Identifying Issues of St. Augustine Lawn Management - Neil Sperry's GARDENS (2024)

I have, in my 30-plus years on the radio, taken some 300,000 phoned-in questions. I have found St. Augustine diagnostic calls to be ultimately frustrating. Symptoms of the various problems are very difficult for home gardeners to describe accurately and in a time frame that can fit into a talk show.

Let me try to differentiate as best I can. I have lived with St. Augustine lawns for almost all of my life. I love the grass, but I, too, find it a little challenging at times. This is a complete list of the issues people have brought to me. Hopefully, you will find your answer here.

Take All patch. Shows up in spring. Areas are not as green as you would wish, even yellow and sometimes browned and dead. When you pull on the runners, they come loose easily from the soil. The roots are shortened and obviously dried and dead. This is the disease that Texas A&M research pathologist Dr. Phil Colbaugh found responds better to an acidic soil surface than it will to a fungicide treatment. Apply one-half inch of any brand of Canadian peat moss to the surface of the lawn. Rake it out smooth and water it lightly several times to filter it onto the soil’s surface. The photos you see in my MAQ section of our website are from my own lawn, and they show the beneficial effects of applying the peat.

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Gray leaf spot.

Gray leaf spot. Shows up in mid-summer and early fall (times may overlap with Take All patch). Grass appears yellowed in washes across the lawn. Your temptation will be to apply a high-nitrogen fertilizer to green it back up again, but this accelerates the disease. On close inspection of affected turf, you’ll see b-b-sized, gray-brown, diamond-shaped lesions on the blades and runners. Discontinue nitrogen until early fall, and apply a labeled fungicide.

Excessive shade. Grass thins and dies away. Same symptoms as above two problems, but is directly associated with increased amount of shading. Grass usually does not yellow in this process. Only solutions: remove one or two lower branches to allow more light to reach the turf, or switch to a more shade-tolerant groundcover to replace the failing turf.

St. Augustine decline. This is less common now than in years past since most of our lawns are now planted in resistant varieties. It is not a likely candidate if the turf is less than 30 years old. SAD is a viral disease that causes yellowed areas. Individual blades, on close inspection, are gently mottled in shades of yellow. There is no chemical control for SAD. It will be more evident in spring and fall. Replace with a resistant variety.

Iron deficiency. Yellowed blades, often with dark green veins. This is a comparatively minor problem unless you live in really alkaline soils of the Texas Hill Country. In fact, even completely healthy St. Augustine will occasionally show these symptoms when the grass is fertilized with a fast-release, all-nitrogen fertilizer. It will usually outgrow that issue, but, for more widespread iron chlorosis problems, you may need to apply a sulfur-iron additive. Keep it off concrete and other masonry surfaces that could be stained.

Grub worms. The grass will turn yellow in irregular patches, usually in the fall. When you pull on the grass, it will come loose in your hands since the grubs will have devoured its roots. If you find 4 or more of the almost-one-inch-long larvae with brown heads and legs in the top several inches of the soil, apply a labeled insecticide. The best treatment time is actually mid-summer, as the young larvae are starting to develop.

Chinch bugs. These will make areas of your lawn look dry. You’ll water the turf, but it won’t respond. They will show up in the middle of the summer, and they’ll be in the hottest, sunniest part of your lawn. Old suggestions called for pushing a can with no top or bottom into the soil, then filling the can with water. The chinch bugs would float to the top. If that works for you, great, but most of us have trouble driving it through the runners and into hard Texas soil. It’s easier to get on your hands and knees and part the grass blades at the interface between dying and healthy grass. If you do that on a hot afternoon, you’ll see the b-b-sized, black insects with white, diamond-shaped patches on their backs moving around in the lawn. Use a labeled insecticide. Treat at first evidence. Chinch bugs can kill patches of St. Augustine in short order. They tend to return to the same places each summer.

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Brown patch.

Brown patch. This fungal leaf disease hits only during cool weather, usually in the fall, and most commonly in October and November. The grass will yellow in round patches, usually 15 to 24 inches in diameter. Within a week, the patches will have turned yellow and the blades will pull loose very easily from the runners. You will be able to see the decayed basesof the sheaths of the leaves (where they attach to the runners) as proof of the fungus. Treat with a labeled fungicide, and water only in early morning hours so that the grass won’t be wet overnight.

