What is Bad Agronomy?

Partially inspired by the awesomeness known as Phil Plait, Bad Agronomy is a blog dedicated to investigating alternative Home & Garden products and services through a critical, skeptical lens. Phil's blog "Bad Astronomy" helped pave the way for guys like me. While this blog is not affiliated with Phil Plait or Bad Astronomy in any way, we hope to live up to the standards he has set.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Sugar on Lawns

I used to write advice on an interesting website that recruited guys like me to take up our free time answering questions from readers who didn't like to do their own research. I wasn't compensated for this, but it did give me some insights into what sorts of questions people ask about home lawn care. The day I quit was the day I received my umpteenth question that was worded something like this:

"Dear Sir, I know you highly recommend putting sugar on my lawn to feed it and control weeds, but how much? How should I apply it?"

Since I had responded to every other sugar related question with a comment along the lines of:

"Um no. Putting sugar on your lawn would be like sprinkling corn chips into Lake Michigan. I just cannot think of a good reason to do it. It won't hurt anything, but neither will licking the inside of your elbow. I assume you don't do that, do you?"

The elbow lickers are a persistent bunch. The questions just kept coming unabated. Keep in mind, ALL my previous answers were prominently posted with outspoken tags like "Don't put sugar on your lawn!"

I've tried to do the research on this, but from everything I can find there's absolutely nothing to back up the claims made about sugar as a great lawn additive. Let me share some of the hypotheses that have been put out there under the guise of science.

Hypothesis 1) Sugar enriches the soil by feeding the microbes. Active microbes = good soil.

Reality Check) Yes, active microbes = healthy soil, but this only holds true when the microbes are actively feeding on real organic matter. Sugar may provide a brief burst of activity for those microbes that are capable of feeding on it. Once the sugar is gone though, the microbes will return to a natural level based on available organic matter sources. Since the soil is enriched by the nutrients given off during the decomposition of organic matter, the sugar does nothing more than get the microbes briefly active by feeding them a food source that has no long term benefit.

Hypothesis 2) Sugar suppresses weeds by creating healthier soils. Weeds opportunistically take over unhealthy soil, so the healthier the soil is, the more it will encourage grass growth over weeds.

Reality check) Weeds are plants, just like your grass. They grow when the soil is good. Certain types of weeds can tolerate poor quality soil, but they'll still do better in good soil. Enriching the soil in any way shape or form will benefit all the existing plants. The argument is moot anyway since we have already shown that sugar doesn't actually do anything to enrich the soil.

When someone is promoting a product or service, it's up to them to prove that it is of value. "What have you got to lose?" doesn't cut it. They need to show reasonable studies performed by impartial professionals. A hypothesis is simply a conjecture until sufficient proof has been gathered to promote it to the level of theory (aka: accepted explanation). "Sugar will improve your lawn" is a hypothesis that has gathered no such evidence. Whether the idea is based on sound scientific principles or not is actually irrelevant. It needs to stand up to testing.

Want to try testing the theory yourself? Go for it! Sounds like a fun science project if you have a middle school child at home. Just make sure the test is blinded. Get a bag of topsoil and a bag of grass seed. Weigh out and put the exact same amount of soil and grass seed into two separate pots. Label them A & B. Add sugar to one of the two, and continually add an identical amount of water to each while keeping the two pots in the exact same area, so they get the same amount of sunlight, same air temperature, etc.

Finally, at intervals of two weeks ask a few impartial observers to analyzed the two pots and make judgements on color, height, feel, etc. It's very important that none of those observers knows which pot was treated with sugar and which wasn't. This way, they won't be biased in either direction, no matter how subconsciously. Write down their comments and analyze. If in fact you DO do this, please let me know how it goes. I'll even post pictures if you send them.

I love the concept of non-toxic, homespun remedies for your lawn and garden. I do not love the concept of wasting time and money just so that I can feel good about having not used chemicals.

-Chris Brown

11 comments:

  1. Well, sugar is extensively used in food industry. Alcohol is made for the presence of sugar as a nutritious medium with specific yeast (candida). Probably some group of alcohol will be formed in this interaction with some germs, and the product of this interaction is other chemical, beneficial for the roots, sugar is acid, though I prefer molasses that is more natural and rich, but in my compost tea, with bacteria to create that alcoholic products, but I never tried to put sugar straight in the soil.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wouldn't it attract insects? Mostly ants and possibly roaches?

    ReplyDelete
  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  5. But wouldn't it attract ants?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Lawn fertiliser
    Buy Pest Control Products, Organic Fertilisers, Natural Insecticide and Equipment. Expert advice and Treatment Guides Ensure Optimum Results. Free Delivery.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Tuscany Tuscany Tuscany Tuscany Tuscany - Tioga, NY Tuscany
    Tioga Tuscany Tuscany is an 1804 Tuscany babyliss pro nano titanium Hotel price of titanium and Casino located in Tioga, mokume gane titanium NY. The hotel offers an infiniti pro rainbow titanium flat iron outdoor titanium ring pool, a Jacuzzi and

    ReplyDelete
  8. It's not a hypothesis. The Hegelian dialectic covers this in logic. Basically, you have a thesis, and then antithesis, and from that comes a hypothesis. This sugar on soil is a thesis. It's never been tested, antithesis, so there can't be a hypothesis. Carry on. You're right but used the wrong noun.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hegelian dialect, snarf. Philosophers (rolls eyes). Science, not philosophy. Hypothesis: can be proved or disproved. Thesis: summary of main claim. Antithesis: opposite of what's claimed. Hegelian dialect only applies to philosophy. Think on that, philosopher.

    ReplyDelete