Bailey is a lifestyle writer from Los Angeles, California. She has a passion for home decor, her cats, and simply hanging out with friends. When she's not writing for Forbes Advisor, Bailey is ...
As winter winds down and your lawn starts to poke through the snow, you may notice that things look, well, off. If the melting ice is revealing ugly, fuzzy patches on your lawn, you could be dealing ...
Snow mold is a fungal disease that occurs on lawns when they are covered in snow for a long time. Cutting your grass short in the fall and not piling up snow on the lawn help to prevent snow mold. To ...
There are several issues that your yard may experience as we all emerge from winter dormancy—brown grass, compacted soil and displaced mulch, to name a few. But one of the top issues is something ...
I knew our yard was in trouble during one of my many snow shoveling sessions this winter. What I uncovered with the snowblower was alarming. Like many of us, I cleared the snow away from the driveway ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Itchy, watery eyes. Sneezing. Spring allergy grossness ... all while massive mounds of snow are still everywhere? Yup. “Snow mold” ...
Experts explain how to protect your grass from those ugly, matted patches. Snow mold looks about as bad as it sounds: Basically, once snow and ice melt on your lawn, you’re left with gray, matted ...
Snow molds are species of fungi that grow under the snow. When the snow melts, it can release spores into the air, which some people are allergic to. A snow mold allergy can look similar to a pollen ...
It’s allergy season and with the snow smelting more people are at risk of snow mold allergies. Snow Mold Allergy is caused as the snow begins to melt and there is a warm up pocket of air beneath, ...
If you had a good amount of snow this winter that piled up on your lawn, you might notice unsightly discolored patches of grass in late winter or early spring when the snow melts. This is snow mold.
Itchy, watery eyes. Sneezing. Spring allergy grossness ... all while massive mounds of snow are still everywhere? Yup. “Snow mold” — also called “snow rot” — (two phrases you didn’t plan to learn ...