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How to Identify and Control Summer Patch

If your lawn is covered with irregular brown patches, the problem may be summer patch. Here's how to tell.

Almost every lawn has a few brown areas from time to time. Perhaps you mowed it too short or with a dull blade, or you forgot to put the kiddie pool away. No big deal. But if your lawn is slow-growing, has wilted turf, and is dotted with irregular, straw-colored patches and rings that get bigger throughout the summer, you may be dealing with a disease called summer patch.

Summer patch is a highly destructive fungus that kills grass by infecting and destroying its roots. Because it can survive in infected plant debris or perennial hosts, it can invade root tissue and remain undetected even in the winter. But when the hot weather hits, the fungus invades your lawn's vascular system, destroying roots and essentially disrupting grass plants' ability to take up water and nutrients.

Before you can take steps to effectively remedy the problem, however, you have to be sure that your lawn is suffering from summer patch. Here's how to tell—and what to do about it.

Grass Types Commonly Affected by Summer Patch

  • Annual bluegrass
  • Kentucky bluegrass
  • Fine fescues (creeping red and hard types)

Other types of lawn grass, such as tall fescue, perennial ryegrass, and zoysiagrass, tend to be resistant or immune to the disease.

How to Identify Summer Patch 

Summer patch changes in appearance as the disease progresses. Look for any or all of these early warning signs and late-stage symptoms:

  • Dark-green, wilted, irregular circles of grass up to 2" in diameter.
  • Straw-colored patches, rings, and crescents that increase in size during summer.
  • Enlarged patches, each with an outer edge that looks yellow or bronze.
  • Grass blades that are dying back from the tip.

How to Maintain Your Lawn to Help Prevent Summer Patch

A lawn that is thick and well-cared for is less susceptible to diseases like summer patch. Keep yours in great shape by:

How to Control Summer Patch

If you determine your lawn is infected with summer patch, you will want to treat it right away. Because summer patch is such a destructive disease, you will need to apply a systemic control that's both curative and preventive like, Scotts® DiseaseEX™ Lawn Fungicide.

This product starts working in 24 hours and lasts up to 4 weeks, and should be applied at the first sign of disease. If you've had problems with summer patch in the past, help prevent it from coming back by applying when conditions are favorable for the disease but before it appears, typically in spring. Be sure to follow label directions.

How to Repair Lawn Spots Damaged by Summer Patch

Once summer patch is under control, repair the damaged areas quickly and easily by using an all-in-one patch and repair mix like, Scotts® EZ Seed®.

It contains high-performance grass seed, continuous release fertilizer, and super-absorbent growing material to help grow grass wherever you need it. Check the package for directions, and use this product during spring or fall for best results. Another option is to overseed your entire lawn with Scotts® Turf Builder® Thick'R Lawn™ Sun & Shade or Scotts® Turf Builder® Thick'R Lawn™ Tall Fescue Mix (depending on your lawn type) during early spring or fall to help restore your lawn to its original thickness.

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