How to water the lawn in spring?
Spring rainfall often provides enough moisture, but knowing when to supplement and how much to apply prevents overwatering problems and builds drought-resistant roots for summer.
- Avoid overwatering in rainy springs to prevent shallow roots4
If spring brings regular rainfall, turn off your irrigation system entirely. Do not add supplemental water when nature is providing an inch or more per week. Resume irrigation only when a dry stretch causes visible wilt.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:31:02 AM
🛠️ Rain sensor (optional)
- Watch for wilting as the sign to water not the calendar4
Instead of watering on a fixed schedule, watch your lawn for the first signs of drought stress: a blue-gray color change, footprints that remain visible for more than a few seconds, and leaf blades that fold or curl lengthwise.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:30:57 AM
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- Use a smart irrigation controller for automatic adjustment4
Replace your basic sprinkler timer with a smart irrigation controller (like Rachio, RainMachine, or Hunter Hydrawise) that adjusts watering schedules based on local weather data, soil type, and plant type.
📌 commercial2/8/2026, 5:30:49 AM
🛠️ Smart irrigation controller, existing in-ground sprinkler system
- Use the tuna can test to measure sprinkler output4
Most homeowners have no idea how much water their sprinkler actually delivers. The tuna can test reveals both the output rate and the uniformity of coverage. Uneven distribution is the number-one cause of brown spots in irrigated lawns.
📌 diy2/8/2026, 5:30:33 AM
🛠️ 5-6 empty tuna cans, ruler, sprinkler
- Water early morning before 8 AM to prevent fungal disease5
Schedule irrigation between 4:00 AM and 8:00 AM. This is the window when water pressure is highest, wind is calmest, evaporation is lowest, and the grass dries quickly as the sun rises.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:30:28 AM
🛠️ Sprinkler timer
- Target 1 inch of water per week including rainfall4
Aim for approximately 1 inch of total water per week during spring, counting both rainfall and irrigation. In cool spring weather (April to mid-May), most cool-season lawns use about 1 inch per week. This increases to 1.5-2 inches in summer.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:30:22 AM
🛠️ Rain gauge
- Water deeply and infrequently to encourage deep roots5
When you do need to water, apply enough to wet the soil to a depth of 6-8 inches in a single session, then let it dry out before watering again. For most soils, this means applying about 1 inch of water per session.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:30:17 AM
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- Let the lawn green up naturally without early irrigation5
Resist the urge to turn on sprinklers as soon as the lawn starts greening up. Allow the grass to emerge from dormancy on natural rainfall alone. Do not begin irrigating until dry conditions cause visible wilt that lasts more than one day.
📌 best practice2/8/2026, 5:30:11 AM
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