View Full Version : Yellow Grass
Dave_B
07-22-2011, 09:24 PM
I want to know what you fellow dog owners use to get rid of the yellow grass spots in your lawns caused from our furry friends doing their thing. I've tried a couple differet kind of sprays but, at $12.00 per bottle, have been very unsatisfied at the results.
Any suggestions?
I have a nice yard and want to keep it that way but, as a new dog owner, do not know what other options exist. Please help!
Dave
peter
07-22-2011, 11:59 PM
Have not tried it yet but just the other day I heard vitimin c "I think vitimin c" tablet for the dog helps with this problem.
mspease
07-23-2011, 12:16 AM
I'm having the same issue with our female dog and it's driving me nuts! I've heard female dogs are the ones that kill the grass, but not sure if that's true or not. I'm hoping to hear some good ideas that work!
Administrator
07-23-2011, 07:37 AM
The female dog has more nitrogen in their urine than the male. This is what turns the grass brown, especially for those that already fertilize. The only real way to combat this is to water down the area where the female peed, to dilute the excess nitrogen.
-John
Team Elkhorn
07-23-2011, 07:47 AM
You learn something everyday. I always thought it was because male dogs always lift their legs to mark stuff and miss the grass.
x2, try to keep it watered.
yamaholic
07-23-2011, 08:46 AM
That's what the neighbors yard is for.lol
rocketman356
07-23-2011, 10:30 AM
Put beer in thier water bowl
junior1
07-23-2011, 10:42 AM
you can buy Gypsum? i think that is how its spelled. its a granular that you can put on your whole yard. it is supposed to help offset the dog spots. i used to do it on my yard then a few springs ago i just gave up knowing the dogs pretty old and ill just fix it once hes gone.
gary_in_neenah
07-23-2011, 12:23 PM
What John said...X3
Regarding the Gypsum, I've been adding 80 lbs. of lime to our lawn each autumn. It helps off-set the Dog Pee (higher acidity) and it's good for the soil. 80 lbs. of Barn Lime will cost about 5 to 6 dollars at a Fleet Farm or a similiar outlet and you can apply it with your fertilizer spreader. We don't have many issues with the brown spots anymore.
mspease
07-24-2011, 07:12 PM
The female dog has more nitrogen in their urine than the male. This is what turns the grass brown, especially for those that already fertilize. The only real way to combat this is to water down the area where the female peed, to dilute the excess nitrogen.
-John
I had read that online to dilute the area with water, and it does seem to help. The only problem is I don't always see where she goes!
I have lime and gypsum and will give that a try. I had used it in the past to offset the pine needles effect on the lawn.
polarisrider1
07-24-2011, 08:18 PM
Spay or netuer dog. Worked for my lawn. Urine is less strong????? Anyways it works.
Dave_B
07-25-2011, 12:03 PM
She is already an "it" so that hasn't helped. I have started soaking the yellow spots with tons of water but, like mentioned earlier, I don't follow her around with the hose so the grass is already yellow by the time I know where she did her thing. Is it too late at that point?
I will check into the Gypsum/Lime options but will need more advice on how, when and how much to apply.
The wife killed the beer idea faster than I could drink one and the neighbors yard, while the optimal solution, won't work as she is on a wireless fence containment system.
Thanks for all the suggestions!
Dave
Bradzoo
07-25-2011, 01:53 PM
Dave try to get the lime in pellets if you buy the powdered lime its like trying to spread flour, if you get the pellets water real good afer spreading or put it on before a rain storm
gary_in_neenah
07-25-2011, 04:28 PM
The Lime/Gypsum is a long term solution. It leaches into the soil over time and lowers the PH. I spread mine in the Fall so the snowmelt in the spring soaks it in but a hose would work too at any time of the year.
Just a dusting is all you need for application amounts, I spread two 40lbs bags annually on our lot. I try to hit the garden plot too as I have some pine needles in that area and this keeps the PH right down the middle for the vegetables.
I've been using this method for about 10 years now, we have the same female dog, each year the brown spots have diminished and I don't have any brown spots at all this year.
anonomoose
07-25-2011, 05:20 PM
Dave, dave, dave....what are we gunna do with you???
Those brown spots are marks of distinction....poor girl is only makin the boundaries clear so she won't get the begezzus zapped out of her. Also you might want to give her more water....if SHE is diluted so will the acidity level she is squart'n out.
Now if this REALLY REALLY bothers you.....head on down to Minards on Super Sunday....and buy a whole case of green paint. Then when a brown spot shows up....get down there and mask off the whole are as to not over flow onto the real green stuff....and you will note that the brown stuff is now dead, and will accept green paint pretty well. Depending upon the quality of your paint, yah might have to hit the spot twice. Make really sure that she doesn't track thru that spot for at least an hour tho.....or she will put green paw prints down over the kitchen floor....and by golly....what would yah rather have...green paw prints or brown spots in the yard?????
