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Fleming Construction, Inc

615 Lower Dedham Rd
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Fleming Construction, Inc

615 Lower Dedham Rd
No reviews yet
42 years of experience

Fleming Construction, Inc has been in business for 33 years, giving the highest quality service in the Eastern Maine area. Safety is our #1 priority, and we are fully insured. We are a small, family owned and operated business. DEP certified and State certified for septic systems and environmental protection. Free estimates. We also sub-contract with reputable companies in the area.

Fleming Construction, Inc has been in business for 33 years, giving the highest quality service in the Eastern Maine area. Safety is our #1 priority, and we are fully insured. We are a small, family owned and operated business. DEP certified and State certified for septic systems and environmental protection. Free estimates. We also sub-contract with reputable companies in the area.






Lawn Irrigation questions, answered by experts

There are plenty of products to help green up your grass. Try an iron supplement spray or fertilizer that is rich in nitrogen. You can also apply a thin layer of compost on top of your lawn at the beginning of spring to give the grass a nutrition boost, which helps it achieve that bright color you are looking for. 

Costs range from $50 to $200, depending on lawn size and method used.

No. Both processes are important for a healthy yard and work toward a similar goal, although dethatching serves a slightly different purpose. Making sure the thatch doesn’t grow too thick prevents other lawn problems, such as attracting pests if the plant decay layer gets too big. Aeration puts less strain on your lawn than dethatching, but both are of equal importance.

Break up hard dirt in your yard with popular methods such as core aeration or manual aeration with a spade, mini excavator, or pitchfork. You can also alter your soil to keep it from compacting in the future. Adding compost, groundcover plants, or aeration granules—preferably made of organic materials—can also soften your ground and encourage water saturation.

When you don’t aerate your lawn, the soil will become more compact over time. This limits how much water can soak in to reach the roots of your grass, and it keeps oxygen and carbon dioxide from the plant roots. This can limit grass growth, which may sound great for limiting mowing, but it also leads to a lawn full of grass that looks dull and sparse. Eventually, compacted soil can weaken grass, while also making it more vulnerable to pests, diseases, and erosion and even causing it to die off.

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The Dixmont, ME homeowners’ guide to lawn irrigation services

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