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All Seasons Landscaping & Lawn Maintenance

3.80(
15
)

All Seasons Landscaping & Lawn Maintenance

3.80(
15
)
Customers say: Super punctual
23 years of experience

Full sevice landscaping company, specializing in landscape design/build, irrigation design build, hardscapes, patios, walkways, retaining walls, drainage systems, landscape lighting, sodding, water features, ponds, streams and waterfalls, prunning, seasonal color, lawn maintenance, bush hogging and more.

Full sevice landscaping company, specializing in landscape design/build, irrigation design build, hardscapes, patios, walkways, retaining walls, drainage systems, landscape lighting, sodding, water features, ponds, streams and waterfalls, prunning, seasonal color, lawn maintenance, bush hogging and more.

Rototilling questions, answered by experts

You should dig 3 to 6 inches deep for plastic edging. Dig as wide as you need to fit your plastic edging into it—2 inches is usually sufficient.

Typically 1-3 days, depending on property size and terrain condition.

Yes, rototilling has many benefits. Rototilling is a great way to aerate the soil in your garden, introduce fertilizer, and remove weeds from your soil to prep it for planting, so it is very often a worthwhile expense. You can get by without rototilling if you’re willing to use manual tools, but the work will take much longer and is very labor-intensive. If you’re looking to prepare your garden for planting or your soil for new grass growth, rototilling is relatively inexpensive and almost always worth the money.

Grading refers to the sloping of your yard away from your house’s foundation. It’s a landscaping term you probably know well if you’ve ever had to push your lawn mower up a steep slope.

Leveling is the solution to grading issues since it involves making your yard flat and smooth (and easy to push a lawn mower through).

It depends on the model of your pool. You’ll always have to level the topsoil, but most vinyl-lined pools require an additional 1- to 2-inch layer of sand to protect the liner. This way, when a foot kicks down to the bottom of your pool, it’s not scraping the liner against the hard ground. If your pool isn’t vinyl-lined, you can skip this step or add a layer of another base material, like decomposed granite. Always check your manufacturer’s instructions before you begin.

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