🌱 April is peak garden planting season in St. Louis β€” if your dog uses your yard, your soil may not be safe to grow food in yet. First cleanup FREE β†’
πŸ₯• Garden Safety β€” St. Louis

Dog Poop and Vegetable Gardens β€” The Food Safety Risk Nobody Talks About

April is planting season. But if your dog has access to your yard, the soil you're planting in may contain roundworm eggs, E. coli, and Salmonella β€” pathogens that can survive for years and contaminate your produce.

πŸ“ž Call (314) 850-7140 πŸ’¬ Text "Garden" to Start
2–5 yrs
Roundworm egg soil survival
48 hrs
Safe waste pickup window
April
Critical planting window
$70/mo
Weekly service, flat rate

The Question Most Gardeners Never Ask

Every spring, thousands of St. Louis gardeners head outside in April to prep their raised beds, turn their soil, and plant the season's first vegetables. They test soil pH, add compost, and plan their layouts carefully.

But almost none of them ask: Is there dog waste in this soil? And if so, what did it leave behind?

If your dog has access to any part of your yard β€” including areas adjacent to or within your garden β€” you may be growing food in soil that contains active pathogens. Not from this week's deposit. From last year's deposits, and the year before that. Because dog waste pathogens don't disappear when the visible waste decomposes. They stay in the soil.

⚠️ The Key Insight
Dog waste decomposes. The pathogens it contained often don't. Roundworm (Toxocara canis) eggs can survive in soil for 2–5 years after the visible waste is long gone. A yard that looks completely clean can still harbor active infective eggs in the topsoil.

What's Actually in Dog Poop That Matters for Gardens

Dog waste contains a range of pathogens β€” bacteria, parasites, and protozoa β€” that can persist in soil and, in some cases, be taken up by or adhere to produce surfaces.

Toxocara canis (Roundworm)

HIGH RISK

Eggs survive 2–5 years in soil. Unembryonated when deposited β€” become infectious in 2–4 weeks. Adhere to root vegetables grown in contaminated soil. Shed in fresh deposits but persist long after visible waste is gone.

E. coli (including O157:H7)

HIGH RISK

23 million bacteria per gram of dog waste. Spreads via water β€” rain, irrigation runoff, and soil splash contaminate low-growing produce. Can survive in soil for weeks to months. Spinach, lettuce, and strawberries are most vulnerable.

Salmonella spp.

HIGH RISK

Survives in soil for weeks to months depending on conditions. Dogs can shed Salmonella even without symptoms. Risk is higher for produce consumed raw and grown close to soil level.

Giardia duodenalis

MODERATE

Cyst-forming protozoan that survives in cool, moist soil for months. Standard garden conditions (moisture, moderate temps) are ideal for cyst survival. Root produce and soil-splashed greens are the primary vectors.

Campylobacter spp.

MODERATE

One of the most common causes of bacterial gastroenteritis. Shed by dogs, survives in moist soil. April showers spread it from waste zones to adjacent garden beds via water movement.

Hookworm larvae (Ancylostoma)

MODERATE

Larvae can survive in warm soil and penetrate bare skin β€” relevant if you garden barefoot or with light garden gloves. Thrives in the same moist, organically-rich soil conditions as vegetable gardens.

23M
fecal coliform bacteria per gram of dog waste
That's what's in the topsoil of every spot your dog has used β€” including near the garden bed

Why Vegetable Gardens Are a Specific Risk Category

Your lawn is a risk zone for pathogens too β€” but the risk pathway is different. With a lawn, the primary concern is barefoot contact and hand-to-mouth behavior, especially for children. The exposure is skin and incidental ingestion.

With a vegetable garden, the risk pathway is more direct: you eat what grows in that soil.

Several mechanisms make garden beds higher-risk than open lawn:

1

Root vegetables grow through contaminated soil directly

Carrots, radishes, beets, turnips, potatoes β€” their edible portions physically pass through soil that may contain roundworm eggs and bacteria. Even after washing, surface contamination can remain in rough exterior textures.

2

Splash contamination affects low-growing greens

Lettuce, spinach, arugula, kale, and strawberries sit close to or on the soil. Rain and irrigation create soil splash β€” contaminated particles reach edible leaf surfaces and stay there through harvest. This is how most E. coli garden contamination events occur.

