🌿 April 2026 — St. Louis Spring Guide

The Complete Spring Yard Safety Guide for St. Louis Dog Owners

Flies. Mosquitoes. Ticks. Parasites. Dead grass. Rain that spreads everything. Here's everything you actually need to know before your kids go barefoot in April.

📱 Schedule Spring Cleanup — (314) 850-7140 First Cleanup FREE →
🌡️ April is peak activation month in St. Louis — 100+ winter deposits are thawing NOW. Every warm rain spreads bacteria and parasite eggs across your entire yard.
100+
Deposits per dog since Dec
5 yrs
Roundworm egg soil survival
8
Spring threats covered below
$2.30
Per day to solve all of it

You let the dog out. You looked at the yard. After four months of winter, it is what it is.

But spring in St. Louis isn't just about the visual problem. The real issues are underneath, and most dog owners don't know what's actually happening in their yard in April. Flies are laying eggs. Mosquitoes are establishing breeding sites. Tick-carrying wildlife is moving in. Roundworm eggs that have been sitting frozen since October are becoming infectious. The lawn is burning in the same spots for the fourth consecutive year.

This guide covers all of it. Not to scare you — to actually give you a plan. Each section below links to the full deep-dive if you want the complete picture. The checklist at the bottom is the actionable summary.

The Winter Math You're Dealing With

Before getting into each specific issue, understand the scale of what April thaw actually means.

One dog deposits approximately 25 piles per month. A standard St. Louis winter runs from December through March — four months. That's 100 deposits per dog, sitting in your yard right now as temperatures rise.

100
Deposits per dog sitting in your yard from a St. Louis winter. Two dogs = 200. Three dogs = 300. All releasing simultaneously in April.

Cold temperatures don't decompose waste — they preserve it. Everything that went into the yard between December 1 and March 31 is still there, now thawing into moist spring soil. That's not just a visual problem. That's a biology problem.

The 48-hour rule: pick up within 48 hours and you remove roundworm eggs before they embryonate and become infectious. Wait three weeks and the visible waste is gone, but the eggs are in the soil — where they'll stay for up to five years. This is why "it'll decompose on its own" is the most expensive mistake a dog owner makes.

Threat #1: Flies

🔴 High Risk — April through October

House Flies & Blow Flies

One pile produces 200–500 fly eggs that hatch within 24 hours. Spring thaw = first generation of the season establishing right now.

🟡 Key Fact

Sprays Don't Work

Fly sprays kill adult flies (Stage 4). Larvae (Stages 1-3) continue in the moist organic material. Removing the source is the only intervention that breaks the cycle.

One dog's waste in one summer produces a potential 30,000–45,000 flies. April is the moment to break this cycle before it compounds — not July when your backyard becomes unusable.

Overwintered pupae are hatching right now as temperatures climb above 50°F. The 100+ deposits thawing in your yard are the first-generation food source for the entire season. Removing that material in April is 40× more effective than addressing flies in July.

🪰 Deep Dive: Dog Poop and Flies — Why It Happens and How to Stop It
The complete fly lifecycle, why sprays fail, and the only intervention that breaks the breeding cycle for good. →

Threat #2: Mosquitoes

Every mosquito guide says "eliminate standing water." Nobody mentions that 100 piles of decomposing dog waste each create their own moisture zone after rain — mosquitoes need only a half inch of saturated organic material to lay eggs.

The April Multiplier Effect Mosquito eggs hatch in 24–48 hours in warm April conditions. One female lays 100–200 eggs per batch. First generation establishes April–May. By July, your yard is exponentially worse than it needed to be. One breeding site removed in April is 40× more effective than one removed in July.

Missouri has a documented West Nile history — DHSS monitors annually. The primary vector, Culex quinquefasciatus, begins laying eggs when temperatures stay above 50°F at night. In St. Louis, that's April.

🦟 Deep Dive: Dog Poop and Mosquitoes — The Backyard Connection You're Missing
Why mosquito sprays don't work if the source isn't removed, and the April window that makes all the difference. →

Threat #3: Ticks

The tick connection most people miss: dog waste attracts mice, voles, and rabbits — the primary tick hosts — into residential yards. These wildlife bring ticks with them. Eliminating the waste reduces the wildlife attractant, which reduces the tick introduction rate at the source.

🔴 Missouri Endemic — HIGH

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

Up to 20% fatality if untreated. American dog tick. Missouri has some of the nation's highest case counts. Can kill within days.

🔴 Missouri Endemic — HIGH

Ehrlichiosis

Missouri is consistently one of the nation's highest-reporting states. Lone star tick. All three life stages bite humans.

