Lawn Care That Builds a Lawn Worth Looking At

Mowing, edging, fertilization, aeration, and overseeding — programmed to your soil and grass type.

1 min read

A great lawn isn’t an accident — it’s a fertilization schedule, a mowing height, and the right amount of water. We treat lawn care as a year-round program rather than a series of one-off mows.

  • Mowing and edging — weekly or biweekly, blades sharpened, height set for your grass type
  • Fertilization program — 5- or 6-step schedule timed to growing season
  • Weed control — pre- and post-emergent treatments
  • Aeration and overseeding — spring or fall, plug-style aeration with a quality seed blend
  • Dethatching when buildup is choking out new growth
  • Seasonal cleanup — leaf removal, bed cutbacks, debris haul-away

The quickest gains come from raising your mowing height, fertilizing on a schedule, and watering deep but infrequent. The medium-term gains come from aeration and overseeding to thicken the turf so weeds can’t establish. The long-term gain is healthy soil, which we improve with organic top-dressing where it makes sense.

If your lawn is patchy or struggling, a soil test is usually worth the small cost — pH, organic matter, and key nutrients tell you what your fertilizer program should actually contain rather than guessing.