Cool-season grass
Annual Ryegrass: Armyworms
Worried about armyworms on your Annual ryegrass lawn? Green to brown in days — the late-summer caterpillar that eats lawns. This guide takes the general diagnosis and tunes it for Annual ryegrass — the signs to look for, what to do first, and how a cool-season lawn recovers — kept safety-first, with the product label as the final word.
What this means for Annual ryegrass
Annual ryegrass is a cool-season grass already under real stress in summer heat, so a problem like this lands on a lawn that's fighting to hold on. Steady it first — mow high to shade the soil, water deeply and early, and hold off on feeding and spraying — then save any real repair for the fall renovation window, when it can actually recover.
How to tell on a Annual ryegrass lawn
- Large areas thinning or browning very fast — sometimes overnight — often spreading like a moving front.
- Up close, the blades are chewed, ragged, and see-through rather than evenly drought-browned.
- Lots of birds suddenly working the lawn — they're eating the caterpillars.
- Green-to-brown striped caterpillars (up to ~1.5") with a pale inverted 'Y' on the head, most active at dawn and dusk.
What to do
- Step 1
Confirm with a soapy-water flush
Before you do anything, confirm it: mix a couple of tablespoons of dish soap into a gallon of water and pour it over a square yard where green meets brown. Armyworms surface within a few minutes if they're there. Check early morning or evening, when they feed — they hide near the soil in the heat of the day.
- Step 2
Treat a confirmed, active infestation
If you find an active infestation, choose an insecticide labeled for armyworms and apply it in the late afternoon or evening, when the caterpillars are feeding — smaller, younger larvae are far easier to control. Treat the damaged area and a buffer around it.
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.
- Step 3
Water to recover — and feed only when it's growing
Once the worms are gone, keep the lawn watered so it can rebuild. If it's actively growing — not heat- or drought-stressed, and not a cool-season lawn in summer — a light feeding helps it bounce back; otherwise hold the fertilizer and let water do the work. Bermuda and other spreading grasses usually green back up from the crowns within a couple of weeks; bunch-type lawns like tall fescue may need bare spots reseeded in the fall.
Never exceed ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft in a feeding, and never feed a heat- or drought-stressed lawn. 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.
How Annual ryegrass recovers
Annual ryegrass is a bunch-type grass that doesn't creep to fill gaps, so any spots killed off won't knit back together on their own. Once the problem is resolved, overseed the bare areas during the fall renovation window.
Safety first on Annual ryegrass
When overseeding a dormant warm-season lawn with annual ryegrass, skip the fall pre-emergent (it blocks the ryegrass seed) and stop overseeding early enough that the ryegrass fades before it competes with spring green-up. 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.
Preventing it next season
There's no reliable preventer the way there is for grubs — armyworms blow in on late-summer moth flights — so the key is scouting. Watch for sudden bird activity or a neighbor's lawn going brown in late summer, and check early: small larvae caught early are far easier to stop than a full-grown army.