Uneven sprinkler coverage, compacted soil, and nutrient gaps don't fix themselves with another round of fertilizer. We test, repair, and program your system around the actual condition of your property, not a generic seasonal checklist.
A brown patch that keeps coming back isn't usually a fertilizer problem. More often, it's a sprinkler head that's clogged or misaligned, a low spot where water pools and drowns the roots, or soil that's compacted enough that water and nutrients can't reach where they're needed. Treating the symptom over and over without addressing the cause is how homeowners end up spending years on a lawn that never quite gets better.
That's the gap LeBlanc Lawn Solutions was built to close. Before we recommend a fertilization schedule, install a new zone, or suggest a drainage fix, we walk the property, run the irrigation system zone by zone, and look at what the soil and turf are actually telling us. Sometimes the answer is a simple head replacement. Sometimes it's a full irrigation audit and a regrade of a low corner of the yard. Either way, you get a written explanation of what's wrong and why, not a guess dressed up as a recommendation.
Our technicians are trained specifically on irrigation systems, not just general lawn maintenance, which means they can troubleshoot controller programming, valve issues, and pressure problems that a general mowing crew typically isn't equipped to diagnose. We carry common replacement parts on the truck so minor repairs can often be completed during the same visit instead of requiring a second trip.
For lawn health specifically, our approach is the same: address the conditions underneath the grass, not just the grass itself. That means looking at soil compaction, drainage patterns, and existing root structure before building a fertilization and weed control calendar, so the program we put in place is actually suited to your property instead of a generic plan applied the same way to every yard on the street.
If you've already tried a few rounds of treatment from another company without seeing the lawn improve, a diagnostic visit is usually the fastest way to find out what's actually been missed.
Each program below can run on its own or as part of a combined irrigation and turf health plan tailored to your property's specific conditions.
New zone design and installation based on your property's actual layout, water pressure, and plant or turf type, rather than a one-size head spacing applied everywhere.
Sprinkler InstallationDiagnosis and repair of clogged or broken heads, leaking valves, controller faults, and pressure issues, with most common repairs completed during the same visit.
Irrigation RepairCorrection of low spots, runoff paths, and standing water areas that drown turf and erode beds, using grading and drain solutions matched to the actual water flow on your property.
Drainage SolutionsA season-long feeding schedule built around your soil condition and grass type, designed to build root depth and density rather than a short-term green-up.
Lawn FertilizationTargeted treatment timed to weed growth stages, paired with turf density improvements so weeds have less room to establish in the first place.
Weed ControlOngoing mowing and upkeep that works alongside your irrigation and health program, so the lawn is maintained consistently while the underlying issues are corrected.
Lawn Care ServiceMulch depth and placement adjusted to improve moisture retention in beds and reduce runoff into turf areas, supporting the broader drainage and irrigation plan.
Mulch InstallationBed layout and plant selection planned around your property's existing water access and drainage patterns, so new garden areas don't create new irrigation problems.
Garden DesignBefore any repair, program, or installation goes on your written plan, it has to hold up against these standards.
Pressure, coverage, and soil conditions are checked directly rather than estimated from a general property type.
Issues are prioritized by how much they're actually affecting your lawn, not by what's quickest to schedule.
You receive a written explanation of what was found and why a given repair or program is recommended.
Plans are checked against results each season and adjusted, rather than left unchanged year after year.
We fix existing components when that solves the problem instead of defaulting to full system replacement.
Fertilization and weed timing follow the specific grass species on your property, not a generic regional calendar.
Watering schedules are programmed to match seasonal needs rather than left on a single fixed setting year round.
Follow-up questions go to the person who actually diagnosed your property, not a general dispatch line.
A few notes from homeowners after their irrigation repair or lawn health program got underway.
Two heads in the back zone weren't even turning. We had no idea. Fixed in the same visit and that section finally caught up with the rest of the lawn.
We'd been fertilizing for two years without much change. Turned out the soil near the fence line was compacted and barely absorbing water. Different conversation once that came up.
The standing water by the patio is finally gone after the regrade work. I'd tried two other fixes before this that didn't hold.
The technician explained exactly why our lawn looked uneven and showed us what to expect after the repair. Very clear and reassuring.
We were worried the problem was the sprinkler system, but the diagnosis uncovered a drainage issue instead. That saved us from wasting money on the wrong fix.
The follow-up after service was thoughtful and helpful. They made sure we understood the schedule changes and what to watch for going forward.
Answers to the questions that come up most before a diagnostic visit or program start date.
A technician walks the property, runs each irrigation zone, checks coverage and pressure, and assesses soil and turf condition in problem areas. You'll receive a written summary of findings before any repair or program work begins.
Common issues like clogged or broken heads, minor valve problems, and controller settings are usually resolved during the diagnostic visit since technicians carry standard replacement parts. Larger repairs, such as a buried line break, may require a follow-up visit once the issue is fully exposed.
Schedules are built around your specific grass type, soil condition, and current weed pressure rather than a fixed regional calendar. Applications are spaced to support steady turf growth and timed to catch weeds at their most treatable stage.
Uneven coverage is usually caused by clogged or misaligned heads, incorrect spacing between zones, water pressure that's too low or too high for the system, or low spots where water pools instead of spreading evenly. A zone-by-zone check identifies which of these is happening on your property.
Yes. Controller programming is updated as seasonal needs change, since a schedule that's correct for peak summer growth typically overwaters during cooler, slower growth periods.
Drainage pricing depends on the scope of the issue, whether it requires regrading, drain installation, or both, and the size of the affected area. A written estimate is provided after the diagnostic walk-through and before any work begins.
Yes. Most existing systems use standard components our technicians are familiar with, so we can typically service, repair, or expand a system regardless of who originally installed it.
Improvement timelines depend on what was wrong and how long the underlying issue had been present. Irrigation corrections often show visible change within a few weeks, while soil and root depth improvements typically take a full growing season to fully establish.
Schedule a diagnostic visit and get a written, prioritized plan before any work begins, covering irrigation, drainage, and turf health together.
Talk directly with a technician about irrigation repair, sprinkler installation, or a lawn health program for your property.
1 (866) 996-5431