What color is your lawn? If it's brown and brittle, don't worry - it may not be dead just yet.
No rain and hot weather has caused some grass to go into early dormancy.
Alan Rabe bought a new lawn mower last year. This summer, he's used it twice.
"Over the years it's been actually decent, but this year it's been really bad," Rabe said.
So bad, most lawns look dead.
"Some of them are dying and some of them are going into dormancy, but the problem is this prolonged drought ... stuff is starting to die out," Floyd Leffers with Leffers Landscaping & Nursery said.
Floyd Leffers owns Leffers Landscaping & Nursery. He says when grass doesn't get moisture, it goes into dormancy or "goes to sleep" for the season.
"But it'll only last for so long," Leffers said. "When it gets so dry, you really got a problem and it will actually burn up because of the root structure - it just dries up and then it's gone."
There's still time to keep that from happening to your lawn. Leffers says how you take care of it today will affect how it looks next year. He suggests you water it at least once a week in the early morning, and save any big lawn care projects until the fall.
"If you get in there, fertilize it, reseed it and do whatever has to be done, and hopefully mother nature will work for us as far as moisture goes," Leffers said.
Hopefully.
"I have faith though, that the lawn is in a dormancy and it'll come back so it's not an issue," Rabe said.
Leffers also said now is not the time to plant. He said the heat and lack of moisture will not allow plants roots to fully develop. He suggests waiting until fall.
Show us your "sleeping" lawn ... send photos to news7@khqa.com or post them on our Facebook page here.