Evergreen Lawn Service Of Duluth

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Aeration: One of the Most Important Things for Your Lawn


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Lawn Aeration


Aeration is one of the most important things you can do for your lawn. It is a mechanical process that pulls thousands of soil plugs from your lawn.

Aeration relieves soil compaction (hard, dense soil) and allows air, water, and nutrients to penetrate down to the root zone. The aeration process allows the lawn's root system to establish new root growth. New root growth will result in the lawn's ability to produce new top growth, which means more blades of grass. Adding more blades of grass means a thicker and healthier lawn for you.

The Aeration Process increases new root growth development by "pruning" grassroots and creating effective growth zones. Other benefits of aeration are:

✔  Improved air, water, and nutrient movement to the root zone to stimulate new growth.

✔  Increased fertilizer, soil, and water uptake.

✔  Relieved soil compaction.

✔  Intensified decomposition of harmful thatch.

✔  Incorporated organic matter into the soil

✔  Increased overall health helps withstand heat and drought stress and improves tolerance to heat and cold.

✔  Improved drainage.

Hard compacted soil and thatch take away your lawn's breath. They keep water and fertilizer away from the roots too. Let us open up your soil and help control thatch with power care aeration. We'll create thousands of growth pockets to catch water, air, and fertilizer and increase rooting. Order an aeration now for a thicker and healthier lawn.

Questions & Answers


  • When is the best time to aerate?

    We aerate most lawns in spring or early summer. Aerating early in the growing season allows the root system plenty of time to multiply into a thicker undergrowth, resulting in a thicker top growth. This gives your lawn a chance to become thicker, healthier, and greener faster than aerating later in the season. However, any time the soil is moist enough to allow the aeration machine to penetrate and pull a plug 1" to 3" in length is adequate. Fall is also a good time to aerate because the plant's root system naturally multiplies at this time, and aerating then compliments that natural growing process.

  • Do I need to have my lawn aerated every year?

    Annual aeration will cultivate your lawn soil to provide your lawn with the best possible growing condition. Aeration is not permanent—the plugs dry and break up, filtering back to the many holes they came from. Most golf courses and professional athletic fields are aerated at least annually. They are in the business of looking good, and their groundskeepers know that repeated aeration will give their turf areas the best chance possible for maximum health. We do recommend annual lawn aeration.

  • Won't all these plugs make a mess out of my yard?

    No. You will notice many plugs on your lawn that range from 1" to 3" in length. These plugs will dry and break up, filtering back into the ground starting about 1 week after the lawn was aerated. It will be hard to find one of these plugs weeks later.

  • Do I have to rake the plugs up after aerating?

    No. There is no need to rake up the plugs, and we request that you don't. The benefit comes from loosening the soil to allow air, water, and nutrients to penetrate the root zone, not actually removing soil from the lawn.

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