Depends on the grass. Some go dormant in the colder months. Some don’t. In the south, St Augustine and Bermuda grasses are pretty popular. Both will go dormant if the area gets a decent winter. In the mid-Atlantic region, you’ll see tall Fescue handle winter just fine.
No, our grass has been in our backyard for 15+ years now, never having anything else done then being mowed occasionally and yet it’s still green 365 days a year.
So I’m genuinely confused.
Also, generally speaking, I would agree that lawn is cut way too short, but again it depends on the grass. Bermuda kind of likes being kept short. St. Augustine looks better when it’s a bit longer.
I mean, different regions have different plants which they call “grass”, not to mention different climates. It is genuinely possible that even grass in the wild goes brown in that region…
Bruh, why the fuck is the grass length in the negatives? no surprise its fucking shit brown. america smh.
Suburban desert
Because it’s winter. I don’t know what you expected.
Your guys grass isn’t green all year round?
Nope. Americans are obsessed with a boring tiny plant that stays dormant for at least a quarter of the year, closing in on half of it.
Depends on the grass. Some go dormant in the colder months. Some don’t. In the south, St Augustine and Bermuda grasses are pretty popular. Both will go dormant if the area gets a decent winter. In the mid-Atlantic region, you’ll see tall Fescue handle winter just fine.
Is this sarcasm? Maybe you should review how seasons work.
No, our grass has been in our backyard for 15+ years now, never having anything else done then being mowed occasionally and yet it’s still green 365 days a year. So I’m genuinely confused.
Same, the only time it’s that colour is in summer during a drought.
Well I’m glad you are enjoying your summer beach house
You do realized not everyone lives in the same climate right? My guess is that you live somewhere that stays about freezing consistently
Also, generally speaking, I would agree that lawn is cut way too short, but again it depends on the grass. Bermuda kind of likes being kept short. St. Augustine looks better when it’s a bit longer.
I’ve always heard it recommended to cut short after it goes dormant. It helps the grass come back quickly in the spring and cuts down on thatch.
That does look really short though
Interesting. I always thought you cut it short in fall to allow light to get to new seed. I thought the best way to dethatch was a power rake.
bro… grass is green in Winter if its normal length
Bro… not all grass is the same, not all winters are the same, not all soil are the same. Bro.
Where are you?
I’ve never seen grass stay green over winter, in the northeast US
yeah, cuz america apperantly has no real grass, also everybody cuts it like 2mm big… who expects that to survive?
I mean, different regions have different plants which they call “grass”, not to mention different climates. It is genuinely possible that even grass in the wild goes brown in that region…
The best cut changes seasonally
Once grass is hibernating, it’s not like cutting it short inhibits anything: that part of the grass isn’t coming back to life
I’m not sure why it is cut so short. However, it doesn’t hurt anything as the grass is dormant.
I think 48/50 states have been considered to be in at least moderate drought, for a few years now.
I can tell,