Happy March! Welcome back to our Potestio Brothers Equipment Newsletter! We are so glad you have joined us,
Thank You!
The first day of Spring is March 19th!
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Finding your model number and serial number is as easy as locating the identification tag on your machine. As seen in the example, the model number will be displayed below the MODEL heading (Example: Z235), and the serial number will be underlined on the top-right corner of the tag (Example: 130002). If you're looking for the engine number, that can be found directly on the engine itself.
Click HERE for tips to locate identification tags on equipment!
Proper Machine Maintenance
Proper machine maintenance is the best way to make sure your equipment starts quickly, runs efficiently, and mows beautifully. Click HERE to schedule your machine's maintenance today!
The ideal lawn is a smooth stretch of grass, so making sure there aren’t any weeds to disrupt the enjoyment of your yard is always top of the maintenance list. As all homeowners know, this is an ongoing activity that needs to be done at different times throughout the year for the best results.
Where you’re treating weed growth will define your approach. Spraying for weeds over sidewalks, driveways, and other paved areas can take a more blanket strategy than spraying weeds in your lawn or garden.
The best time of the year to spray weeds in the lawn is going to depend on when the weeds show up each spring, summer, and fall. Weeds can be hearty plants competing with your grass for soil nutrients, water, space, and sunlight, so a watchful eye and a good schedule will help you keep the grass clear of unwanted growth.

Using Herbicides
Weed-killing sprays, or herbicides, are useful products for maintaining a weed-free lawn. Since these kill plants, using them carefully is important to maintain your lawn and other greenery. Following the directions and making sure you use the right kind of herbicide for the weed you’re dealing with will ensure the best results.
A healthy lawn will be more resistant to disturbances, so keeping it watered and trimmed regularly provides a solid foundation for you to eradicate the unwanted growth.
When you target a weed, you can apply two kinds of solutions: herbicides that are pre-emergent (targeting the roots) or post-emergent (focusing on the leaves). These weed killers act efficiently and are designed for the species of weed you wish to remove, leaving the surrounding grass unharmed when the product is applied.
Since pre-emergent herbicides target the root system before leaves sprout, this kind is usually spread over the yard. When using a post-emergent herbicide product, which interacts with the weed’s leaves, it’s not a good idea to apply it across the entire lawn.
This kind should only be used on the weed plant itself, targeting the main stem and leaves for best absorption.

When Should I Treat My Lawn for Weeds?
Maintaining an annual schedule for the cycles of plant growth across the seasons is the best way to stay on top of weed control year to year.
  • End of Winter – applying pre-emergent herbicide before weeds start to grow in the spring is an effective, preemptive way of managing weed growth before it happens. For weeds that grew in the winter, like many broadleaf weed species do, using post-emergent spray before your regular grass grows in will clear space for your lawn to regain its lush condition.
  • Spring – like in the cooler months at the end of winter, applying pre-emergent herbicides will help rid the yard of the roots of weeds before they sprout. Most new vegetation growth in the year will happen in spring, so targeting any unwanted growth early on will keep plants from establishing themselves and spreading in the warmer months.
  • Summer – weeds will continue to spring up throughout the year, growing alongside your lawn, trees, and garden. Respond to these as soon as you see them. If your spring treatments were effective, summertime should be spent mostly post-emergence spot treatment when you see something popping up here or there.
  • Fall – although many plants are dying or going dormant, some cool-weather-loving plants will thrive. Usually, broadleaf species of vines and forbs will continue to grow into the autumn and can be removed with post-emergent herbicide product

What Time of Day Should I Spray for Weeds?
Applying herbicides should be done in the late morning after the grass has dried from the morning dew, which can dilute the spray and make it less effective. Waiting until midday may be too late to apply weed sprays since the liquid may evaporate before it can be absorbed, especially on hot summer days.
The afternoon and evening might be too late to put herbicides on weeds since moisture collects on the leaves again as the sun sets and continues to do so into the night. The right conditions for the spray to be absorbed are the drier times of day when temperatures aren’t too high or too low.