🟡 Increasing — MODERATE

Alpha-Gal Syndrome

Permanent red meat allergy caused by lone star tick bite. No cure. Growing in Missouri as lone star tick range expands.

April is Missouri's peak tick nymph emergence month. Nymphs are poppy-seed sized — 96% of Lyme cases involve a tick the person never noticed. The window to reduce wildlife traffic into your yard is right now, before the season establishes.

🕷️ Deep Dive: Dog Poop and Ticks — The Hidden Connection
The wildlife vector nobody talks about, Missouri's endemic tick diseases, and the spring removal timing that breaks the cycle. →

Threat #4: Parasites (The Silent Long-Term Risk)

This one has the longest tail. Roundworm (Toxocara canis) eggs survive in soil for 2–5 years. Hookworm larvae penetrate bare skin directly — no ingestion required. Giardia cysts persist in cool moist soil for months.

The 48-Hour Rule — Why Timing Is Everything Fresh feces contains roundworm eggs that are NOT yet infectious. It takes 2–4 weeks of warm soil incubation for them to embryonate. Pick up within 48 hours and you remove the eggs before they become a threat. Wait three weeks and the waste is gone, but the eggs are in the soil where they'll remain infectious for years.

14% of Americans have been exposed to Toxocara roundworm. The CDC estimates 70 cases per year of permanent vision damage (ocular larva migrans) — primarily in children. This is the risk that converts dog owners who were vaguely aware of "health concerns" into people who understand why frequency of pickup, not just effort, is what matters.

🪱 Deep Dive: Dog Poop and Worms — What St. Louis Families Need to Know
The 48-hour rule, parasite survival timelines, and why April is the highest-risk exposure month for children. →

Threat #5: Rain Spreading Everything

The most common misconception about dog waste: "I'll wait for rain to handle it." Rain doesn't eliminate dog waste. It disperses the bacteria, parasite eggs, and nitrogen across a wider area of your lawn — and sends runoff into storm drains that connect to Gravois Creek, Deer Creek, Creve Coeur Creek, Coldwater Creek, and eventually the Meramec and Mississippi Rivers.

23M
Fecal coliform bacteria per gram of dog waste. Every inch of April rain spreads this across your entire lawn. St. Louis averages 4.2 inches of rain in April.

The EPA classifies dog waste as a non-point source pollutant under the Clean Water Act — the same category as oil runoff and pesticides. The "it'll wash away" belief is responsible for more contaminated yards than any other single factor.

🌧️ Deep Dive: Does Rain Wash Away Dog Poop?
What actually happens to dog waste when it rains, the St. Louis waterways affected, and why wet weather makes the problem worse. →

Threat #6: The Decomposition Myth

Best case scenario for decomposition in St. Louis: 9 weeks in warm, moist conditions. But during a Missouri winter, decomposition essentially stops. That means everything deposited between December and March is still there — preserved by cold, not broken down.

And even after visible waste disappears, the soil contamination doesn't. Roundworm eggs: 2–5 years. Giardia cysts: months to a year. E. coli: weeks to months. A yard that looks clean in April is not necessarily safe.

🔬 Deep Dive: How Long Does Dog Poop Take to Decompose?
The complete timeline, what survives decomposition, and why "letting it go" is a 5-year soil contamination decision. →

Threat #7: Lawn Dead Spots

The same corners die every spring, even after reseeding. This isn't a fungus problem. Dog waste is acidic (pH 4–5) and contains concentrated nitrogen that burns grass roots — the same mechanism as over-fertilizing in a very small spot. The combination of nitrogen toxicity and acid damage kills the same areas year after year because the source was never removed.

The Fertilizer Myth — Why It's Backwards Livestock manure works as fertilizer because herbivores eat plant material. Dog food is high-protein meat, producing acidic, nitrogen-concentrated waste in a form that burns rather than nourishes. If you've been leaving it to decompose as fertilizer, you've been damaging your lawn every time.

First-year spots: 6–12 inches. Without consistent cleanup, year two expands to 24–36 inch dead zones where standard seeding won't establish — requiring tilling, lime, topsoil, and premium seed at $80–200 per zone. Compare to $2.30/day prevention.

🌿 Deep Dive: Dog Poop Dead Spots in Your Lawn
The nitrogen burn and acid damage mechanisms, why the same spots die every year, and the 7-step repair sequence that actually works. →

Threat #8: Pool Season (For Pool-Owning Households)

Wet feet track bacteria from a contaminated yard into pool water. Giardia cysts are not neutralized by standard pool chlorine levels. Children running barefoot from yard to pool are the highest-risk scenario — not because the pool chemistry fails, but because the yard-to-pool path can't be fenced off.

