How Often Should I Water My Lawn in Summer? Oklahoma Watering Guide
In Oklahoma’s hot summers, most lawns need about 1 to 1.5 inches of water per week, applied in 2-3 deep watering sessions rather than daily light sprinklings. Water early in the morning (before 10 AM) to minimize evaporation and disease. Bermuda grass can survive on less water than fescue, and established lawns need less than […]
How to Start a Lawn Care Routine in Tulsa, Oklahoma: A Beginner’s Guide
The short answer: Start by identifying what grass you have (Bermuda, fescue, or Zoysia), then build your routine around that grass type’s specific needs. The four pillars of any lawn care routine are mowing (weekly at the correct height), watering (deep and infrequent, morning only), fertilization (timed to your grass type’s growth cycle), and weed […]
How to Start a Lawn Care Routine in Tulsa, Oklahoma: A Beginner’s Guide
The short answer: Start by identifying what grass you have (Bermuda, fescue, or Zoysia), then build your routine around that grass type’s specific needs. The four pillars of any lawn care routine are mowing (weekly at the correct height), watering (deep and infrequent, morning only), fertilization (timed to your grass type’s growth cycle), and weed […]
Why Does My Sprinkler Head Spin Wildly Instead of Rotating Slowly?
The short answer: A rotor head that spins too fast instead of slowly sweeping back and forth has worn internal gears or a damaged drive mechanism. The gears inside gear-driven rotors are designed to convert water pressure into slow, controlled rotation. When these gears wear out or break, the head loses its braking mechanism and […]
What Size Sprinkler Head Do I Need to Replace My Old One?
The short answer: Most residential sprinkler heads use a 1/2-inch threaded connection (the fitting that screws into the pipe), so matching that is usually straightforward. The more important measurements are the pop-up height (how tall the stem rises, typically 2, 3, 4, or 6 inches), the spray radius (how far water reaches), and the spray […]
Soil Testing for Oklahoma Lawns: Why It Matters and How to Do It
A soil test tells you exactly what nutrients your Oklahoma lawn needs and what it doesn’t, eliminating guesswork from your fertilization program. Most Oklahoma soils are alkaline (high pH) and often deficient in nitrogen while having adequate phosphorus. Without a soil test, you’re either wasting money on nutrients you don’t need or starving your lawn […]
What Is Soil Compaction? Do I Need Aeration? (Complete Guide for Oklahoma Lawns)
The short answer: Soil compaction happens when soil particles are pressed together so tightly that air, water, and nutrients can’t reach grass roots. If your lawn has areas where water pools or runs off instead of soaking in, grass is thin and struggling despite proper care, or you can’t push a screwdriver into the soil […]
Does Snow Affect My Lawn Treatment? What Snow Does to Your Lawn in Jenks and Tulsa
The short answer: Snow itself is actually beneficial for your lawn, not harmful. It acts as an insulating blanket that protects grass crowns from extreme cold, provides slow-release moisture as it melts, and can even deliver trace nitrogen. If you have a scheduled lawn treatment and snow is on the ground, we’ll simply reschedule. Once […]
Can I Skip Lawn Treatments If I Don’t Have Weeds Right Now? Understanding Prevention vs. Reaction in Bixby
The short answer: You can, but you probably shouldn’t. Here’s why: the reason you don’t have weeds right now is likely because previous treatments are working. Skip treatments, and those weeds are coming back, often worse than before. Lawn care is primarily preventive, not reactive. Pre-emergent herbicides prevent weeds from germinating in the first place. […]
What Are Signs of an Unhealthy Lawn? Warning Signs to Watch For
The main signs of an unhealthy lawn include discoloration (yellow, brown, or pale patches), thin or bare spots, excessive weeds, fungal growth, pest damage, and slow recovery from foot traffic. A healthy lawn should be consistently green, dense enough that you can’t see soil, and bounce back quickly after being walked on. If your lawn […]