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GDD lawn timing

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Growing degree days

Bermuda grass GDD green-up guide

Growing degree days are a heat-accumulation signal. They help explain why spring green-up and weed pressure arrive earlier in warm years and later in cool years.

GDD as a trend signal, not a fixed threshold

University extension sources do not establish confirmed GDD greenup thresholds for bermuda grass. Texas A&M AgriLife Extension identifies 65°F soil temperature at depth — with consistent nighttime temperatures above 60°F — as the signal for active bermuda growth and recovery. The 50–55°F soil temperature window is the established pre-emergent crabgrass timing trigger (University of Minnesota Extension; Penn State Extension), not a bermuda greenup signal.

Where GDD is useful: comparing this spring's heat accumulation to last spring's at your own location. Build your own multi-season baseline by pairing GDD totals with the date you first saw green shoots each year.

Use GDD as a trend, not a guarantee

GDD models help compare spring heat accumulation, but Bermuda green-up is also affected by cultivar, shade, mowing height, winter injury, soil moisture, and local microclimate. Use GDD with visual green-up and soil temperature rather than as a single automatic trigger.

Where GDD helps most

  • Comparing this spring to last spring in the same location.
  • Pairing heat accumulation with soil-temperature pre-emergent timing.
  • Tracking PGR intervals separately from seasonal turf GDD.

Use Lawn Dominator

The GDD Calculator shows seasonal turf GDD from January 1 and a separate from-date calculation for PGR timing. The app lets you log what you applied and compare the results later.

Research and extension sources

  1. NC State Extension: Bermudagrass Lawn Maintenance Calendar
  2. Penn State Extension: Crabgrass and soil temperature timing
  3. Cornell Turfgrass Program: Growing degree days and PGR performance