3

Garden conditions are ideal for pathogen survival

Vegetable gardens are specifically maintained to be moist, organic-rich, and at moderate temperatures. These are also the optimal conditions for Giardia cysts, roundworm eggs, and bacterial survival β€” you've created the best possible environment for pathogens to persist.

4

Gardeners work with their hands in the soil directly

Pulling weeds, thinning seedlings, harvesting β€” gardeners have direct soil contact that lawn walkers don't. Hand-to-mouth transfer and skin penetration (hookworm) are real exposure pathways during normal gardening activities.

5

Most garden washing doesn't remove all pathogens

Standard produce washing removes surface soil but doesn't reliably eliminate roundworm eggs (which have a sticky outer coating) or bacteria embedded in surface textures. Cooking kills most pathogens β€” but raw salads, snacking on cherry tomatoes, and lightly rinsed herbs remain at risk.

Which Produce Is Most at Risk?

Not all garden crops carry the same risk level. The primary factors are: how close they grow to soil, whether they're eaten raw, and whether washing reliably removes surface contamination.

πŸ₯•
Carrots
HIGH
Grows through soil, rough exterior surface
πŸ₯¬
Lettuce
HIGH
Low-growing, splash contamination, eaten raw
πŸ“
Strawberries
HIGH
Soil contact, eaten fresh, rough surface
πŸ₯¦
Spinach
HIGH
Dense leaf surface traps soil particles
🌿
Herbs
HIGH
Often eaten without cooking (basil, cilantro)
πŸ…
Tomatoes
LOWER
Above-ground, smooth skin, usually washed
πŸ«‘
Peppers
LOWER
Above-ground, smooth skin
πŸ₯’
Cucumbers
LOWER
Elevated on vines, above splash zone
🌽
Corn
LOWER
Tall, husked, typically cooked
🌱 April Planting Window Context
In St. Louis, April is when most gardeners start cool-season crops: spinach, lettuce, kale, peas, and radishes β€” all of which are high-risk produce types. You're planting the most contamination-vulnerable crops at the same moment winter waste accumulation is thawing and releasing the highest concentration of pathogens into the topsoil. Timing matters.

The Winter Accumulation Problem β€” Specific to St. Louis

St. Louis winters are cold enough to effectively halt decomposition from November through March. Every deposit your dog makes during those 4 months sits largely intact β€” preserved, not broken down.

When April arrives, the soil thaws and decomposition resumes. But what also resumes is the embryonation of roundworm eggs. Fresh feces contain unembryonated eggs that aren't yet infectious β€” but as temperatures warm, those eggs develop into infective larvae in 2–4 weeks. Winter deposits that have been sitting since December are now embryonating simultaneously across your entire yard, including soil adjacent to garden beds.

100+
deposits per dog sitting in your yard right now
One dog, average St. Louis winter (Nov–March). Two dogs: 200+. All becoming most infectious right now in April.

What the Research Says

Multiple studies have documented soil and produce contamination pathways from animal waste. The CDC's roundworm guidance specifically notes that Toxocara eggs can contaminate soil and persist for years. The EPA classifies pet waste as a non-point source pollutant under the Clean Water Act β€” the same category as pesticide and fertilizer runoff β€” because of its documented environmental and public health impact.

The University of Minnesota Extension and the National Gardening Association both caution against using dog waste as compost or allowing pets to access vegetable garden areas, citing pathogen persistence as the primary concern.

The short version: This isn't theoretical. It's documented, studied, and consistently recommended against by agricultural and public health institutions. If you're serious about your garden, you need to be serious about your yard.

Vegetable Gardener Scenarios

❌ Garden With Unmanaged Dog Waste

  • Winter deposits thaw in April releasing roundworm eggs simultaneously
  • Rain spreads bacteria from deposit zones toward raised beds
  • Dog tracks through garden while owner is at work
  • Root vegetables grow through contaminated topsoil
  • Lettuce splashed by irrigation from contaminated soil
  • Fresh herbs eaten directly from garden without thorough washing
  • Gardening without gloves = direct soil contact
  • Kids snacking on cherry tomatoes straight from the vine

βœ… Garden With Weekly Cleanup System

  • Waste removed within 48 hours β€” before roundworm eggs become infectious
  • No accumulation zone near or adjacent to garden beds
  • Consistent removal breaks the contamination cycle at the source
  • Rain carries clean soil water, not bacterial runoff, toward beds
  • Garden barrier fencing works as intended with no waste source inside
  • Root vegetables grow through uncontaminated soil
  • Safe to garden without hazmat-level precautions
  • Peace of mind eating what you grew

What Doesn't Work (and Why)

Raised beds with a clear perimeter

Raised beds with defined borders reduce but don't eliminate risk. Water runoff, soil splash, and airborne particles still move. If your dog walks through the raised bed frame area before deposits are removed, you're still contaminating the bed. And the soil you filled the raised bed with β€” was any of it your existing yard topsoil?