Dave_B
07-25-2011, 07:12 PM
Oh, Moose! You crazy Troll!
Yes, her "territory", is determined by the radius I set on her invisible fence. She freely pee's and deficates within that boundary and, by now, knows it's her space!
I agree that some more water may help but, the paint thing, not an option.
She actually does a good job peeing in the same general vicinity, but I would still like to combat the brown spots with a long term solution method and one much more practical than paint!
polarisrider1
07-25-2011, 10:27 PM
Dave, you got a sandbox for the kids? May as well teach the dog to use it. We all know the neighborhood cats do. Besides sandboxes are over rated with all the mind warping childrens programing on TV for thee little ones to watch.
Dave_B
07-25-2011, 10:45 PM
Yes, and you should quit watching them. It may help your spelling ability.
Besides, who can resist a good dose of Phineas and Ferb...Quality stuff!
polarisrider1
07-25-2011, 11:27 PM
Yes, and you should quit watching them. It may help your spelling ability.
Besides, who can resist a good dose of Phineas and Ferb...Quality stuff!
When my kids were young it was teenage mutant ninjas to Sponge Bob era. Still think a doggie sand box will work.
LoveMyDobe
07-25-2011, 11:28 PM
I want to know what you fellow dog owners use to get rid of the yellow grass spots in your lawns caused from our furry friends doing their thing. I've tried a couple differet kind of sprays but, at $12.00 per bottle, have been very unsatisfied at the results.
Any suggestions?
I have a nice yard and want to keep it that way but, as a new dog owner, do not know what other options exist. Please help!
Dave
It is all another thing of owning a dog! Your yard will never be the same. Get over it! Unless you want the "Home & Garden" show yard, you should not have a dog.My past Reba girl was on Proin for female issues and she burnt the grass where she piddled. But this drug kept her from uncontrolled peing in her sleep.. Now I have my Skye girl, amazing, her first potty in the am she does it in the driveway! We love our fur kids, guess we just do what we gotta do. By the way, I have caught my Hubby waking up and trying to pee in the closet after a night out. How do I cure that?!!! Shock collar?
skiroule
07-25-2011, 11:56 PM
By the way, I have caught my Hubby waking up and trying to pee in the closet after a night out. How do I cure that?!!! Shock collar?
Funny, funny, funny... Does gypsum work on flooring?
anonomoose
07-26-2011, 01:36 AM
It is all another thing of owning a dog! Your yard will never be the same. Get over it! Unless you want the "Home & Garden" show yard, you should not have a dog.My past Reba girl was on Proin for female issues and she burnt the grass where she piddled. But this drug kept her from uncontrolled peing in her sleep.. Now I have my Skye girl, amazing, her first potty in the am she does it in the driveway! We love our fur kids, guess we just do what we gotta do. By the way, I have caught my Hubby waking up and trying to pee in the closet after a night out. How do I cure that?!!! Shock collar?
Hummm....I got that problem myself after a night out with the boys....but my wife jist points to that box of diapers with sailors and kites on them and sezz..."suit up" buster! I'm gett'n so I like them.
By the way, I have caught my Hubby waking up and trying to pee in the closet after a night out. How do I cure that?!!! Shock collar?
Shock collar would work....but your probably only gunna get one chance at that bad boy...so roll that juicer up there into the red zone....nothin like a few super amps to make him reverse motions and zoom around the house trying to hold on.... for dear life that is:o....but I would also recommend one of those home defibs...they sell, jist encase he does the belly flopper on yah....wouldn't want to lose the old guy; course if the life insurance is paid up.....sure makes one think abit eh?
Dave_B
07-26-2011, 11:45 AM
It is all another thing of owning a dog! Your yard will never be the same. Get over it! Unless you want the "Home & Garden" show yard, you should not have a dog.My past Reba girl was on Proin for female issues and she burnt the grass where she piddled. But this drug kept her from uncontrolled peing in her sleep.. Now I have my Skye girl, amazing, her first potty in the am she does it in the driveway! We love our fur kids, guess we just do what we gotta do. By the way, I have caught my Hubby waking up and trying to pee in the closet after a night out. How do I cure that?!!! Shock collar?
I'm not trying for a Home and Garden Lawn and this is not an issue I lose sleep over! I just know that there are ways to control the issue and alot of dog owners on this site who could offer some advice which they have. Suggesting that I should not have a dog wasn't the kind of solution I was looking for!
I'm not really sure what your intent for the post was but, the OMG, Get over it and apparent jab at the shock collar gives the whole post a negative overtone which rubbed me the wrong way.
