02/18/2026
"Your Lawn Looked Fine Last Year. So Why Does It Look Like This?"
Every spring I have the same conversation with homeowners across Boone County. They walk their property after the first real warm weekend, look at their lawn or their ornamental beds, and ask some version of the same question: Why does this keep happening?
The roses have black spot again. The crabapple looks thin. There are bare patches in the lawn that never quite filled in from last year. They fertilized. They watered. They did everything the bag told them to do. And here we are again.
I've been doing this work for over 30 years, and I'll tell you what I tell every one of those homeowners: the problem usually isn't above ground. It's what's happening — or not happening — six inches below the surface.
Healthy soil isn't just dirt. It's a living system — billions of bacteria, miles of fungal networks, microscopic organisms that cycle nutrients, suppress disease, and feed your plants continuously throughout the season. When that system is weak or disrupted, you see it in your landscape. Poor color. Thin growth. Disease that comes back year after year no matter what you spray.
Our Northern Kentucky soils are heavy clay, and clay is hard on soil biology. Compaction, drought stress, synthetic chemical applications, and harsh winter freeze-thaw cycles all take a toll. By late winter, the beneficial microbial populations your soil needs are at their lowest point of the entire year — right before your landscape plants are about to make their biggest demands.
That's the gap most homeowners never know exists.
The good news is that it's fixable, and late February into early March is actually the best possible time to address it. Not mid-summer when the damage is already showing. Right now, while the soil is just beginning to wake up and there's still time to get ahead of the problems you've been fighting for years.
In my next post I'll explain exactly how we're addressing this for a limited number of clients this spring — and why the timing matters more than most people realize.
If you are interested in more information about how compost tea can help your landscape, please contact me to schedule a free landscape evaluation (859)444-0486 and visit www.whitehouselandscapes.com to read more articles to help protect your most expensive investment in your home.
WhiteHouse Landscapes LLC has been serving Florence, Union, Walton, Richwood, and Burlington Kentucky since 2016. With an ISA Certified Arborist leading all services we provide our clients with science based service that gets results at a fair price.