Last Updated on January 7, 2025 by Brian Beck
Do you ever get that feeling that you’re just a number when you deal with a large corporation or the government? You know what I’m talking about, that mentality that you’re just as important as a person who they talked to five hours ago or the person they’re going to see five minutes after you. It’s pretty impersonal and that stems from a lack of empathy and that they are dealing with too many people. This is exactly what your lawn feels like when you use the traditional method of lawn care. Let me explain. You see them roving around town, pulling out their hose and spraying down a lawn with a concoction with whatever they feel like your lawn needs and the guy down the street. Now don’t get me wrong, it’s not the method or means of application, it’s what’s in the tank that is the problem. Now lawns are going to need routine types of nutrition to meet their growing needs, but this is assuming that everyone needs the same thing. What if this approach was inaccurate? What if the guy next to you needs something that you don’t or vice versa?
This is exactly what we were thinking back in 2017 when we discovered the Biological method. Shortly afterwards we discovered soil testing and found out how flawed traditional means of providing lawn care really is. You see, a healthy lawn will need the same routine things but an unhealthy soil will prevent a lot of things from happening that translate into waste and prevent a lawn from being efficient. This is costing you a lot of money, primarily in water but also in exposure to substances that you might not want to be exposed to. Most of these “extracurricular” substances are being used to treat the symptoms of the malfunction in the soil, the malfunction(s) that you could have known about if you had identified them wit a soil test. See how this approach is vastly different than the “everyone gets the same thing” approach? Trust me, this is much more personal and is very individualistic. This individual approach identifies issues that are keeping you from a lawn that is using 20-50% more resources than it should be using. The way that we are maintaining lawns is very wasteful and can be vastly improved.