Washing produce thoroughly

Standard washing removes surface soil. It doesn't reliably remove roundworm eggs (which have a lipid-coated outer layer that makes them sticky and washing-resistant), and it doesn't address bacteria embedded in leaf textures or stem bases. Cooking reliably kills pathogens β€” but raw salads, fresh herbs, strawberries, and garden snacking remain at risk.

Composting dog waste

Standard compost piles don't reach consistently high enough temperatures to reliably kill Toxocara eggs. Commercial hot composting at sustained 145Β°F+ can work, but residential compost piles rarely achieve or maintain those temperatures throughout the pile. The USDA specifically advises against using dog waste compost on vegetable gardens. (For more detail, see our full post on composting dog poop in St. Louis.)

Keeping dog out of the garden bed only

Keeping your dog out of the raised bed area itself is valuable β€” but the risk extends beyond direct access. Deposits in the surrounding yard still contribute to soil contamination through water movement, and deposits that aren't removed still contribute roundworm eggs to the broader soil ecosystem.

What Actually Works: The 48-Hour Rule for Gardeners

The most important thing you can do for your garden's food safety is establish β€” and maintain β€” a weekly or more frequent waste removal system. Here's why timing matters specifically:

Freshly deposited dog waste contains roundworm eggs, but those eggs are not yet infectious. They require 2–4 weeks of warm soil contact to embryonate into infective larvae. If you remove the waste within 48 hours, the eggs never become infectious. The yard never becomes contaminated. The garden's soil never receives the infective forms.

Wait three weeks, and you've removed the visible waste but the infective eggs are now in the soil β€” where they can persist for 2–5 years regardless of what you do next. This is why frequency matters far more than total effort. A single thorough monthly cleanup is almost useless for preventing soil contamination. Weekly removal actually prevents it.

Spring Garden Prep Protocol for Dog Owners

1

Remove all existing winter accumulation BEFORE tilling

Do not till your yard or garden beds while winter deposits remain. Tilling distributes waste and eggs throughout the soil profile rather than keeping them concentrated and removable. Remove all visible deposits first, then amend and till.

2

Assess your dog's access pattern relative to beds

Dogs are creatures of habit. Map which zones your dog consistently uses for elimination. If those zones are within 15 feet of your garden beds, run-off and splash contamination is a realistic risk during rain. Consider physical barriers or reducing your dog's access to that zone.

3

Establish weekly pickup β€” before planting, not after

Set up your cleanup system before you put seeds in the ground. Once beds are planted, you've made a season-long commitment to the safety of those crops. Starting weekly removal at the same time you plant is the right timing β€” not at first harvest.

4

Use fresh (not existing-yard) soil for new raised beds

If you're adding or expanding raised beds this spring, use purchased garden soil or compost from a non-contaminated source β€” not existing yard topsoil that may have years of accumulated contamination. Even if your yard looks clean, roundworm eggs that are already in the soil remain viable for years.

5

Maintain 48-hour removal through the growing season

Once the season starts, consistent weekly removal maintains the clean baseline you established. Don't let summer vacations, busy weeks, or "I'll get to it this weekend" thinking allow accumulation to rebuild. The growing season is exactly when you most need the contamination cycle to stay broken.

Seasonal Risk Calendar for St. Louis Gardeners

❄️

Nov–Mar: Accumulation

Deposits build up. Decomposition halted by cold. Roundworm eggs not yet embryonating β€” but winter deposits are building the spring problem.

🌱

April: CRITICAL

Winter deposits thaw simultaneously. Soil warms β†’ roundworm embryonation begins. You're planting cool-season crops in the highest-risk soil window of the year.

β˜€οΈ

May–August: Growing

Main growing season. Weekly removal keeps contamination cycle broken. August rain events increase splash contamination risk for low-growing crops.

πŸ‚

Sept–Oct: Fall Garden

Fall crops (lettuce, kale, radishes) are planted. Winter accumulation begins. Same high-risk produce types as spring. Last cleanup before leaves cover deposits.

