Garden Soon's lawn care program is available in Georgetown, Beaver County at $320–$480 annually. Silty clay loam from river deposit soils throughout most of the borough. We account for those conditions in how we time and apply everything across the season.
DIY lawn care is genuinely not hard to do at a basic level. You can spread fertilizer, you can spot-spray weeds, and you can get decent results if you have the right conditions and a little luck. We'll be honest about that. What a bag from the hardware store can't give you is timing tied to what's actually happening in the soil. Pre-emergent works on a narrow window — too early and it breaks down before the crabgrass germinates, too late and you've already lost the season. The products we use are also different — professional-grade herbicides at concentrations and formulations that aren't available on retail shelves, and slow-release nitrogen that feeds turf over 8–10 weeks instead of giving it one big flush that burns out in a month. We also see what's actually happening to your lawn over the course of a year. If dollar spot fungus is showing up in your shaded backyard or your bluegrass is developing summer patch, we adjust. A bag of all-purpose fertilizer doesn't course-correct. We do.
For Georgetown specifically: silty clay loam from river deposit soils throughout most of the borough. Organic matter is generally adequate on established lawns, but topsoil depth over clay subsoil is often shallower than it appears. Wet-season drainage can be slow in the low-lying sections.
Each application in our program is timed to protect the lawn during a specific vulnerability window. The early spring visit stops crabgrass before it germinates — the only point in the year when pre-emergent actually works. The late-spring visit catches broadleaf weeds when they're actively growing and most susceptible to treatment. The mid-summer application protects the root system from grub damage before eggs hatch and larvae start feeding in August. The fall winterizer protects the grass going into winter dormancy. Lime treatments, when the soil needs them, protect your investment by making sure the fertilizer you're paying for can actually be absorbed.
The program runs five to six visits timed to what's happening in the yard, not just the calendar. First visit happens when the forsythia is blooming — usually late March in western PA — and we put down pre-emergent crabgrass control with a starter fertilizer to get the existing turf moving. Second visit comes around Mother's Day to Memorial Day, targeting broadleaf weeds that are actively growing: dandelions, clover, ground ivy, plantain. Third visit is the mid-June to early July window for preventative grub control — this is the visit people sometimes skip and regret in August when they find dead patches. If the program includes aeration and overseeding, that happens in late August, ideally before Labor Day, with a second starter fertilizer application to support the new seed. The final visit comes in October to November before the first hard frost — a winterizer application with elevated potassium that helps the root system go into winter in the best condition possible. Lime applications, when needed, can happen at almost any visit depending on the soil test results.
The standard four-application program runs $320 to $480 per year for an average residential lot in the 5,000 to 8,000 square foot range — that covers pre-emergent, broadleaf weed control, grub prevention, and a fall winterizer. Larger properties at 10,000 square feet and above are priced at $520 to $720 annually. Individual one-time applications, if you only need a single treatment, are $75 to $115 per visit. Core aeration with overseeding is an add-on service priced at $175 to $350 depending on lot size — this is scheduled as a separate visit in late summer. Lime applications run $85 to $150 per treatment and are recommended when a soil test shows pH below 6.0. The program does not include ornamental bed weed control, mulch installation, or irrigation service. Pricing is based on measured lot size, not a flat rate, so we can give you an exact number before you commit to anything.
Yes — Garden Soon provides lawn care in Georgetown and throughout our service area. Call (724) 201-9484 or use the contact form to confirm your address and schedule.
Relatively flat along the Ohio River terrace with modest grade changes toward the town edge. Most properties are accessible with standard equipment. Georgetown's small size means the service area is compact and efficient to work, but rural road access to the area requires planning. We adjust our equipment and approach based on what's actually there.
Core aeration pulls plugs of soil — usually three to four inches deep — out of the lawn, which physically breaks up the compacted surface layer and opens channels for air, water, and fertilizer to reach the root zone. In western PA's clay soils, compaction is a real problem; water sheets off compacted clay instead of absorbing, and roots can't penetrate deep enough to survive summer heat or winter cold. Aerating before overseeding also gives grass seed direct soil contact, which dramatically improves germination rates compared to seeding into thatch.
Tall fescue is the most practical choice for most western PA lawns — it handles the region's clay soils, survives summer heat better than bluegrass, and performs in partial shade. Kentucky bluegrass is excellent in full-sun lawns and produces a dense, attractive stand, but it's more demanding and struggles in shade or drought. Fine fescue is what we use in shaded areas where bluegrass and tall fescue don't perform well. Perennial ryegrass shows up in older lawns that were overseeded years ago, but it's not what we'd plant from scratch for a long-term stand.
Beaver County clay is some of the most compacted soil we work in, and yes, it changes the approach. Water infiltration is the core problem — clay holds water at the surface rather than letting it percolate down to the root zone, and fertilizer applied to compacted clay often can't reach the depth where it does the most good. For most Beaver County lawns, we recommend core aeration as part of the program, not an optional add-on, because without it the rest of the program is working against the soil structure. The pH also tends to run low in this area, so lime corrections are common.
Most customers who run our lawn care program also use at least one of these services in Georgetown — they address different parts of the same property:
Weekly or biweekly mowing with edge trimming and blowdown. We cut at the right height for cool-season turf and adjust for growth rate.
One-time reclamation for neglected or jungle properties. We bring equipment rated for heavy material and haul everything out.
Spring and fall cleanup — leaf removal, debris, bed edging, ornamental cutbacks, and disposal.
Family- and pet-safe perimeter spray applied around the home exterior — foundation band, entry points, and window frames.
Vegetable garden design, site assessment, planting plans, and seasonal coaching.
Garden Soon
Licensed & insured in PA · Rated 4.8★ on Google
Providing Lawn Care in Georgetown, PA and surrounding areas.