Why Las Vegas Yards Need Sanitizing More Than Most Cities.
If you've ever wondered why your yard smells like a kennel by August, the answer is the same reason your laundry dries in 20 minutes. Vegas does things to dog yards that other climates don't.
Most pet waste advice on the internet was written for places like Portland, Atlanta, or Chicago. Damp air, soft grass, regular rainfall. The advice "scoop once a week and you're fine" works in those cities because rain rinses the yard between visits.
Las Vegas doesn't get that rinse. We get 4 inches of rain a year. We get 110-degree summers that bake whatever is left on your turf into a hardened, ammonia-soaked layer that scooping alone won't fix.
That's why sanitizing matters more here. Here's what's actually happening in your yard, and what an EPA-registered treatment like Wysiwash actually does about it.
What scooping doesn't get
Scooping removes the solids. That's the obvious part. What stays behind is the residue: urine that soaked into the turf infill, fecal bacteria that the visible mess deposited before you got to it, and the by-products that those bacteria leave as they break down.
In a humid climate, rain rinses most of that away. In Vegas, it sits and bakes. By the end of a hot week, your yard isn't just "a yard that needs scooping." It's a yard with a measurable bacterial load on every surface a dog has touched.
The Vegas summer specifically
From May through September, the air is dry, the sun is direct, and surface temperatures on turf and concrete reach 140°F or higher. Three things happen:
- Urine ammonia volatilizes faster. That sharp pee smell isn't from the urine itself, it's from ammonia released as it bakes. The hotter and drier the yard, the more ammonia gets airborne.
- Bacteria entrench in the infill. Artificial turf gets the worst of this. The infill granules absorb urine, hold heat, and become a near-perfect bacterial habitat. Hosing the turf moves the surface bacteria around without killing them.
- Parasites survive longer than you'd think. Giardia cysts last 7 weeks in dry soil. Hookworm larvae can persist for months. The same dryness that kills lawn microbiomes preserves dog parasites.
This is why the yard you swept on Sunday smells different on Friday. The dryness preserves the parasites, and the heat reactivates the residue.
What Wysiwash actually is
Wysiwash is an EPA-registered calcium hypochlorite tablet system. In plain English: a controlled-release sanitizing tablet that meters into a hose-end sprayer at a precise pet-safe dilution. It's the same system used by professional pet waste services, animal shelters, doggy daycares, and boarding facilities nationwide.
It's not a "deodorizer" in the air-freshener sense. It's a disinfectant. It kills the bacteria that cause the smell, rather than masking the smell after the fact.
What it kills (and what it doesn't)
At the dilution we apply it, Wysiwash is registered to kill the bacteria and pathogens that pet waste leaves behind, including:
- E. coli and salmonella from fecal residue
- Parvovirus, the leading cause of preventable puppy deaths
- Giardia cysts that survive scooping
- Common mold and mildew that grow on shaded concrete
- The ammonia-producing bacteria responsible for urine odor
What it doesn't do: kill grass, harm artificial turf, bleach pavers, or leave a residue that pets can't be around once dry. Drying takes about 15 minutes. After that, dogs and kids can go back out.
How often do Vegas yards actually need it?
Most single-dog yards do fine on monthly sanitizing. Multi-dog homes, artificial turf, and apartment patios usually need bi-weekly to keep up. Daycares, boarding facilities, and dog parks run weekly during summer.
The honest answer is "more often than you'd think in the summer, less often in winter." If you're noticing the smell, you're already behind. The point of recurring treatment is to never get there.
How we apply it
Sanitizing is added to the regular scooping visit. We scoop first (solids in a double-bag, dropped in your trash). Then we apply Wysiwash through a calibrated hose-end sprayer at the pet-safe dilution. Even coverage on grass, turf, patio, or pet-relief zones. Photo proof texted when we leave.
Total extra time on site: 5 to 10 minutes for most yards. You get the scooping you'd get anyway, plus a sanitized yard you can actually use.
Pricing
One-time treatments are $60. Monthly recurring is $60/month. Bi-weekly is $85/month. Weekly is $100/month. You can add sanitizing to any recurring scooping plan or book it stand-alone.
If you've been hosing the yard yourself trying to handle the smell, the cost of monthly Wysiwash is less than what most people spend on enzyme sprays from the pet store that don't actually disinfect anything.
The short version
Scooping removes the solids. Sanitizing kills what's left. In Vegas heat, what's left is more aggressive than in most cities, and it builds up faster than scooping alone can keep up with. Monthly Wysiwash is the simplest way to stay ahead of it.
See our deodorizing service → or get a quote with sanitizing added →.