Organic lawn care in Amherst and surrounding Western Mass neighborhoods is the best way to achieve a well-balanced lawn without using chemicals and toxic gas fumes that traditional lawn service still use. These chem-lawn providers are masking deeper problem symptoms in your lawn to gain short term results. Amherst organic lawn care is an environmentally and family healthy alternative to make residential neighborhoods in and around Western Mass safer for everyone. This natural focused movement is spreading in demand throughout our country as consumer education and awareness leads to concern about chemical side-effects.
Our safe lawn care options help create the beautiful outdoor space you love with natural, microbe-rich soil the way nature intended. Take pride and rest easy knowing that our organic lawn professionals use only treatments safe for children to play and pets to roll through. Here at Clean Air Lawn Care, we’re committed to giving our customers grass that’s truly greener.
Organic fertilizers provide the soil with nutrients it naturally craves, which in turn promotes the growth of organic matter and microorganisms, and leads to a greener, more resilient lawn that’s able to hold up over time.
While inorganic, chemical fertilizers claim some of the same temporary gains, the environmental and economic costs of using such products far outweigh the benefits. Point blank: chemical fertilizers only help your lawn superficially and in the short-run. Below the grassline, these products are breaking down healthy soil, polluting groundwater, and, if left to fester, causing serious harm to our families and communities.
Organic lawn care systems conserve the Earth’s limited resources. At Clean Air Lawn Care Western Mass, our organic fertilizers and weed control programs help determine what’s right for your Western Mass lawn based on practical measures, such as anticipated rainfall and other climate considerations unique to your area. When your grass does need watering, our elective irrigation maintenance service will ensure you’ll reach the correct areas of your lawn with minimal runoff that will not contaminate waterways or drinking water because we only use organic fertilizers.
Our organic lawn care services also encourages recycling as much as possible. Grass clippings from your lawn may be reused as mulch, composted on site, or removed to an organic waste recycling center. On our watch, they’ll never end up in some plastic bag in a landfill.
Organic lawn care treatments demand the discipline necessary to ensure essential microorganisms will thrive in the soil. Such soil self-improvement plans require a steady diet of organic fertilizers, which are comprised of nutrients that encourage long term root growth. For only in concert with a well-balanced soil will grassroots reach their maximum depth, therefore retaining vital water for longer periods of time. Subsequently, you’re left with a heartier lawn that’s nearly self-sustaining, and far less dependent on your sprinkler system.
Chemical pesticides kill off the beneficial organisms that fight for us below the grassline. Predictably, pests find chemically-saturated lawns appealing and thrive in uneven ecosystems.
The best way to eradicate pests from your lawn is to make the environment unattractive to them. By creating a healthy, ecological coalition in the soil, you’ll ally yourself to the favorable microorganisms, insects and plants that keep your lawn healthy, all while discouraging any unrest from pests.
Here at Clean Air, we’ve got a proven treatment program for rehabilitating chemically-addled ecosystems. We’ll begin by weaning your lawn off the drugs it depends on, move to a full detox from all pesticides and inorganic fertilizers, and then begin to build your grass up stronger than it’s ever been before.
Through the regimented routine of our organic lawn practices, your California soil will eventually acquire the endurance to heal itself and sustain natural growth. Which means you’ll not only be able to stop spending money on chemical quick-fixes (as our competitors suggest you should, three times a year), but that once your soil is healthy, it will independently take control of its own ecosystem, and become much cheaper to maintain going forward.