Preseason savings on all pesticides ordered now through March 31st! 10% off when you call or stop by to place you order and pick it up by April 10th.
Excludes in-stock inventory.
John Deere Fun Fact! 

How two neighbors united during a trying time.
by Gil Gullickson
Abi Reetz glanced down at her phone while riding in a tractor driven by Steve Brake on a bluebird day in September 2022.

"Suddenly, she looked at me, punched me in the shoulder and asked, 'What did you do?'" says the Wilmont, Minnesota, farmer.

Plenty. But then again, so did the high school student Abi.

Best driveway in town. Steve and his wife Mary moved from a nearby farm to Wilmont in 2017. That's where they met their next-door neighbor, Abi.
"One day, my two sisters and I wanted to chalk their driveway, and they let us," says Abi. "They had the best driveway in town."

Friendship quickly bloomed. "It was great to have them entertaining us, sitting on the deck, and watching TV," says Mary.

One day, Steve asked Abi if she wanted to ride in his tractor and learn how to run a ripper.

That would have to wait, though. Steve started suffering severe pain in his neck, shoulders and hands accompanied by double vision in October 2021.

"I kept getting worse each day," he says. "I couldn't get out of bed, couldn't eat. A [Catholic] priest gave me last rites."

A neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, finally diagnosed Steve with Miller Fisher Syndrome, a rare and debilitating nerve disease.

"I had to learn how to talk again through speech therapy," he says. This was accompanied by vision, physical, and occupational therapy.

Steve has mostly recovered, although the numbness in his hands and feet may never leave.

Abi didn't forget Steve during his illness. She and her sister Morgan shot videos of their local elevator manager giving Steve market updates, using a corn cob to act as a microphone.

As Steve recovered, Abi volunteered to read screens in the cab with him as he drove a tractor. Eventually, she drove the tractor with Steve in the buddy seat.

"I didn't take her seriously at first, that a kid next door could drive one of these big tractors," he says. "But one day, I asked her to drive because I was struggling with no stamina. I'm a guy who likes to teach, so I gave her instructions on how to drive. One day, her hand came up to my face while I was talking and she told me, 'I'm the driver here!'

"That's when I named her the tractor princess!" he adds.

Abi spent every weekday evening and weekend during field work season riding in and driving tractors with Steve. She'd exit the tractor to pick rocks when he couldn't due to lack of balance. Eventually, she drove a tractor pulling a grain cart at harvest.

"We talked a lot in the tractor," says Steve. "Every day, I'd ask her how her day at school went and if she had her homework done."

"That was always a 'nope!'" jests Abi.

Conversations often revolved around her future. Steve encouraged her to further her education, which she is doing this year at South Dakota State University.

Social connections through neighboring have numerous mental and physical health benefits, says Cap Bendixsen, director of the National Farm Medicine Center for the Marshfield Clinic in Marshfield, Wisconsin.

"Those who have stronger social bonds are 50% more likely to survive serious illnesses and other medical conditions," he says.

Beyond the comfort zone. Flash back to that tractor cab conversation in September 2022. Steve listened to Bishop Robert Barron, who heads the Diocese of Winona-Rochester in Minnesota, speak at Abi's confirmation a few days earlier. Barron discussed Marvel Comics superheroes, complete with super strength and flowing capes.

"But he said that many times, superheroes are just normal human beings who go beyond their comfort zone," says Steve. "That night, I wrote a letter to Abi's school, telling them she was my superhero because of all the things she did for me."

The school posted Steve's letter on its Facebook page. Abi discovered on that September day that the Facebook post garnered several thousand likes and comments. The interest later spawned several media stories.

"I often think of what it would have been like without her helping me," says Steve.

"Without Abi, Steve wouldn't have been able to do field work, since I was handling everything else going on in our lives," adds Mary. "Whenever she wanted to ride with Steve, I said, please do!"

Bishop Barron is right. Superheroes don't just reside in comic books or movies. They may just live next door.
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