If you’ve been pouring fertilizer onto your Long Island lawn and seeing... well, nothing... you might be tempted to just buy a stronger bag. Before you do that, let’s talk about why that might be the absolute last thing your soil needs.
The "mystery" of a yellowing lawn often isn't a lack of nutrients; it’s a pH lock.
Here in Suffolk County—especially if you’re near the North Shore woods or the Pine Barrens—our soil is notoriously acidic.
Think of your soil like a locked room full of food (nutrients). Your grass is standing outside that room, hungry. You can keep piling more "food" (fertilizer) against the door all day long, but if the door is locked, the grass can't eat.
Acidity is that lock. When your soil pH is too low, it chemically binds the nutrients so the grass roots simply can't absorb them.
Most companies will tell you that you "need" a lime application every year. We take a different approach.
We aren't here to talk you into a "standard" package. We’re here to find out why your lawn isn't performing the way it should.
If you’re tired of guessing why your grass isn't greening up, let’s do a quick soil test. It might turn out that the "missing piece" of your puzzle isn't more chemicals—it’s just a little bit of balance.