Pre-Emergent Weed Control in Marble Falls
Stop crabgrass, sandbur, and winter weeds before they ever sprout. Correctly timed spring and fall barrier applications are the backbone of a weed-free lawn.
Marble Falls, TX • Burnet County
Golf-course agronomy for Highland Lakes lawns. Pre-emergent, fertilization, and disease control programs run by a TDA-licensed applicator.
From established neighborhoods off Mormon Mill Road to newer HOA communities, Marble Falls lawns are a mix of St. Augustine shade lawns and full-sun Bermuda — and each needs a different program.
St. Augustine under oaks is brown patch country every fall, and a herbicide that’s safe on Bermuda can injure St. Augustine badly. We identify your turf first, then build the treatment calendar around it — the same discipline the owner practiced managing golf course turf.
Stop crabgrass, sandbur, and winter weeds before they ever sprout. Correctly timed spring and fall barrier applications are the backbone of a weed-free lawn.
Dandelions, clover, dollarweed, nutsedge — targeted herbicide applications that kill the weeds you can see without harming your turf.
Season-long feeding matched to your grass type and soil test — not a one-size-fits-all bag. Thicker, greener turf that crowds weeds out naturally.
Golf-course-grade agronomy for your yard. We test pH and nutrients, then build your fertilization program from real data instead of guesswork.
Brown patch, take-all root rot, gray leaf spot — we diagnose turf disease correctly and treat it with the right fungicide at the right time.
Grubs, chinch bugs, armyworms, and Texas fire ants. Season-long control that protects your lawn — and your bare feet.
Almost certainly brown patch (large patch), a fungal disease that fires up when fall nights cool and moisture lingers. It's treatable with correctly timed fungicide applications, and preventable in chronic lawns by treating before symptoms appear. We diagnose it on-site as part of a free lawn analysis rather than guessing.
Late winter — generally February into early March, before soil temperatures hit 55°F — for the spring barrier, and again in September–October for winter weeds like poa annua and henbit. We schedule by soil temperature, not the calendar, which is why timing rarely slips.
Thank you. We’ll be in touch with a detailed estimate.
Need us sooner? Call 325-423-6797.