Lawn Care service include the following:
1. Mowing with well maintained, lightweight mowers that will not tear up your yard.
2. Line trimming all the areas on the property including fences, around posts, trees, and curbs.
3. Edging the sidewalk, driveways, and curbs with a metal blade edger.
4. Using our blowers to blow the grass clippings off of your sidewalks, driveways, and the street.
The price you pay is determined by the square footage of the turf on the property. We don't uncharge if you live in a fancy neighborhood; the price is the price, and it's fair across the board.
Some other things to note during service: if we are servicing your property and notice an empty trash can needs to be brought back up to the house form the road then we are going to do that. We pick up kids toys before we mow and place them on the porch. We refill your dogs water bowl if we notice it getting low. These are the extras that set us apart, and it's just normal day to day activities for us.
If you want to be successful as a natural, organic gardener - or grow a healthy, organic lawn - you ay need to think differently about your soil.
Organisms in the soil have the same needs we do: to drink, breath, eat, digest, and excrete. When the soil is healthy, fed with natural materials, and not compacted; those natural processes allow the fertilization and growth to happen the way Mother Nature intended.
Organic fertilizer is actually soil food that nourishes the organisms, whereas chemical fertilizer feeds plants directly. However, much of the chemical fertilizer runs off into lakes, oceans, rivers, and groundwater. Growing grasses and other plants in healthy living soil will make the plants more drought-tolerant, and disease-resistant, and maintenance-free.
Never spend money on any fertilizer or soil amendments for your lawn or garden without first consulting the results of a soil test.
These diagnostic results - available from virtually all Cooperative Extension offices across the U.S. - will tel you exactly how much N (nitrogen), P (phosphorus), K (potassium), lime, sulphur, or other nutrients to add. Too much nitrogen and phosphorus can harm lakes, oceans, rivers, and drinking water. Other excess nutrients can weaken and even kill grass and other plants.
The bottom line , in other words, is to avoid guessing. That can be bad, for the environment, for your landscape, and for your pocketbook.
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