Knowledgebase
What killed the turf in our yard? #931505
Asked May 12, 2026, 6:34 PM EDT
Lenawee County Michigan
Expert Response
Hello mmccallister,
Here’s the Michigan‑specific, MSU‑aligned diagnosis of what killed the turf at your vacation property
Most Likely Cause: Winterkill (NOT over‑fertilization or grubs)
Based on your description and Michigan conditions, the pattern you’re seeing is classic winterkill, especially in lawns that:
Are unattended all winter
Experience extended snow cover
Have freeze–thaw cycles
Sit in areas with poor drainage or uneven grade
Your page notes that the lawn was covered in snow when you visited in winter — this is a major risk factor.
Why winterkill fits your symptoms:
Large, irregular dead patches in spring
Turf that is completely dead, not just thin
No signs of grub tunneling or animal digging
Occurs even in lawns that were healthy the previous summer
This is extremely common in Michigan after winters with long snow cover.
Why it’s NOT grubs
Grub damage shows:
Turf that peels up like carpet
Skunks or raccoons are digging
Damage starting in late summer/fall, not suddenly in spring
Your description doesn’t match the symptoms of a grub.
Why it’s NOT over‑fertilization
Scott’s 4‑step program is designed to be safe when applied correctly. Over‑fertilization causes:
Burned, straw‑colored streaks
Damage in patterns, not large random patches
Usually visible immediately, not after winter
Your lawn was healthy all summer, so fertilizer burn is not the cause.
Could it be snow mold?
Pink or gray snow mold can occur under long snow cover, but:
It causes matted, bleached patches, not complete death
Turf usually recovers by late spring
Your page says the grass is dead, not just matted or discolored.
So snow mold alone does not explain the severity.
So what caused the dead patches?
Winterkill, uneven grade, and prolonged snow cover are the most accurate explanations.
Low or uneven areas trap ice and water, suffocating turf roots.
This matches your note that you want the lawn regraded to be flatter, which strongly suggests that drainage issues contributed to the kill.
Is power‑raking + reseeding the right fix?
Yes — but only if the soil grade is corrected first.
Best practice:
Regrade the lawn to eliminate low spots and improve drainage.
Remove dead turf (power‑rake or dethatch).
Add a thin layer of topsoil only where needed to smooth the grade.
Reseed with a Michigan‑appropriate mix (KBG + perennial rye).
Keep the seed moist for 3–4 weeks.
You do not need to replace all the soil unless:
There are construction debris layers
The soil is extremely compacted
You want to raise the grade significantly
Most Michigan winterkill lawns recover fully with regrading + overseeding
I hope this helps!