🏊 Deep Dive: Opening Your Pool With Dogs? Clean That Yard First.
Why Giardia is chlorine-resistant, the wet-feet contamination path, and a 6-step pre-pool cleanup guide. →

The Complete Spring Yard Checklist

Work through this in order. Each step matters, and each builds on the previous one.

📋 Phase 1: Full Winter Cleanup (Do This First — Before Any Other Step)

Grid-search the entire yard, starting from corners and fence lines (waste concentrates there). Work methodically in rows — don't eyeball it.
Check at crouch level — children play at this height, and decomposed material is harder to see standing. You'll find things you missed.
Double-bag and remove from property entirely. Bags sitting in your trash for a week still leach bacteria through rain — removal means off-site.
Do this BEFORE the first major April rain. Once rain hits, bacteria and parasite eggs spread across the entire lawn surface. Cleanup before rain is exponentially more effective than after.

🔄 Phase 2: Establish Weekly Pickup (The Only Long-Term Solution)

Commit to pickup within 48 hours of deposit. Roundworm eggs become infectious after 2–4 weeks of warm soil incubation — the 48-hour rule removes them before the window opens.
Weekly professional service or twice-weekly DIY is the minimum effective frequency. Monthly visits are not sufficient to break the mosquito breeding or parasite contamination cycle.
If hiring professional service: confirm they remove waste from the property, not bag and leave at yard edge. Bagged waste still leaches through rain.

🌱 Phase 3: Lawn Repair (For Dead Spots)

Remove ALL existing waste completely from the dead spot area before attempting any lawn repair. New grass seeded without removing the source will burn again within weeks.
Establish weekly cleanup before overseeding. Any lawn repair attempted without consistent future pickup will fail — this is why the same spots die every year.
For multi-year spots (24+ inches of dead zone): rake out dead grass and thatch, lightly amend with lime to address soil acidity, overseed with tall fescue (appropriate for St. Louis climate), water consistently for 3–4 weeks.
Best window for lawn repair in St. Louis: April–May. Cool-season turf (tall fescue) germinates best in spring. Summer heat makes seed establishment harder and dead spots more visible.

🐾 Phase 4: Parasite Prevention

Schedule annual fecal testing for your dog with your vet. Many dogs with intestinal parasites show no symptoms. Testing confirms whether your yard is actively being reseeded with parasite eggs.
Monthly heartworm/parasite prevention medication (many products also prevent roundworm and hookworm shedding into the yard).
Talk to kids about not touching their face or putting hands in mouths after outdoor play, especially before washing. Roundworm transmission is hand-to-mouth, not direct contact.

🦟 Phase 5: Pest Reduction

Complete Phase 1 (winter cleanup) BEFORE applying any mosquito treatments. Sprays kill adult mosquitoes; they don't address breeding sites in moist organic material. Applying spray before removing waste treats the symptom, not the source.
Add Bti dunks (Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis) to any unavoidable standing water features — bird baths, planters, drains. This is the only safe mosquito larvicide for areas with kids and dogs.
Keep grass under 3 inches — tall grass is tick habitat. Mow before first warm weekend of the season, then maintain.
Perform full tick checks after outdoor play April through June: hairline, behind ears, armpits, groin, back of knees. For dogs: same areas plus between toes and under collar.

What Doesn't Work (Save Yourself the Time)

These are the interventions people try that address the symptom without touching the source:

The Two-Scenario April

❌ Without Spring Cleanup

  • 100+ deposits release pathogens into warm moist April soil
  • First April rain spreads bacteria across entire lawn
  • Mosquito breeding sites established across every deposit point
  • Wildlife attracted by waste brings tick population into yard
  • Roundworm eggs embryonate in soil, infectious by May
  • Dead spots in same corners for fifth consecutive year
  • Yard unusable from July through September

✅ With Spring Cleanup + Weekly Service

  • Winter accumulation removed before first April rain
  • Bacteria not spread across lawn by rain — removed at source
  • Mosquito breeding sites never established
  • Wildlife attractant eliminated, tick introduction reduced
  • 48-hour pickup prevents egg embryonation
  • Lawn repair actually works this year
  • Kids and dogs in the yard all summer

How the Math Works Out

The spring cleanup clears what's been accumulating since December. The weekly service maintains the yard so none of the above cycles have time to establish — flies, mosquitoes, ticks, parasites all require days to weeks to complete their critical cycles. Weekly removal stays ahead of all of them simultaneously.

