Serving Orléans & East Ottawa — larger projects across the greenbelt 613.830.9743· david@davidslawns.com
Lawn Restoration · Common Problems

Grubs eat the roots. Then animals dig up the turf to reach them.

White grubs feed on grass roots below the surface — then skunks and raccoons tear up the turf to feed on them. With cosmetic pesticides banned in Ontario, the path is diagnosis, recovery and resilience.

Reading The Damage

Signs to look for.

  • Brown patches that lift or peel back like loose carpet — the roots are gone
  • Skunks, raccoons or birds suddenly digging and tearing at the lawn
  • Spongy turf underfoot in late summer or fall
  • Damage that spreads despite normal watering and care

None of these is proof on its own — chinch bugs, drought stress and grub feeding imitate each other well. That's why our first step is never a treatment: we agree a preliminary plan first, then confirm what's actually happening under your turf on site.

Recovery is soil restoration plus precision seeding on the damaged areas — dense new turf placed into prepared soil, timed to the seeding windows. Resilience is the long game: deep-rooted grass on healthy soil tolerates grub feeding far better than stressed turf, and amendments like wollastonite — whose producer publishes research on grub-damage control — earn their place where the soil test supports them.

Patchy, bare-spotted backyard lawn before restoration
Thin, torn-up turf — the kind of damage we confirm on site before recommending anything.
Good To Know

Common questions.

How do I know it's grubs and not something else?

You often don't — which is why we confirm it on site. Chinch bug damage, drought stress and grub damage look alike from the porch. We check what's actually under the turf before recommending anything — because treating the wrong cause wastes time and money.

What can be done, with pesticides banned?

Two fronts. Recovery: damaged areas are rebuilt with soil restoration and precision seeding — dense new turf, placed into prepared soil. Resilience: a healthy, deep-rooted lawn on good soil tolerates grub feeding far better than a stressed one. There's no legal quick spray in Ontario.

I've heard wollastonite can help — true?

Its producer, Canadian Wollastonite, publishes research on wollastonite as a natural approach to grub damage — the silica strengthens plant cell walls. We carry it in the amendment toolkit and apply it where the soil test and what we find on site support it. Read their research and our wollastonite page, and ask us about it when we agree your plan.

When does grub damage show up?

Most visibly in late summer and fall, and again in spring — which is also when the animal digging is worst. If you're seeing it now, we can agree a plan now; recovery seeding is timed to the seeding windows.