Mow the lawn:
Grass growth slows down during the fall but it doesn't completely stop.
Not exact matches
Like their Japanese counterparts, American Wagyu producers raise their cattle on a diet of
grass and grains that promotes
slow, steady
growth.
Mander, a chemist from the Australian National University in Canberra, has developed a version of a plant
growth hormone which keeps
grass lush and green but
slows its
growth to about a third of its normal rate.
Published in this month's Biology Letters, «Ungulate saliva inhibits a
grass - endophyte mutualism» shows that moose and reindeer saliva, when applied to red fescue
grass (which hosts a fungus called epichloë festucae that produces the toxin ergovaline) results in
slower fungus
growth and less toxicity.