Choice Landscaping & Garden Center LLC



Hours
5267 S. Whitnall
Cudahy, WI 53110
Mon-Fri 7am-5pm
Sat 7am-noon
414-764-2300

Products we carry

  • Tools
  • Bird Products
  • Windchimes
  • Grass Products
  • Edgings
  • Draintile

Choice Landscaping on Facebook
Summer Services
Winter Services

5267 S. Whitnall ave Cudahy, WI 53110

Telephone: 414-764-2300

Email:clgc@me.com

Site Made By: WCH
Sitemap

Lawn Aeration Services
Lawn aeration constitutes typically of only two things, controlling lawn thatch and reducing soil compaction. Lawn thatch is athe layer of dead organic tissues that deprive the lawn from it's much-needed oxygen. Over time, soil compaction makes it difficult for grass to root. It disturbs natural rainwater irrigation, therefore it is important to aerate the lawn. This is especially true for lawns with high traffic. If people walk or even run over a lawn, the pressure generates compaction in the soil. When aerating very dense soil, it will ease the process when the lawn is watered the night before aeration. Always a good suggestion!
Why Aerate Your Grass
Aeration improves soil drainage and encourages worms, microfauna and microflora which require oxygen. It's simple really, with more oxigen to these items, the better health your grass can take on. It's all part of a simple ecosystem and aeration benefits
Types of Lawn Aeration
There are two types of lawn aerators. There is the type that uses spikes to punch holes in the soil and there is the type that pulls out plugs of soil, also known as a core aerator due to the cores of soil removed. The latter is preferred if compaction is a problem, because while the spike punching lawn aerator only provides paths for air to contact the soil, the lawn aerator that pulls out soil also reduces compaction. For hobbyist lawn maintainers, there are also spiked shoes that can be used to aerate a lawn, these are much more affordable than larger lawn aerating machines. But these spikes, like the spike punching aerator, actually increase compaction by compressing the soil as the spike enters. This may be an acceptable result if aeration is the primary goal and compaction is not a problem.
© 2009 Choice Landscaping LLC Email Us