If I misinterpreted your intent, I'm sorry.
Dave
skiroule
07-26-2011, 12:47 PM
Dave_B,
Since you've reminded us to re-focus, I'll relate our experience. We have had two to four dogs since I can remember (we currently have three). Except for the most recent addition, all have been female. Needless to say, our yard is subjected to a substantial contribution of liquids and solids from the group.
I AM fanatical about our yard but with the overwhelming odds of the opposition, I've had to make some adjustments. Because they favor a particular area of the yard all winter, there is a concentration of damage in the spring (for some reason, this area varies from year to year). Much of the damage recovers by the time the rest of the yard starts to look good but I've resigned myself to resodding/reseeding some of the most severely damaged sections and then it's good for the summer.
We do get a rare spot during the summer but these are almost always avoided by regular watering (and I mean regular). I installed a sprinkler system to augment the natural rainfall and it helps a lot. If it's hot and the yard gets dry, it seems to contribute to an increase in brown spots.
The gypsum/lime sounds like a good idea but my experience has been that watering will reduce the effect considerably.
polarisrider1
07-26-2011, 04:38 PM
Dave, lets get realistic here. You don't get to pee anywhere you want at home, so why should the dog get to. Make an area in back yard were the dog can go. Be it on concrete, sand or "Pee" (pea) gravel. teach her to go there, problem solved and you can walk barefoot in your yard again. Dogs tend to us the same area once you get them used to it. I am not into the shock collar use on pets but that was not the question.
Dave_B
07-26-2011, 08:50 PM
Dave, lets get realistic here. You don't get to pee anywhere you want at home, so why should the dog get to. Make an area in back yard were the dog can go. Be it on concrete, sand or "Pee" (pea) gravel. teach her to go there, problem solved and you can walk barefoot in your yard again. Dogs tend to us the same area once you get them used to it. I am not into the shock collar use on pets but that was not the question.
When it's dark out, I pretty much do! :)
LoveMyDobe
07-27-2011, 06:46 AM
I'm not trying for a Home and Garden Lawn and this is not an issue I lose sleep over! I just know that there are ways to control the issue and alot of dog owners on this site who could offer some advice which they have. Suggesting that I should not have a dog wasn't the kind of solution I was looking for!
I'm not really sure what your intent for the post was but, the OMG, Get over it and apparent jab at the shock collar gives the whole post a negative overtone which rubbed me the wrong way.
If I misinterpreted your intent, I'm sorry.
Dave
There is NO WAY I meant to say you shouldn't have a dog. Just making a point that dog owners do what they have to to make their lives easier. As I just rescued 2 young dogs after losing a senior dog, my life is WAY different.
The shock collar comment, just trying to be funny. My hubby just bought one for "his dog", I don't want to use it on "my dog". Wonder what it would feel like on him!
Dave_B
07-27-2011, 09:07 AM
Thanks for responding! I think you nailed it when you said "dog owners do what they have to to make their lives easier."
That, I guess, was the whole purpose of seeking advice.
As far as the collars go, they work and don't really feel good. I tested mine by wandering the yard with my fingers on it to determine the radius. I yelled lots of 4 letter words when I found the boundaries! :)
snow_monkey
07-27-2011, 09:22 AM
I want to know what you fellow dog owners use to get rid of the yellow grass spots in your lawns caused from our furry friends doing their thing. I've tried a couple differet kind of sprays but, at $12.00 per bottle, have been very unsatisfied at the results.
Any suggestions?
I have a nice yard and want to keep it that way but, as a new dog owner, do not know what other options exist. Please help!
Dave
Neighbors yard! Works for me!
Cat Woman
08-02-2011, 05:31 PM
Dave I have used "Green-UM" tablets before and they did help significantly. You feed them the appropriate amount 1-2 times a day, I did it with their regular feedings. They make several different sized bottles that you can purchase based on your dogs weight. When we'd be in a dry spell brown spots would start to show up in the yard again so we'd just keep the lawn watered when those conditions occured. You are however supposed to take them off of them for, if I remember correctly about 3 months out of the year. We always did it in the winter. My husband is a landscaper and you can imagine what brown spots all over the lawn did to him, lol. I always purchased them off ebay or elsewhere on the internet. They might be worth a try.
Firecatguy
08-02-2011, 07:59 PM
put the shock collar on yourself and see if it helps you learn???same with a choke collar....useless!!!!!work with a dog spend time and goto a class........thats my o2 on collar....as for grass.......I gave up on that long ago.....I go with the flow........
