03/27/2026
Winter Lawn Damage in Southern Maine: How to Spot It, Fix It, and Get a Healthier Spring Lawn
Winter in Southern Maine can be rough on turf. Heavy snow cover, ice, road salt, and repeated freeze-thaw cycles can leave your lawn looking patchy, matted, and slow to green up when spring arrives. The good news: most winter lawn damage is repairable, if you identify it early and follow the right recovery plan.
At Wicked Green, Inc., we help homeowners across Southern Maine and the Seacoast NH area rebuild lawns after winter, so they enter spring thicker, healthier, and more resilient.
What Winter Does to Your Lawn
Here are the most common types of winter lawn damage we see in Southern Maine:
Snow Mold
Snow mold is a fungal issue that develops under prolonged snow cover. It typically shows up as:
Circular patches of matted, straw-like grass
Gray or pinkish discoloration
Webby or crusty areas after the melt
Winter Kill & Crown Hydration Injury
Cold snaps and temperature swings can damage the plant crown (the growth point). Symptoms include:
Areas that don’t green up even after consistent warmer weather
Thinning patches that feel “loose” when you tug on the grass
Salt and Plow Damage
If you’re near driveways, roads, or walkways:
Grass edges may turn brown or “burned”
Growth may be delayed along the perimeter
How to Identify Winter Lawn Damage
When the snow melts, walk your property and look for:
Matted grass that stays flattened after a few dry days
Patchy brown areas (especially in circles)
Bare or thin spots near piles of snow or plow edges
Spongy areas or spots that stay wet (often a drainage/compaction clue)
A simple test: gently rake a small section. If the grass starts to lift and you see green blades underneath, it’s often recoverable. If it pulls up easily with no roots, you may be looking at winter kill that needs overseeding.
Repairing Winter Lawn Damage: What Works (and What Backfires)
Many lawns get worse because homeowners do too much too fast, especially with early fertilizing or aggressive raking. Here’s a smarter approach:
Light Spring Raking (Not a Tear-Up)
Lightly rake to remove debris and lift matted turf. Avoid deep, aggressive raking that rips out weakened grass.
If your lawn is slow to respond call for a consultation.
855-947-3361