thrive in infertile soils. Large patches in your lawn can be an indicator of low fertility.

In this case, fertilizing your lawn will not kill the clover, but it will help it become dense and vigorous, making it harder for the clover to spread.

Hand Weeding – Pulling or digging is effective if you attack small patches before they spread. You must remove the entire plant – stolons have the ability to regenerate if left behind. Once they spread into large patches a chemical herbicide may be required.

Chemical Control – Herbicides are most effective when plants are actively growing. If you choose to use a broadleaf herbicide, the fall is the best time to start treatments. When clover is flowering in the spring, herbicide effectiveness is reduced.

lawn weed pesticide blurb

Weed ID

Often confused with yellow wood sorrel (Oxalis) and black medic.

Roots – Plants that grow from seed develop a deep strong taproot in the first year. The taproot eventually dies as the creeping stems root at the nodes forming a fibrous root system.

Stems – Low-growing, prostrate stems that root at the nodes (joints) forming new roots and shoots.

Leaves – Compound leaves made up of three leaflets. Leaflets usually have a lighter green or white ‘water mark’ on the upper surface.

Flowers – The flowers appear in early summer. They are white and sometimes have a pinkish hue. Flowers occur on stalks that arise from the leaf axils. Each flower head is round or globular in outline, approximately 1/2 to 1 1/4 inches long, and consists of 40 to 80 florets.

More weed ID:

Corn Speedwell (Veronica arvensis) is a low-growing winter annual and a common weed problem in thin turf stands and newly seeded lawns. Pictures to help with lawn weed identification and control.

Mouse-ear chickweed is a common lawn weed found throughout the United States. Its characteristics make it a competitive weed in lawns.

How to identify and manage Common Chickweed (Stellaria media), a winter annual lawn weed. Photos are included to help with weed id and control. Lawn care tips and advice.

Find out how much your job will cost
marker