Excessive rains cause fungus root rot damage on lawns.
The occasional rain shower is great but not 10 inches of rain in two week, excessive rains cause fungus root rot damage on lawns.
The average lawn only needs about one inch of rain or watering per week any less you start having drought stress and anymore and it could be wasteful and unnecessary but in excess of three to six inches in a week and you start to have fungal issues and even root rotting.
Lawn fungus is mostly triggered by environmental stresses, too much rain, over cast, sudden temperature drops or spikes can trigger a fungus outbreak. It rained all night and it was overcast the next day all day or the temperature went from 85 degrees in the day to 65 degrees at night this is enough to invoke a full blow fungal out break and you will see the effects in the following two weeks.
Improper cultural practices such as scalping, mowing the lawn lower than the cultivar can handle or allowing it to over grow and removing more than thirty percent will cause stress on the lawn and make it more susceptible to disease pest problems.
Homes with no gutters allow hundreds of gallon to fall on parts of the lawn with poor drainage, down spots that don’t drain away from lawns and gardens cause serious damage.
Irrigation systems that do not have active working rain sensors cause further damage by not shutting off the water supply in heavy rain situations exasperating the problem.
Steps you can take to reduce root rotting of lawns.
If your irrigation system does not have a rain sensor then manually shut the irrigation system.
Do not allow your lawn to over grow and them mow it short so it will last, this is murder on a lawn.
Do not mow your lawn when its wet it will look horrible clogged up by decaying leaves that did not get mulched correctly by the mower.
Avoid performing weed control and fertilizing as chemicals can cause further damage to an already stressed lawn.
Allow it to rest and recover, if it’s fungal infection like leaf spot, large patch then treat with a fungicide like Heritage or Cleary 3336.
In water soaked areas where puddle occur this could cause root rotting and fungicides should not be applied to these areas as they cannot correct the rotting until the water drains.
Having a lawn care program in place will allow a professional to start working on restoring your lawn as soon as its prudent to begin the restoration process sooner rather than later.