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Making Texas GREEN

With warm weather grasses —

In some ways, growing and maintaining a good-looking lawn in Texas is more involved than the folks from up North. Choosing grass varieties is trickier; many varieties do much better when started as plugs or sod than from seed. Good soil is critically important for growing a low maintenance lawn in North Texas.

Some homeowners seed their existing lawns with ryegrass each fall to maintain green color during the winter months. This is called “winter overseeding.” Not exactly the ideal situation, but it works. A HIGHLY RECOMMENDED procedure is to Aerate your lawn. This helps solve many problems and prevents others. If you have any questions about what type of lawn you have, or what would be best way to redo your lawn, contact our office or fill out our information request form.

Generic Name
Description
Bermudagrass Prefers full sun, draught resistant, can withstand heavy traffic.
Buffalograss Best suited to the arid Southwest
Centipedegrass Very low maintenance, very tolerant to high temperatures, moderately resistant to drought, will tolerate some shade, but prefers full sun. Not good to heavy traffic.
St. Augustine Recommended mostly for coastal regions, thrives in heat, does poorly in cool climates. Excellent to fair under drought conditions. Moderately good to heavy traffic. Very shade tolerant
Zoysia Low maintenance, works well in hot, humid climates. Exceptionally heat tolerant. Moderate to good in drought conditions. Good, slow growth in partial shade. Very shade tolerant and is superior grass for heavy traffic areas.

 

Lawns in McKinney, Frisco, Allen and Plano Texas

A good-looking lawn in North Texas is more involved than for the folks from up North

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Better Business Burea serving Sachse and Murphy Texas