How Tidy Tails Solves This for St. Louis Gardeners

Tidy Tails is St. Louis's local dog waste removal service, serving all of St. Louis County and St. Charles County. We're not a national franchise. TJ β€” the owner and the person who shows up β€” texts you before every visit ("On My Way") and texts when done ("All Done"). Every deposit is removed from your property and double-bagged.

For gardeners specifically, weekly service means:

Tidy Tails Pricing β€” Flat Rate, No Contracts

One flat monthly rate regardless of yard size. No per-dog surcharges above the tier, no yard-size fees, no contracts.

3–4 Dogs, Weekly
$80
/month
Flat rate still
One-Time Cleanup
$75+
one time
First cleanup FREE with monthly

No contracts. Cancel anytime. First cleanup is free when you start weekly service.

⭐5.0β˜… Rating
πŸ“±"On My Way" Text
βœ…"All Done" Text
πŸ“‹No Contracts
🏠Local STL Owner
🎁First Cleanup FREE

Frequently Asked Questions

Is dog poop really dangerous near a vegetable garden?
Yes β€” more so than most people realize. The primary concerns are roundworm (Toxocara canis) eggs, which can survive in soil for 2–5 years and contaminate root vegetables and soil-splashed produce; E. coli and Salmonella, which spread via water runoff and irrigation splash to low-growing greens; and Giardia cysts, which survive in moist garden soil for months. The risk pathway is more direct than with a lawn because you eat what grows in that soil, often raw.
My dog doesn't go in the raised bed β€” is it still a problem?
Partially. Direct access to the bed itself is the highest-risk scenario. But even if your dog's deposits are in the general yard rather than the garden bed specifically, water movement (rain, irrigation) can carry bacteria and pathogen-laden soil particles toward beds. And if you're using any existing yard topsoil in or around the beds, that soil may already contain roundworm eggs from prior years. The safest approach is consistent yard-wide waste removal combined with fresh purchased soil for raised beds.
Does washing produce from my garden eliminate the risk?
Standard washing removes surface soil but doesn't reliably eliminate all contamination. Roundworm eggs have a sticky lipid-coated outer surface that makes them washing-resistant β€” studies have documented their persistence after rinse washing. E. coli can embed in leaf crevices and stem bases. Cooking reliably kills most pathogens. For produce eaten raw β€” lettuce, strawberries, fresh herbs, cherry tomatoes β€” the washing step provides partial but not complete protection. Preventing the contamination from reaching your soil in the first place (via consistent waste removal) is more reliable than post-harvest remediation.
Can I use dog poop as compost for my vegetable garden?
The USDA and most extension services advise against it. Standard residential compost piles don't reach or maintain the 145Β°F sustained temperature needed to reliably kill Toxocara eggs and other pathogens. Even if surface temperatures get hot, the interior of a typical compost pile may not. Hot composting properly done can work, but the margin for error is significant. Dog waste composting is generally considered acceptable only for non-edible landscaping, not vegetable gardens. See our full guide on composting dog poop in St. Louis.
When is the riskiest time of year for garden contamination in St. Louis?
April is the highest-risk window for two converging reasons: (1) winter deposits are thawing simultaneously, releasing months of accumulated waste all at once, and (2) roundworm eggs begin embryonating as soil temps warm β€” the same eggs that were inert and frozen over winter are now becoming infectious. You're also typically planting high-risk produce (spinach, lettuce, radishes, peas) in April. This convergence makes April the most important month to have a clean yard before you put seeds in the ground.
Does your service cover my neighborhood in St. Louis?
We serve all of St. Louis County and St. Charles County β€” North County (Florissant, Hazelwood, Ferguson, Bridgeton), South County (Kirkwood, Webster Groves, Crestwood, Mehlville, Affton), West County (Chesterfield, Ballwin, Wildwood, Creve Coeur), Central County (Clayton, University City, Maplewood), and St. Charles County (O'Fallon, Wentzville, St. Peters, St. Charles). Text your address to (314) 850-7140 to confirm coverage for your specific location.
How much does weekly service cost? Is there a contract?
Weekly service is $70/month for 1–2 dogs, $80/month for 3–4 dogs, flat rate regardless of yard size. No contracts β€” you can start or stop with a text message. First cleanup is free when you start weekly service. One-time spring cleanups start at $75. Text (314) 850-7140 to get started.

Service Areas β€” All of St. Louis County and St. Charles County

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