Aeration & Overseeding in Greer, SC
Core aeration plus overseeding to thicken fescue lawns and break up Upstate clay.
Aeration & Overseeding for Greer yards
If your fescue lawn thins out and the soil feels like concrete, this is the service that fixes it. Core aeration pulls thousands of small plugs out of the ground, which breaks up our heavy red clay, lets air and water reach the roots, and gives new seed a place to take hold. We follow the aerator with quality fescue seed so the lawn fills in thick before winter. This is the single biggest thing you can do for a cool-season lawn in the Upstate.
Greer lawns sit on the same Piedmont red clay as the rest of the Upstate, often heavily graded in the newer subdivisions, which leaves compacted, fast-draining slopes. Fescue, bermuda, and zoysia all grow here in Zone 7b to 8a. New lawns especially benefit from fall core aeration to break up the construction-packed soil.
What is included
- Core aeration that pulls real plugs, not spikes
- Quality tall fescue seed matched to your lawn
- Even coverage across thin and bare areas
- A pass over high-traffic, compacted zones
- Starter watering guidance so the seed comes up
- Plugs left to break down and feed the soil
Timing in Greer
Fall is the time, roughly mid-September through October in the Upstate. The soil is still warm enough for seed to germinate and the cooling air lets young fescue establish before winter. Aerating and overseeding fescue in spring rarely works here because the new grass cannot handle the summer heat. Warm-season lawns are aerated in late spring instead.
Aeration and overseeding is priced by lawn square footage, since that drives both the machine time and the amount of seed. We measure the lawn and give you one price that covers both steps.
Aeration & Overseeding in Greer: questions
Do you offer aeration & overseeding in Greer, SC?
Yes. Aeration & Overseeding is one of our regular services in Greer, along with the rest of our outdoor maintenance. Call (864) 630-5567 or book online and we will get you a flat quote.
Why does my fescue lawn need fall aeration?
Our Upstate clay compacts hard over the summer, which chokes the roots and keeps water from soaking in. Core aeration opens the soil back up, and doing it in fall lets you overseed at the one time of year fescue actually establishes here. Skip it and a fescue lawn keeps thinning.
What is the difference between core aeration and spike aeration?
Core aeration pulls plugs of soil out of the ground, which actually relieves compaction. Spike aeration just pokes holes and can press the soil tighter around them. We core aerate, because that is the method that works on clay.
How long until I see results from overseeding?
New fescue usually sprouts in 7 to 21 days with proper watering, and the lawn fills in noticeably over 4 to 6 weeks. Keeping the seed consistently moist for the first couple of weeks is the part that makes or breaks it.
