Expert advice for keeping your Georgia lawn healthy and beautiful all year round.
The window for pre-emergent application in Georgia is narrow. Miss it and you'll be fighting crabgrass all summer. Here's exactly when to apply in 2026.
Brown patches appearing overnight? Circular dead spots? Here's how to identify common lawn diseases in Georgia and what to do about them.
If you live in Georgia, your lawn is almost certainly growing in clay soil. Here's why that makes annual aeration non-negotiable for a healthy lawn.
Think lawn care stops in winter? Think again. Here's what Georgia homeowners should be doing in January and February to set up a great spring.
Choosing between Bermuda and Zoysia? Both thrive in Georgia, but they have very different characteristics. Here's how to pick the right one.
Yellow grass doesn't always mean you need fertilizer. Learn to read the signs your Georgia lawn is actually giving you before reaching for the spreader.
Sod gives you a finished lawn fast, but it's not always the right call for Georgia properties. Here's when sodding wins, when seeding makes more sense, and what each one actually costs in 2026.
Professional lawn care in central Georgia runs $50–$120 per treatment for most homes, but pricing varies more than most companies admit. Here's the honest breakdown of what you should expect to pay in 2026.
Every month matters for Georgia lawns. Here's exactly what to do — and what to avoid — from January through December for Bermuda, Zoysia, and Centipede.
Crabgrass, nutsedge, dallisgrass, poa annua — every Georgia lawn faces the same weeds in the same windows. Here's a complete guide to what to treat, when to treat it, and how to actually win.