brucethebroker
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
If it's not poop I do not think there is an issue. What do you expect them to do?
I know many animals urinate on my lawn. Dogs cats bunnies squirrels chipmunks raccoon.
Well said....
If it's not poop I do not think there is an issue. What do you expect them to do?
I know many animals urinate on my lawn. Dogs cats bunnies squirrels chipmunks raccoon.
I think a snappy sign saying that the lawn was just doused with pesticides may do the trick. In my own yard once a week I shovel up piles of bear $h17 full of nuts and berries.
female dogs squat when they urinate. It is concentrated in that spot. and then spreads from there. Even males that squat, their urine stream is not straight down onto on spot--simply because of the shape of the penis.
The chemical formula for urine-- NH2 2CO N=nitrogen. Did you ever notice how a rag that had been used to soak up urine, has an ammonia smell if you for some reason forgot to wash it/throw it out right away.
Grass doesn't care where the N comes from to either green up or brown up due to levels applied.
The grass is always greener in the 2-4" ring around a dead spot, and is possibly the best looking grass in your yard.
Our females are both neutered and we have dead spots. I rake out the dead grass, apply aged compost and see. Easy--peasy.
I agree with this.My point is 1) if you watch your dog you know when they are about to pee and 2) you can control them verbally or just by pulling on the leash - they learn pretty quick.
Now that is pure idiocy..........I see owners pulling their dog along while their dog is pooping, so the feces are strung along the sidewalk for several yards.........
I have a dog that I walk in the neighborhood, on a 6 foot leash. I keep an eye on her and I know when she is about to pee. I don't allow her to pee on neighbor's bushes (she's a leg lifter) or on finer lawns. There is a a lot of mowed road edge where she can pee and no one will notice or care.
My point is 1) if you watch your dog you know when they are about to pee and 2) you can control them verbally or just by pulling on the leash - they learn pretty quick.
Five pages of dogs peeing on lawns.
Amazing.
Five pages of dogs peeing on lawns.
Amazing.
I don't know where you live but around here there are all kinds of animals peeing more than dogs in yards. Deer, and occasional foxes and possums. Mice, squirrels, and other animals all pee on grass. Rabbits. So dogs peeing on yards are the least amount of pee when you add all the pee up from all the other critters.
Yeah, we've had a big black bear marking his turf on our lawn every summer. Now that's a pile. I almost consider it an honor to be one of his favorite places.
I have a dog that I walk in the neighborhood, on a 6 foot leash. I keep an eye on her and I know when she is about to pee. I don't allow her to pee on neighbor's bushes (she's a leg lifter) or on finer lawns. There is a a lot of mowed road edge where she can pee and no one will notice or care.
My point is 1) if you watch your dog you know when they are about to pee and 2) you can control them verbally or just by pulling on the leash - they learn pretty quick.
YesSo you are saying that it is actually possible to prevent your dog from peeing on a neighbor's lawn! (That's my experience too as a former dog owner.)
I wonder why all dog owners don't understand that? Are you just more attentive? Is your dog better trained? Or is it that you bother to try more than most?
One other reason not to move to Texas: Armadillo's, feral hogs and skunks do a lot more damage to a lawn than dog pee.
They are just eating the grubs that are eating the roots of your grass. So your grass was gonna die anyways without the roots. That is, the armadillos were doing you a favor.Exactly...I am at war with some Armadillos as we post. My back yard looks like Vietnam after a bombing run.
They are just eating the grubs that are eating the roots of your grass. So your grass was gonna die anyways without the roots. That is, the armadillos were doing you a favor.
Of course, you can spray triazicide which will kill the grubs and then no more June bugs and no more armadillos. And no more fireflies.
Thanks for that. I do spend quite a bit of time in my landscape and lawn. I guess you could say it is a hobby of sorts and I take great pride in it so...yes...I do get a bit irritated.There is an elderly couple across the street from us who spend quite a bit of time tending to their flowers, bushes, and grass. We don’t get many dogs on our street but one day sure enough a dog came by and peed all over what they just worked on.
At the time it struck me as kind of annoying that people walk their dogs and let them pee all over everything. Never cared about it before but for some reason that day it bothered me, maybe because they work by hand on those bushes and flowers all the time.
So anyway I can see where the OP is coming from.
Is your dog on a leash?As a dog owner-I'm perfectly happy to pick up all the sh1t the dog drops. But I haven't figured out a way to control where he pees.
What should I do?
As a dog owner-I'm perfectly happy to pick up all the sh1t the dog drops. But I haven't figured out a way to control where he pees.
What should I do?
Pack a bucket and sponge?
https://goo.gl/images/QeyQxZ
Is your dog on a leash?