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Dog Urine ruining ny lawn

BlakeD
Finding My Feet

Dog Urine ruining ny lawn

Hello,

12 months ago I put in a buffalo lawn. Since then, my dog has used the same corner to go to the toilet on. As you can see in the pictures, it’s quite dead: I did a lawn Reno at the start of spring but no luck reviving this corner. Any tips or advice? And is it possible that it’s spreading down the deck and killing more lawn? Or is my dog just moving his preferred toilet area?

Thanks

IMG_3795.jpeg

 

 

MitchellMc
Bunnings Team Member
Bunnings Team Member

Re: Dog Urine ruining ny lawn

Unfortunately, this is a very common issue with dogs and natural turf @BlakeD. Once a dog chooses a preferred toilet spot, the repeated urine in the same area causes a nitrogen overload and salt build-up, which effectively burns the grass and kills it off at the roots. At that point, even lawn renovations struggle to make any lasting difference because the underlying issue keeps repeating.

 

Given the extent of the damage you are seeing here, this is actually a good opportunity to seriously consider artificial lawn options. Even if the damage was only half as severe, I would still be suggesting the same line of thinking. Realistically, if your dog has locked onto this corner as their toilet area, you are likely to be fighting a losing battle unless you can successfully retrain them to use a different part of the yard. With the size and layout shown, that can be quite difficult unless there is another clearly defined and suitable area you can redirect them to. It is possible to isolate the damaged section temporarily by using stakes and dog mesh, then re-lay turf and train your dog to use another part of the lawn, but this requires consistency and time, and there is no guarantee they will not return to their original spot once access is restored. That is why many people in this situation choose to change the surface instead of constantly repairing it.

 

Modern artificial grass has come a very long way over the last 20 years and the premium options available now look exceptionally realistic. They are well suited to dog areas because they can be easily flushed with clean water, and there are purpose-made deodorisers available to manage odours. In a high use toilet zone like this, artificial turf often ends up being the most practical, low stress solution rather than repeatedly patching natural lawn that continues to die off.

 

So while retraining is possible, given how persistent this behaviour is and the amount of damage already done, switching this corner to artificial lawn is likely to give you the best long term result and save you a lot of ongoing frustration.

 

Here's a helpful step-by-step guide: How to lay synthetic turf.

 

Please let me know if you have any questions.

 

Mitchell

 

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AlanM52
Amassing an Audience

Re: Dog Urine ruining ny lawn

Hi @BlakeD,

 

There are people out there prepared to follow their doggie with a watering can and... I was one of them.

@MitchellMc has provided lots of good info and I am also wondering if there is enough space to redirect pee activity so could post photos of the whole area. @MitchellMc mentioned fencing off and another option is a motion activated impact sprinkler.

With photos of the whole area we can better assess the situation.

Oh... another factor likely to effect small area lawn reno is the size and age of the dog because their urine acidity generally increases with age. I my case I can confirm that... very closely follow our aging Golden Retriever one had holding the waterer other hand fully outstretched bending low ready to collect a pee sample.

 

Cheers

 

 

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