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Kingman Landscape & Maintenance, LLC

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Approved Pro

Kingman Landscape & Maintenance, LLC

New on AngiNew on Angi
Approved Pro
28 years of experience
Free onsite estimate

Welcome to Kingman Landscape & Maintenance, LLC. We are your one stop shop for all of your lawn care, landscaping, snow removal, and any other property maintenance needs you have. We are professional, reliable, and we care about our customers. Call us today!

Welcome to Kingman Landscape & Maintenance, LLC. We are your one stop shop for all of your lawn care, landscaping, snow removal, and any other property maintenance needs you have. We are professional, reliable, and we care about our customers. Call us today!

Rototilling questions, answered by experts

Pros will assess your soil type, property geography, and rain patterns for optimal slope.

Yes, it’s always a good idea to fertilize your lawn before a major leveling project. This step gives your grass the nutrients necessary for healthy growth, helping it recover and replenish itself faster. However, you should do this at least three weeks in advance, as the leveling process can disturb the newly-applied fertilizer.

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.

Fixing a depression in your lawn is a DIY for small dips, divots, or slight slopes. You can either remove sod and earth to lower the uneven ground or add premixed topsoil and reseed the lawn to raise it. You can also hire a yard grading company near you for professional help.

Yes, you can rent a rototiller for around $60 per day and do the work yourself, but it’s not recommended. Tilling is more of an art than a science, as tilling too deep can be detrimental to your soil structure and the organic matter that is beneficial to plants and shrubs, and tilling too shallow won’t properly introduce fertilizer or break up the soil for rooting plants. Additionally, tillers are powerful machines with sharp blades to cut through small roots and soil, so they are inherently dangerous to use. It’s usually worth it to hire a professional rototiller.

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