Soil-first lawn care, in Nibley.
Nibley is the fast-growing south end of the valley — former farmland turned subdivisions, which means a lot of new sod sitting on scraped, compacted builder soil.
Nibley has boomed with new construction, and new construction is hard on lawns: builders strip the topsoil, compact the subsoil with heavy equipment, and lay sod over the top. The grass looks fine for a year, then struggles — because the soil underneath was never built to grow anything. That’s the exact problem a soil test and aeration solve.
New-construction soil
Most Nibley lawns sit on compacted builder subsoil with the good topsoil scraped off. We test to see what’s actually there, then aerate and feed to rebuild it — not just green up the surface.
Heavy valley-floor ground
Nibley sits on the valley floor, where soils run heavier and drain slower. Aeration and the right nutrient balance keep roots from suffocating.
High pH, pale lawns
The valley’s alkaline soil locks up iron, so even well-fed Nibley lawns can look yellow-green. We correct with chelated iron.
We work where we live.
We cover all of Nibley — established streets and new subdivisions alike — plus the rest of Cache Valley. No sub-contracting, nothing past 30 miles, response under 24 hours.