Runners arching over the lawn between mowings. This alarms some gardeners, but it’s almost entirely cosmetic. For some reason, the affected runners don’t "peg down" to the soil. It happens in mid-summer more than at other times, but it does not indicate any kind of special problem. Lift them up with your foot before you mow and you’ll be able to remove them with no ill effects to the lawn.

Nitrogen deficiency. If your St. Augustine isn’t growing as well as it should, and if conditions are favorable otherwise (sunny site, warm weather), it may need to be fertilized. Use a high-quality lawn food with half or more of its nitrogen in slow-release form. Fertilize in late March or early April, early June and early September. Personally, I would never recommend a weed-and-feed fertilizer. The two processes should be handled separately.

Posted by Neil Sperry

Identifying Issues of St. Augustine Lawn Management - Neil Sperry's GARDENS (2024)

FAQs

What is the issue with St. Augustine grass? ›

The most common diseases observed on St. Augustinegrass are gray leaf spot (Pyricularia grisea), large patch (Rhizoctonia solani), and take-all root rot (Gaeumannomyces graminis var. graminis), while the most common insect pests are chinch bugs and white grubs. Disease and insect damage can often look very similar.

What is the problem with St. Augustine? ›

One question preoccupied Augustine from the time he was a student in Carthage: why does evil exist in the world? He returned to this question again and again in his philosophy, a line of inquiry motivated by personal experience.

What is the problem with St. Augustine University? ›

Financial troubles

The IRS last month filed a $7.9 million tax lien against the university. The school has also had problems paying vendors, court records show. The financial problems got so bad earlier this year that the university wasn't able to pay faculty and staff.

What is killing my St. Augustine lawn? ›

If you're dealing with dead St. Augustine grass, a lawn disease might be to blame. This type of turf grass is particularly susceptible to common lawn diseases like brown patch disease, gray leaf spot, and certain types of root rot.

How do you fix diseased St. Augustine grass? ›

Commonly recommended fungicides are propiconazole, thiophanate methyl, mycobutanil, or azoxystrobin. Some of these are available as bottled products that can be attached to and applied with a garden hose.

Is too much water bad for St. Augustine grass? ›

St. Augustinegrass is medium to dark green and coarse textured, and it has a low, dense growth habit. It grows well in nearly all soil types and tolerates shade, heat, salt and, to some degree, drought. It does not tolerate waterlogged soils or extended periods of cold weather.

What happened with St Augustine? ›

Augustine died on August 28, as the Vandals invaded Hippo. Following Augustine's death, his body was laid to rest in Hippo.

Why is Saint Augustine losing accreditation? ›

The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges stripped the university of accreditation in December over financial and governance issues.

Is St Augustine hard to get into? ›

Saint Augustine's University has an acceptance rate of 72%.

What does Epsom salt do to St. Augustine grass? ›

Epsom salt is an organic compound that is full of beneficial minerals for lawns. Iron in Epsom salt, for example, helps grasses to grow healthy and strong. Meanwhile, the magnesium in Epsom salt balances the PH level in your grasses so that it doesn't become too acidic.

What gets rid of St. Augustine grass? ›

The reason this became such a good option is that glyphosate (RoundUp brand name) is a non-selective herbicide that can kill bermuda grass. It also will kill St Augustine grass but not ProVista.

Why is my St. Augustine grass turning brown and dying? ›

The most common cause of ailing St. Augustine lawns is grass disease. Brown Patch and Take All Patch diseases are the most likely culprits, causing circles of grass that appear yellow or brown. These diseases are caused by fungus and are deadly for your lawn if they are not treated.

Is Saint Augustine a good grass? ›

St. Augustine grass is one of the most popular lawn grasses in Florida and the Gulf states, thanks to its tolerance of heat and humidity. Its blue-green blades form a dense turf that establishes quickly and easily, and can tolerate salt, making it an excellent choice for coastal yards.

Will Dead St. Augustine grass come back? ›

If the temperature is low and your grass looks yellow-brown and crispy, you may just need to wait for the weather to warm up. However, if your St. Augustine grass is truly dead, there is no reviving it. To get a healthy lawn, you'll need to start from scratch.

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