We love our dogs, and they are all good boys and girls but let’s be honest: they can be a nightmare for our lawns. As the snow melts in Edmonton, many homeowners are left staring at brown, dead patches with bright green rings around them.
If your furry best friend has turned your backyard into a polka-dot mess of dead grass, don't panic. Fixing dog pee spots is easier than you think once you understand why it happens. Here is the ultimate guide to repairing dog urine damage on your Edmonton lawn, and how to stop it from happening again.
If you search online, you’ll find hundreds of articles claiming that dog pee kills grass because it is highly acidic. They suggest pouring baking soda or lime on the lawn to "neutralize" the pH.
Stop! Do not do this. Dog urine doesn't kill grass because of acid; it kills grass because it is extremely high in nitrogen. Nitrogen is the main ingredient in lawn fertilizer. When a dog pees in one concentrated spot, it’s the exact same thing as spilling a handful of chemical fertilizer in one place. It burns the roots.
Notice how the dead brown spot usually has a ring of ultra-dark, fast-growing green grass around the edges? That outer ring is where the nitrogen was diluted enough to actually fertilize the lawn!
Because Edmonton naturally has heavy, compacted clay soil, these nitrogen salts get trapped at the surface instead of draining away, making the burn worse.
If the grass is already dead and brown to the roots, it isn't going to bounce back. You need to do a quick patch repair. Here is the fastest way to fix it:
If you catch your dog in the act, immediately grab the hose and drench the spot with water. Diluting the urine will wash the excess nitrogen deep into the soil, turning a potential burn into a free fertilizer treatment.
*Pro tip* Watering your dogs common pee areas weekly is usually enough to prevent any damage!
For old spots, take a stiff garden rake and aggressively scrape out the dead, brown grass. You want to expose the bare soil underneath. Removing this dead layer (thatch) ensures your new grass seed can actually touch the earth.
Even though the grass is dead, the nitrogen salts from the urine are still trapped in Edmonton's clay soil. Soak the bare dirt heavily with a hose to flush out the remaining salts. If you skip this step, the new seed you put down will just burn and die too.
Sprinkle a handful of fresh, high-quality topsoil into the patch. Next, heavily sprinkle your grass seed.
Lightly step on the seed to ensure good soil contact. Water the patch lightly every single day (sometimes twice a day if it's a hot July afternoon) until the new grass is about 2 inches tall.
Repairing spots is easy, but preventing them is better. Here are three highly effective ways to protect your Edmonton yard:
If your lawn looks more like a Dalmatian than a putting green, spot-treating might take too much time. The fastest way to recover a heavily damaged yard is through Spring Overseeding and Aeration.
At Neighbourhood Heroes, we specialize in rescuing Edmonton lawns from harsh winters and heavy pet use. Our custom overseeding packages use premium, Alberta-hardy seed blends that choke out weeds and fill in bare spots fast.