What to do in your Front Range yard each season โ from spring irrigation startup to fall blowout, summer drought management to winter tree protection.
Late frosts, wet clay, and irrigation startup. Don't rush โ Front Range springs are unpredictable and an early mistake is expensive to fix.
What to inspect, repair, and plant in March through May. Irrigation startup timing, winter damage assessment, and first-mow guidelines.
Read Article โSlow pressurization, zone-by-zone inspection, and head adjustment. What to look for after a Colorado winter โ and when to call a pro.
Read Article โDormancy, snow mold, and winter kill look alike in April. How to tell them apart โ and why waiting until May is almost always the right call.
Read Article โThe first zone-by-zone walkthrough of the season catches winter damage before it wastes water for months. What to look for and how to do it right.
Read Article โA May snowstorm with 6 inches of wet snow can snap mature branches that survived January blizzards intact. Why timing makes spring snow so destructive.
Read Article โPeak water demand, drought restrictions, and heat stress. Summer is when the semi-arid climate hits hardest โ and watering strategy matters most.
A lawn that looked healthy in June can look straw-colored by August despite regular watering. What's actually happening โ and how to tell dormancy from damage.
Read Article โMost Front Range lawns are watered too often and not deeply enough. The deep-watering schedule that builds roots that hold through August heat.
Read Article โThe most important window for winterizing irrigation, overseeding, and protecting trees. Don't miss it โ a missed fall blowout can cost thousands in pipe repairs.
Why compressed air blowout is essential in Colorado, when to schedule it, and what happens if you skip it. DIY vs. professional blowout compared.
Guide in developmentAeration, overseeding, fertilizing, and mulching timing for the Front Range. What to do before the ground freezes to set up spring success.
Guide in developmentSnow load breaks branches, freeze-thaw cycles crack bark, and dry Chinook winds desiccate evergreens. Winter isn't downtime for Colorado yards.
Heavy wet snow snaps branches and splits weak crotches. Which tree species are most vulnerable, and how to safely clear snow before damage occurs.
Guide in developmentMulching perennials, wrapping young trees, protecting broadleaf evergreens from desiccation. What Front Range plants need going into a Colorado winter.
Guide in development