Beware smelly snow mould as your lawn thaws - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:41 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Beware smelly snow mould as your lawn thaws

The threat to you garden is low, but it can trigger allergies, says Kath Smyth with the Calgary Horticultural Society.

'It's a cross between running shoes and ...an outhouse,' says horticulturalist

Snow mould typically grows on areas that have been hard-packed, either by walking or the weight of snow. (Shutterstock)

Noticingsmelly, web-like growths on your newly revealed grass during thespring thaw?

You're seeing snow mould, a fungus that develops when the weather warms up quickly after a cold spell, says Kath Smyth with the Calgary Horticultural Society.

All that freezing and melting creates a pocket of warm moist air between the lawn and the crust of snow above, which is perfect for growing mould, she explains.

"It creates a little greenhouse in between the snow and the ground."

"[Snow mould] really and truly is annoying...it appears where the snow stays the longest and it appears where the soil is packed hard," said Smyth on the Calgary Eyeopener.

It really and truly is annoying."- Kath Smyth

This is usually where people (or pets)have trod on the soil a lot a pathway, for example.

Snow mould can be pink or white depending on the type of lawn, and has a pungent odour, she says.

Smyth describes the smell as,"disgusting ... it's a cross between running shoes and, sort of, an outhouse."

It can also be atrigger for allergies, like any fungus or mould.

Despite its foul smell, Smyth describes the threat to your lawn aspretty minor.

  • LISTEN to Kath Smyth break down snow mould:

It can kill the grass it grows on, but she says "the trick is to discouragewalking on the area for the first little while while it clears itself up."

If you can't wait the problem out until it clears up on its own,Smyth says you can simply wear gloves and rake it up thentoss it in a bin.

She advises washing the rakeafter doing so. She says you could sweep or even mow it up, but sometimes the fungus can stay on your tools and continue to grow.

In a winter where there has been a lot of snow, like last year, she says snow mould typically makes a bigger appearance.

She says you can manage its growth ahead of the spring season by raking up leaves on the lawn in the fall.

With files from the Calgary Eyeopener