Short grass wins. Left alone, lawn grass does not become a lush meadow; it becomes tall, sparse and stressed under its own shade. Regular cutting exploits how turf species evolved under constant grazing, turning that apparent injury into a controlled growth strategy.
Counterintuitive as it looks, a cut blade is a signal, not a disaster. Mowing removes older leaf tips that have lower chlorophyll efficiency and higher transpiration, so the plant reallocates carbohydrates toward new leaves and deeper root systems. That shift in carbon partitioning, described in plant physiology as a change in source–sink balance, thickens the turf instead of letting a few shoots dominate and flop over.
Density, not height, is the health metric that matters. When you trim only the upper third of the leaf, you trigger tillering: side shoots emerge from basal nodes, filling bare soil that would otherwise host weeds. Shorter, more upright leaves intercept light more evenly, improving net photosynthetic rate per unit area while keeping the canopy aerated, which reduces leaf wetness duration and the risk of fungal disease. Paired with sharp blades and sensible cutting height, that repeated, minor damage is the maintenance fee the grass pays for staying vigorously green.