A healthy, vibrant lawn can dramatically enhance the appearance of any home, but not every yard can be restored with fertilizer, weed control, or routine maintenance. When grass has become thin, patchy, diseased, or overrun with weeds, a complete lawn replacement may be the most effective solution.
Signs That a Lawn Should Be Replaced
Restoration Sod is helping homeowners throughout Lakewood Ranch and surrounding communities recognize when professional sod installation is a smarter investment than continuing to repair an unhealthy lawn. Many homeowners spend months—or even years—trying to revive a struggling lawn with seed, fertilizer, herbicides, and irrigation adjustments.
One of the clearest signs that a lawn should be replaced is widespread dead or dying grass. If large sections of the yard remain brown despite proper watering and seasonal maintenance, the existing turf may no longer be healthy enough to recover. Likewise, lawns that have become dominated by weeds often require complete removal before a healthy new lawn can thrive.
Benefits of Professional Sod Installation
Installing new sod provides an immediate transformation, creating a lush, uniform lawn that can begin establishing itself much faster than grass grown from seed. Professional sod installation involves much more than simply rolling out new grass. Restoration Sod manages every phase of the project, including removing the existing lawn, grading and leveling the property, preparing and amending the soil when needed, delivering fresh sod, professionally installing each section, and providing detailed watering instructions to encourage successful establishment.
Restoration Sod recommends homeowners consider replacing their lawn if they notice large areas of dead, thinning, or unhealthy grass, persistent weed infestations, bare patches that fail to recover despite regular maintenance, uneven lawn color and inconsistent grass growth, soil that drains poorly or remains uneven after repeated repairs, or a lawn that requires constant treatments but still fails to improve.
Original reporting: KTBS 3 (Shreveport) — read the source article.