Dave_B
08-02-2011, 08:50 PM
put the shock collar on yourself and see if it helps you learn???same with a choke collar....useless!!!!!work with a dog spend time and goto a class........thats my o2 on collar....as for grass.......I gave up on that long ago.....I go with the flow........
I will give you $1,000 if you can get that shock collar on me before you end up in the ER!
That collar has been 95% effective keeping the dog in the yard and out of trouble (which is it's intended purpose). I spend plenty of time with my dog and she knows "where to go". I was simply looking for advice as to how to combat the yellow spots! Collar, or no collar!
Another useless response to sincere question.
polarisrider1
08-02-2011, 08:55 PM
put the shock collar on yourself and see if it helps you learn???same with a choke collar....useless!!!!!work with a dog spend time and goto a class........thats my o2 on collar....as for grass.......I gave up on that long ago.....I go with the flow........
Exactly, lazy people who don't want to take the time to train humanly use such medieval devices.
Dave_B
08-02-2011, 08:57 PM
Thanks Wayne!
Firecatguy
08-02-2011, 09:02 PM
I will give you $1,000 if you can get that shock collar on me before you end up in the ER!
That collar has been 95% effective keeping the dog in the yard and out of trouble (which is it's intended purpose). I spend plenty of time with my dog and she knows "where to go". I was simply looking for advice as to how to combat the yellow spots! Collar, or no collar!
Another useless response to sincere question.
sorry I do not belive in the shock collar I beleve they are usless...sorry if you feel i insulted you......most schools will tell you the same thing.........get the book "good dog bad dog" its a good book.....1000$ buck eh.......
Dave_B
08-02-2011, 09:03 PM
Listen!
This post has nothing to do with the opinions ANY of you have about shock collars!
It's about practical ways to treat our lawns from the damage or canine friends to to them.
If you do not have a practical suggestion, I do not want to hear it! Your opinions do not matter to me. Your experience with helping be combat my issue does.
Dave
Firecatguy
08-02-2011, 09:05 PM
WHOA!!!!I did give ya my opinon on the grass!!!!!!
Dave_B
08-02-2011, 09:08 PM
sorry I do not belive in the shock collar I beleve they are usless...sorry if you feel i insulted you......most schools will tell you the same thing.........get the book "good dog bad dog" its a good book.....1000$ buck eh.......
I do not like the shock collar either! When you live in a residential area, they serve a practical purpose and have nothing to do with where Charlie pisses! I just was hoping for inteligent responses on how combat the problem of yellow grass stains.
You want the $1,000 challenge, google me!!
Firecatguy
08-02-2011, 09:19 PM
I also live in a residential area I do not use a shock collar my pup stays in my yard we walk the park every day 2 times a day and he walks to the end of my drive and waits to get his leash on!!!!!he also walks the park WITHOUT a leash and if someone is coming I call him and he gets hooked back up!!!!!I got all this done without a shock collar!!!!puppy class works wonders for those who need it... Google???
as for your Pee problem just go get the tablets at Petco that bring the nitrogen or whatever your dog has high volume of down........That you can google and get an answer all day......
Dave_B
08-02-2011, 09:41 PM
Thanks Pat! That last sentence is all I need from you.
woodi
08-03-2011, 10:24 AM
Dave John is right I have had many dogs and after a female pees spray some water on it. My wife is nuts about hear lawn & when the kids bring there female dogs over she watches them & after they relieve themselves she poor alittle water on it. We have a sprinkler system in our lawn & it doesn't help much. As for shock collars I will respond on the other thread.
jstreh
08-03-2011, 04:35 PM
Pet supply stores sell a product in a pill form that you give your dog once a day. I've been using it for several years with my dog during the grass growing season and it seems to work very good.
mjkaliszak
08-04-2011, 08:52 AM
I knew what I was bringing in to the house when I bought her as a pup. Just like my wife knew who/what she was marrying. A dog is a dog ! I have found that my dogs spots are just something that I have to accept. BUT what was the majority of the problem was the neighbors dogs....... My lawn can't tolerate everyones "dog on a walk " peeing in the same area. In my neighborhood I'm known as the "mailbox nazi" ( LOL ) It has taken 2 months for the grass in this area to start to recover. Everyone now walks on the other side of the street. Either that or I let my dobe out and she chases there dog down. She doesn't like other dogs or joggers ( too funny ). She is actually just " looking for a friend " but none of the neighbors know that except for the 1 across the street.
Now as far as the dog goes.... I love my dog," when everyone in the house is mad at me " she still loves me ! I do like the pill to lower the nitrogen suggestion but I'm already giving her a Zyrtec for allergies and a hormone pill.
I have also found that my Ferris 52" mower will burn the lawn if I stop in a spot . Never figured that 1 out but maybe I should put the heat shield back on the muffler ?????
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