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Originally Posted by Teemotay
It’s difficult to advise you on the proper way to fix this yourself without more info, although many have done just that.
Your question was for trustworthy landscapers to give you a fresh start. I can’t help you there, however if you want to give it a shot yourself then you need to educate yourself on several issues concerning growing healthy St Augustine grass.
Weeds have been a big problem this year and especially since we’ve been in a bit of a drought for a while now. Without adequate water the grass weakens and the weeds come in. You said that you water regularly but what does that mean? You could be watering every day for 10 minutes and not getting enough water for your grass to thrive. First, understand how much water your grass needs and then test to be sure it’s getting it from your irrigation.
You should also do a soil test to better understand what what is lacking in it. The grass needs nutrients and proper water to thrive. A soil test will tell you what fertilizer to apply so that you’re feeding your grass what it needs.
As far as weeds are concerned, you need to know what they are so that you know how to control/eradicate them. One size definitely doesn’t fit all when it comes to fertilizer and weed control.
Your grass is not dormant now, contrary to another comment in this thread. We’ve been having temps in the 80’s and healthy St Augustine is still growing enough to need mowing. If you’re mowing it then it’s not dormant.
I do my own lawn mowing and treatment. I’ve attached a picture of how it looks this morning. Definitely not dormant.
The University of Florida extension service has great info on growing a healthy St Augustine lawn. Good luck with your lawn!
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My lawn looks like yours. I hire Dean's to handle the "chemicals" but I control the water and mow my own lawn. Mowing services bring and deposit remnants (bugs, weeds?) from each lawn they mowed that morning. Water, water, in this environment, that provides fast recovery from "damage". I mow and then hand water the bad spots I encounter, till they're gone. Summer time - mow three times a week. Wintertime - every 6 weeks, or so.
I figure - if I can ride my bike and/or golf in the hot summer, I can mow my lawn, too.