Deerfield Village, WV POA

Home/Lawn Tips

How to Repair Winter Lawn Damage

Each winter all of our lawns incur some damage.  If heavy snow lays in one area too long it can cause snow mold which can kill grass.  Or usually we all incur some kind of “snow plow” damage, or somebody drives off the driveway leaving a muddy track in the lawn.  Whatever the case, it has to be repaired for the lawn to look good again.

Repairing lawn damage is easy enough to do.  The secret is to get out there early and get it repaired before it gets really hot because intense sun makes it really  difficult to establish new grass.  There are no secrets to planting grass seed, but there are a few tips.

First of all, loosen up the soil by whatever means it takes.  In order for grass to grow nicely you have to start with loose soil.  If you put grass seed on hard  packed soil as soon as it rains all the seed washes into the lowest area.  If the soil is loose, the rain soaks  in and kind of permanently put the seed in it’s place.

Buy grass seed that is a blend of several different types of grasses.  Kentucky Blue Grass is great, but it takes 28 days to germinate and usually before that happens the weeds take over, the birds eat the seed, or the seed gets washed away.  If you get a blend of grass seed that contains a fescue, a couple of kinds of perennial rye grass and some Kentucky Blue Grass, you’ll get quick germination from the perennial rye grass, and that acts as a nurse crop protecting the Kentucky Blue until it has a chance to germinate.

Cheap grass seed is cheap.  It often contains ugly thick bladed grasses that you don’t want in your lawn. You don’t have to buy the most expensive grass seed on the market, but you should be a few notches above the cheap stuff.

New grass seed really likes a little bit of shade as it establishes itself.  Straw makes a great mulch because straw sits above the soil and actually shades those little tiny seeds.  But straw can be messy, and it can be hard to find.  In that case you can use the green seed starter mulch.  It works pretty good and contains starter fertilizer.

To plant the seed just sprinkle it over the loose soil.  You should apply the grass seed at a rate of 5 to 6 pounds per 1,000 square feet.  After you apply the grass seed take a  broom or a leaf rake and gently drag the tool over the area you seeded.  Turn the leaf rake upside down so it doesn’t dig into the soil.  This covers the seed with a very light layer  of soil, or at least presses the seed into the soil.  Thenapply your mulch or straw. Water immediately and water on a regular basis.  Allow the soil to dry slightly between waterings, but just ever so slightly.  In about 5 or 6 days you will start to see tiny grass plants.  Make sure to not miss any waterings as these tiny plants try to establish themselves.  It is really, really important to keep new grass watered on a regular basis.  New grass plants are as thin as a human hair and even the shortest time without water and they will die. Once that happens they are gone forever because the seed is spent, and the new plant has failed. And that’s why so many people have trouble establishing new grass.  They do everything right, up to the point of keeping up with the watering.  They do okay for the first few days, then they forget.  That’s why it’s so much easier to plant grass now, becausein the spring the watering is less critical.  The grass should be watered, but while you are at work your new grass will be fine until you get home.  In the middle of summer that’s not the case.

Now go plant some grass!