| Agree with a PP - I have never seen these so called brown spots caused by pee. |
I follow the same personal rules. My dog only goes on tree lawns. I never let her go onto people’s yards. |
I have a large male dog. I have yellow dead grass spots all over my backyard. Maybe some dogs’ urine doesn’t kill grass, but my dog’s does. Fortunately, he only pees a ton in our yard. When we go on walks he’s just peeing a tiny amount here and there and not doing the same kind of damage. I think it’s that really concentrated, first pee of the day that’s so damaging. |
| Yards with signs get more dog pee. |
The jerk dogs don't care, idiot. |
Brown patch disease is caused by the fungus Rhizoctonia. This disease causes patches of dead brown grass in hot and humid weather. Not dog pee |
Then why is the grass usually dead at the base of streetlights, stop signs, and fire hydrants, where dogs pee all day long? |
| Funny signs are better. |
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I live in Rockville. Aside from roaming neighborhood cats, there is an abundance of wildlife including squirrels, birds, mice, possums, raccoons, and an occasional deer. While it didn’t come to our neighborhood that I’m aware of, the news reported a bear in the area earlier this summer, and other years I remember warnings about coyotes. Since presumably all these animals urinate somewhere, I don’t think the neighborhood dogs make a significant difference.
That being said, the most memorable sign I ever saw was posted at a campground. It was a fake tombstone displaying the following verse: Here he lies all stiff and hard the last d——d dog that c——d in my yard. |
+1. This is what I do, too. I also try to keep my dog off the verge when there is a sign in the yard. |
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Dogs can't read. The sign just makes it more enticing because there's "pole" to pee on.
They run up to the sign, sniff, and aim for it. |
I am a fairly new dog owner (3.5 years) and I have been hearing this for ages. FWIW, my small make Havanese (if it matters) actually helps our grass grow. There are dense tufts of dark green grass in my own yard, and that’s how my dog knows where to go when we let him out. He goes right for one of his “ spots”. |
It's dose-dependent. The people who don't think pee (of any species) hurts plants is because they've probably only had small critters, including small dogs, pee on their property. But large quantities of urine will cause browning. |
I’m curious; do you have a sprinkler system and do you use it? |
But they won’t. Everyone of these discussions gets taken over by the rude and entitled dog owners. They aren’t the norm and being a dog owner doesn’t make you rude or entitled. We just have so many more self centered, self important rude people. |