Summer Watering Tips for Your Cape Cod Lawn
Watering seems simple — turn on the sprinklers and walk away. But on Cape Cod, the way you water matters more than most homeowners realize. Our sandy soil drains fast, summer heat is unforgiving, and many towns have watering restrictions in place by July.
Water Deep, Not Often
The single most common mistake we see is watering a little bit every day. Frequent, shallow watering trains grass roots to stay near the surface, where they dry out fast and burn in the heat.
Instead, water deeply and less often — about 1 inch per week, split into two or three sessions. Deep watering pushes roots down where the soil stays cooler and holds moisture longer, building a lawn that can handle a Cape Cod August.
Quick check: Set out an empty tuna can on the lawn while the sprinklers run. When it fills to 1 inch, you’ve watered enough for the week.
Water Early in the Morning
The best time to water is between 4 a.m. and 9 a.m. Here’s why:
- Less evaporation — cooler morning air means more water reaches the roots instead of disappearing into the heat.
- Healthier grass — the lawn dries through the day, so it isn’t sitting wet overnight.
- Fewer diseases — wet grass after dark invites fungus, which spreads fast in Cape Cod’s humid summers.
Avoid watering in the evening. It feels intuitive after a hot day, but it leaves grass damp all night and sets the stage for lawn disease.
Account for Sandy Soil
Cape Cod’s sandy soil is a blessing and a curse — it rarely floods, but it also drains so quickly that water and nutrients slip past the roots before the grass can use them.
To work with it, not against it:
- Water in shorter, spaced-out cycles (for example, two 10-minute runs 30 minutes apart) so water soaks in instead of running off.
- Keep a layer of compost or topdressing to help sandy soil hold moisture.
- Don’t cut too short — taller grass shades the soil and slows evaporation. Aim for a mowing height of about 3 inches in summer.
Know Your Town’s Watering Rules
By midsummer, many Cape towns enforce water restrictions — often odd/even day schedules or mandatory hours. Check your town’s current rules before you set your timer, and adjust your irrigation controller to match. A smart controller makes this easy and can save water (and money) automatically.
Watch for Signs of Trouble
Your lawn will tell you what it needs. Look for:
- Footprints that stay visible after you walk across — a sign the grass is thirsty.
- Bluish-gray patches that have lost their bright green color.
- Crispy or curling blades, which mean it’s time to water before damage sets in.
A little brown during a heat wave isn’t a crisis — established Cape lawns often go dormant and bounce back with cooler, wetter weather. But consistent stress means it’s time to adjust.
Let Sears Dial It In
Watering right is a balance of timing, soil, and your specific property — and an efficient irrigation system makes all the difference. At Sears Landscaping, we design, install, and tune irrigation systems built for Cape Cod conditions, with smart controllers that water deeply, early, and within your town’s rules.
Want your lawn to stay green all summer without the guesswork? Contact us today to schedule an irrigation tune-up or consultation.