"What household item can I use to formulate my prairie low green, I hear dish wash soap 1 subdivision to 10 parts dampen
Answers: To make your lawn open green, you need to increase the amount of nitrogen and/or sunlight the lawn get.
Well-rotted barnyard manure is the traditional way of increasing the amount of nitrogen available to the plants. Manure from birds (chickens, turkeys, .) is especially large in nitrogen. It must be well-aged, or it will burn the lawn. (The grass basically under a dog dropping will go brown and may die, but the grass around it will be wide green.)
Theoretically, you could increase the amount of nitrogen by applying dishwashing soap (NOT dishwasher detergent!)
However, I think the alkalinity of the soap would be as damaging as doggie doo, and for much like reasons.
I can't quite integer how you'd go about applying the solution, which sounds enormously concentrated, to me.
At one time, the cheapest and easiest way of greening-up a lawn be to sprinkle it with some urea. Unfortunately, it has be used for making some very nasty explosives, so that's no longer an opportunity.
For my own lawn, just over an acre, and prone to burdock and thistles, I use "Weed and Feed" or a similar product which combines a nitrogen fertilizer and a broadleaf weed-killer.
If you want a more "natural" urban approach, you can buy stacks of "Dehydrated Bovine Something-or-Other", which is just what you think it might be. (A bequest for the man or woman who has everything?)