Cool-season grass
Bentgrass: Brown Patches
Worried about brown patches on your Creeping bentgrass lawn? Round, spreading, or random — what brown patches are telling you. This guide takes the general diagnosis and tunes it for Creeping bentgrass — 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 Creeping bentgrass
Creeping bentgrass 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.
A known weak spot for Creeping bentgrass: High-input: frequent low mowing, watering, and disease pressure.
How to tell on a Creeping bentgrass lawn
- Roughly circular patches that appear overnight in hot, humid weather point to fungal disease.
- Spongy patches that lift like loose carpet point to grubs chewing the roots.
- Spreading yellow-to-brown patches in the hottest, sunniest, driest spots point to chinch bugs.
- Small, sharply defined dead spots ringed by lush green point to dog urine or a spill.
- Straight brown or yellow striping in the pattern of your spreader passes, right after a feeding, points to fertilizer burn — water the area deeply to flush the excess salts past the roots.
What to do
- Step 1
Read the pattern before you treat
Note the shape (circular vs. irregular), where the patches are (shade and damp vs. hot and dry), and when they showed up. That pattern is most of the diagnosis — and it decides whether the answer is water, a pest treatment, a fungicide, or just reseeding a spot.
- Step 2
Rule out the easy causes first
Confirm it isn't simple drought (browns evenly, perks up with water), scalping (worst on bumps after mowing), or pet spots (small, sharp-edged) before assuming a pest or disease that needs a product.
- Step 3
Confirm the culprit, then treat the spot
Tug-test a patch edge for grubs, part the grass for chinch bugs, and look for the ring and timing of disease. Treat only what you've confirmed, and treat the affected area rather than the whole 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 Creeping bentgrass recovers
Creeping bentgrass spreads and self-repairs, so once the cause is handled, small thinned or damaged areas usually fill back in on their own with steady watering and time — you rarely need to reseed.
Safety first on Creeping bentgrass
Bentgrass is easily injured by herbicides and by heavy nitrogen — confirm any product lists bentgrass, use the bentgrass rate, and keep each feeding at or below ~1 lb of nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft, spreading the annual budget across many light applications. 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
Water deeply in the early morning (never the evening), keep the mower blade sharp and the height up, and avoid heavy summer nitrogen — the conditions that prevent disease and stress are the same ones that grow a thick lawn.