Cost: $70/month = $2.30/day. One-time spring cleanup: $75. No contracts. Text before every visit. We remove waste from the property — it doesn't stay bagged at your fence line.

Get Your Yard Ready for Spring

$75+
One-time spring cleanup
$70/mo
Weekly · 1-2 dogs
$80/mo
Weekly · 3-4 dogs
$90/mo
Weekly · 5+ dogs

No contracts. No yard-size surcharges. We text before every visit. First cleanup FREE with subscription. Jamie handles it personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the most important spring task for dog owners? +
Remove all winter accumulation before the first major April rain. Dog waste that sat frozen all winter is now thawing and releasing pathogens, nitrogen, and parasite eggs into moist soil at the exact moment kids start going barefoot and pests start breeding. This single step — before rain hits — is more effective than any other intervention.
How much waste accumulates over a St. Louis winter? +
One dog deposits roughly 25 piles per month. A standard St. Louis winter (December through March) equals about 100 deposits per dog. Two dogs means 200 piles. Three dogs means 300. All of that material releases simultaneously in April as temperatures rise above freezing. Cold doesn't decompose waste — it preserves it.
Does rain clean up dog poop? +
No. Rain disperses bacteria, parasite eggs, and nitrogen across a wider area of your lawn — it doesn't eliminate them. Every inch of April rain (St. Louis averages 4.2 inches) spreads 23 million fecal coliform bacteria per gram of waste across the yard surface and sends runoff through storm drains into local waterways. The EPA classifies this as a non-point source pollutant under the Clean Water Act.
How long do roundworm eggs survive in soil? +
Toxocara (roundworm) eggs survive in soil for 2 to 5 years after visible waste is gone. Cold temperatures preserve them — they don't die over winter. A yard that looks clean in April may still have active parasite eggs from waste deposited months ago. This is why removing visible waste isn't sufficient if it wasn't done consistently throughout the year.
Does dog poop attract ticks and mosquitoes? +
Yes, through two separate mechanisms. Dog waste attracts tick-carrying wildlife (mice, voles, rabbits) into residential yards — these animals are the primary tick hosts, not the ticks themselves. Separately, decomposing waste creates moist organic depressions that serve as mosquito breeding sites — mosquitoes only need half an inch of saturated material to lay eggs. Removing waste reduces both attractants.
How much does professional pooper scooper service cost in St. Louis? +
Tidy Tails charges $70/month flat for 1-2 dogs with weekly service — $2.30 per day. One-time spring cleanups start at $75. No contracts, no yard-size surcharges, and we text you before every visit and when we're done. The first cleanup is free with a subscription.
Is weekly pickup service worth the cost? +
For households with 1+ dogs, yes. At $70/month, the service costs less than two cups of coffee per day. It eliminates the year-round accumulation of flies, mosquitoes, tick habitat, parasite contamination, and lawn damage that builds up without consistent pickup. The comparison isn't $70/month vs. doing it yourself — it's $70/month vs. 2+ hours of weekend labor every week, plus the cost of mosquito treatments, lawn repairs, and potential medical bills if parasites become an issue.

Service Area

We serve all of St. Louis County, most of St. Charles County, and select surrounding areas. Call or text to confirm your address — same flat rate regardless of zone.

Florissant
Hazelwood
Ferguson
Bridgeton
Kirkwood
Webster Groves
Crestwood
Chesterfield
Ballwin
Wildwood
Creve Coeur
Clayton
Ladue
Maplewood
Mehlville
Oakville
Affton
O'Fallon
St. Peters
Wentzville
Maryland Heights
St. Charles

Related Guides

🪰
Dog Poop and Flies
Why sprays fail, the breeding cycle, and the only fix that works.
🦟
Dog Poop and Mosquitoes
The April multiplier effect and the breeding sites nobody talks about.
🕷️
Dog Poop and Ticks
The wildlife vector, Missouri's endemic diseases, and the spring window.
🪱
Dog Poop and Worms
The 48-hour rule, parasite survival timelines, child risk.
🌧️
Does Rain Wash It Away?
What actually happens to dog waste when it rains in St. Louis.
🔬
How Long Does It Decompose?
9 weeks minimum. 5 years for roundworm eggs. The real timeline.
🌿
Lawn Dead Spots
Why the same corners die every year and the repair sequence that works.
🏊
Opening Your Pool With Dogs
Giardia is chlorine-resistant. The yard-to-pool path you're not thinking about.