Cool-season grass • USDA Zone 7
Rough Bluegrass Lawn Care Schedule — USDA Zone 7
Rough bluegrass (Poa trivialis) is a cool-season grass that tolerates the wet, shady conditions where most lawns struggle, spreading by stolons into a bright-green, fine-textured patch. It is a niche and sometimes controversial grass: valued for shade and moisture tolerance, but shallow-rooted and quick to brown out in summer heat and drought, and often considered a weed when it invades a sunny lawn. This schedule is tuned for USDA hardiness zone 7 — mild transition-zone winters (average lows around 0 to 10°F). Your fall renovation window and feeding schedule shift with the local season, so the windows below are tuned for this zone.
- Type
- Cool-season
- Mowing height
- 2–3″
- Nitrogen budget
- 1–3 lbs N / 1,000 sq ft / yr
- Growth habit
- Spreading (self-repairs)
- Shade tolerance
- High
- Drought tolerance
- Low
- Traffic tolerance
- Low
- Winter low
- average lows around 0 to 10°F
Different zone?
See the Rough Bluegrass schedule for another USDA hardiness zone, or the full Rough Bluegrass care guide.
Key care windows for Zone 7
Timing windows are flexible (early / mid / late) and tuned to Zone 7's season — soil temperature and your local weather should always have the final say.
Spring green-up & cleanup
As the lawn wakes up, rake out winter debris and make the first mow at the normal height. Cool-season grass has a spring growth flush, but the fall program matters far more — keep spring inputs light.
Spring pre-emergent (crabgrass)
Apply a crabgrass pre-emergent before soil temperatures reach about 55°F, the point at which crabgrass germinates. Important: do not apply it if you plan to overseed within 8–12 weeks — it blocks grass seed as well as weed seed.
Don't combine a pre-emergent with overseeding — wait 8–12 weeks between them. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Light spring feeding
Keep spring feeding light — heavy spring nitrogen pushes top growth at the expense of roots and invites summer disease. Keep feeding light — about 1–3 lbs of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft per year, applied mostly in fall like other cool-season grasses. It does not need much, and heavy nitrogen will not overcome its intolerance of summer heat.
Plant rough bluegrass deliberately and only where you want it — as a stolon-spreading grass it is widely regarded as a weed in sunny lawns and hard to remove later. Keep each feeding at or below ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Summer stress management
Summer heat is the hardest season for cool-season grass. Raise the mowing height, water deeply and infrequently in the early morning, and avoid fertilizing, seeding, or aerating during peak heat.
Fall aeration & overseeding
Early fall is the single best time for cool-season lawns: core-aerate and overseed while the soil is still warm but the air is cooling, for fast germination and strong rooting. Keep new seed consistently moist.
Fall broadleaf & winter-weed control
Fall is the most effective time to control broadleaf weeds, which are moving energy to their roots. A pre-emergent also targets winter annuals like Poa annua — but skip it if you've just overseeded.
Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Primary fall feeding
Fall is when cool-season grass stores the energy that drives next year's lawn. Make the main feeding(s) of the year now. Keep feeding light — about 1–3 lbs of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft per year, applied mostly in fall like other cool-season grasses. It does not need much, and heavy nitrogen will not overcome its intolerance of summer heat.
Keep each feeding at or below ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft. Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Soil test
Take a soil test in fall so lime or sulfur has the winter to react and you head into spring with the right pH and a real fertilizer plan instead of guesswork.
Winterizer feeding
A late-fall "winterizer" feeding, higher in potassium, hardens the lawn for winter and sets up an early, vigorous spring green-up. Apply while the grass is still green and growing.
Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.
Winter slowdown
Growth slows or stops over winter. Keep off frosted turf, and make sure the final mow left the grass at a moderate height — neither scalped nor overly long going into the cold.
Month-by-month schedule
A quick at-a-glance plan for Rough bluegrass in USDA zone 7, month by month.
| Month | Season | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| January | Winter· dormant |
|
| February | Winter· dormant |
|
| March | Spring |
|
| April | Spring |
|
| May | Spring |
|
| June | Summer |
|
| July | Summer |
|
| August | Summer |
|
| September | Fall |
|
| October | Fall |
|
| November | Fall |
|
| December | Winter· dormant |
|
Rough Bluegrass at a glance
- Tolerates wet, shady sites where other cool-season grasses thin out
- Fine texture and bright green color in cool, moist conditions
- Spreads by stolons to fill damp, shaded patches
- Shallow roots — browns out fast in summer heat and drought
- Looks patchy and off-color as it goes summer-dormant
- Often considered a weed when it spreads into a sunny lawn
For the full Rough Bluegrass mowing, watering, fertilizing, and weed-control guide that applies in every zone, see the complete Rough Bluegrass lawn care schedule.
Common Rough Bluegrass lawn problems
Browning, patches, or pests on a rough bluegrass lawn? These guides help you diagnose what's actually wrong and what to do about it — safely, before you treat.
- Heat & drought stressWhen the whole lawn browns evenly in the heat.
- Dead or dormant?Tell a stressed-but-alive lawn from one that won't come back.
- Lawn fungus & diseaseBrown patch, dollar spot, and the conditions that cause them.
- Brown patchesRound, spreading, or random — what brown patches are telling you.
- ArmywormsGreen to brown in days — the late-summer caterpillar that eats lawns.
A starting point — your plan adjusts to your yard
This Rough Bluegrass schedule is a research-based template tuned to your grass type and USDA zone. Your lawn is one of a kind, though: the right timing and amounts also depend on your soil test, sun and shade, irrigation, lawn size, and the goals you set — a low-input yard, the deepest possible color, or just crowding out weeds. YardLedger takes this template and adjusts it to your yard's specific needs, then keeps refining it from the history of what you've actually done and how the lawn responded — so every recommendation gets more personal over time.
Safety first
Plant rough bluegrass deliberately and only where you want it — as a stolon-spreading grass it is widely regarded as a weed in sunny lawns and hard to remove later. Keep each feeding at or below ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft.
Always read and follow the product label — it is the legal authority on rates, timing, and safety. These windows are regional estimates, not a prescription; defer to the label and your local extension office.