2026-04-20
☰ Home Lawn Care Cleaning Blog About Contact Free Estimate Home / Blog / Spring Lawn Care Checklist for Fredericksburg, VA Homeowners Fredericksburg VA & Surrounding Areas Spring Lawn Care C
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2026-04-20
Clean windows let in noticeably more light. That’s not marketing copy — it’s measurable. Here’s why spring is the right window for the job, and what ‘professional’ window
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2026-04-16
Complete spring lawn care checklist for Fredericksburg, VA homeowners. Expert tips from Hibaxum on cleanup, mowing, and getting your yard ready for the season.
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2026-04-13
April rains are the diagnostic. Every low spot, every bad grade, every failed French drain shows up this month. Fix it now and summer runs clean — ignore it and the problems get worse every year.
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2026-04-06
First mow of the season usually hits the first week of April in Fredericksburg. Weekly or biweekly? Here’s the signal for each, plus why skipping a week in May costs you more than it saves.
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2026-03-30
Bare-root roses are cheaper, grow better, and establish faster than container roses — but you have to plant them while they’re dormant. In central Virginia, that’s right now. Here’s
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2026-03-23
The mulch math that will save you two trips to the landscape supply. Here’s the formula, the VCE-recommended depth, and the common mistakes that cost homeowners money and kill their plants.
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2026-03-16
The difference between a lawn that looks professional and one that looks ‘mowed’ is 20 minutes of detail work on every visit. Here’s what those 20 minutes are — and what a dull blade
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2026-03-09
Fertilize too early and you get a growth spurt on turf that isn’t ready. Too late and you’ve missed the window. Soil temperature is the signal — here’s where the line is for tall fes
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2026-03-02
Every lawn care company offers ‘spring cleanup.’ What’s actually on the list varies wildly. Here’s our full scope, in plain English, so you know what you’re paying for an
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2026-02-23
Last week of February — warm enough for a walk, cold enough that problems are still visible. Here’s the 7-point walk we do on every property, and the ones you can do yourself.
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2026-02-16
Crabgrass doesn’t negotiate. It germinates at 55°F soil temperature, and your pre-emergent has to beat it there. Here’s the Virginia Coop Extension timing rule, what forsythia tells you, a
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2026-02-09
Most people clean gutters in November. The smart ones clean them again in February — before March thunderstorms dump 2 inches of rain on a gutter full of leftover leaves, pine needles, and winter debr
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2026-02-02
February is your last great pruning window before buds break. Here’s what VCE says to cut now, what to save for April, and why bad timing costs you a whole season of blooms.
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2026-01-26
You can’t do much ON the lawn in late January, but you can do everything ABOUT it. Soil test, measure your beds, decide what’s changing — get ahead of March so spring doesn’t sneak u
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2026-01-19
Fredericksburg averages 10–12 inches of snow a year, but it arrives in 2–3 unpredictable storms. The time to line up snow removal is before the first flake, not during the panic call after.
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2026-01-12
Most homeowners think of tree trimming as a summer job. The arborists disagree — January and February are when dormant structure shows clearly, cuts heal cleanest, and you won’t fight pests or s
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2026-01-05
Spring seems far off in the first week of January, but route slots for mowing customers fill by March. Book now and you lock in the best day of the week, priority scheduling, and a pricing guarantee.
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