How to Select and Manage Turfgrass for a More Environmentally Sustainable Surface
Agenda
Webinar instructions will be emailed before the date of the webinar.
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
11:00 am – 2:15 pm CST (incl. 15-min. break)
Agenda:
The turfgrasses and which ones to choose
How to establish turfgrass
Cultural practices for a more economically sustainable turfgrass surface
Pest management (including non-chemical options)
Webinar Instructions
All attendees must log-on through their own email – attendees may not watch together if they wish to earn continuing education credit. HalfMoon Education Inc. must be able to prove attendance if either the attendee or HalfMoon Education Inc. is audited.
Certificates of completion can be downloaded in PDF form upon passing a short quiz. A link to the quiz will be sent to each qualifying attendee immediately after the webinar. The certificate can be downloaded from the Results page of the quiz upon scoring 80% or higher.
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GoToWebinar App requirements:
Windows 7 – 10 or Mac OSX Mavericks (10.9) – macOS Catalina (10.15)
Web Browser:
The two most recent version of the following browsers:
Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, Microsoft Edge
Internet Explorer v11 (or later) with Flash enabled
Internet connection: Minimum of 1Mbps Hardware: 2GB RAM or more
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Credits
Credits: Professional Engineers:
3.0 PDHs
Landscape Architects:
3.0 HSW CE Hours
LA CES: (LA CES credits only available for attending live Webinar.)
Pending
Speakers
David Gardner
Associate Professor, The Ohio State University
David Gardner is an associate professor of turfgrass science at The Ohio State University. He received a B.S. degree in Horticulture from Iowa State University in 1993, an M.S. degree in Horticulture from Iowa State in 1996 and a Ph.D. degree in Turfgrass Science from the University of Illinois in 2000. Professor Gardner teaches several undergraduate courses including turfgrass management, statistics, herbaceous and woody ornamental plants, and plant taxonomy. His research interests are in weed management and turfgrass shade stress physiology.