Articles Showing articles related to: Southwest Landscape Management

You really can have a gorgeous yard in fall and winter and the pros at Southwest Landscape Management can take you there

In the CLE, the average first frost happens in mid-to late October, and the last frost is around mid- to late-April, which would leave your yard in a dormant state for about six months of the year. Why not make it look its best before the big chill creeps in? Giving your yard a dose of TLC this fall will pave the way for weathering winter and...

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Southwest Landscape Management has the tools and the expertise to keep your lawn and landscaping in full bloom

As our lawns come back to life this month, now’s the perfect time to take stock of how your yard fared over the winter. Spring cleanup is best done early—and by professionals. Steve Rak, president and owner at Southwest Landscape Management, says his crews are already in full gear doing spring clean-ups for homes, commercial...

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Now is a perfect time to have Southwest Landscape Management beautify your yard

“The best defense is a good offense” is an adage that applies to keeping your home’s exterior looking ship-shape in every season. Steps you take in fall can carry you through winter and ensure your home sweet home will look fabulous come springtime. For anyone who hasn’t had time this summer to take a good look at their landscaping,...

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At Southwest Landscape Management, creating and maintaining beautiful yards is what they do--period

After a visit to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, Morty Seinfeld bluntly assessed the impressionist works of Claude Monet: “Don’t you think he had to be near sighted? I mean nobody would paint like that if they could see.” Likewise, says Steve Rak, owner of Southwest Landscape Management, a homeowner, viewing his or her...

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Get a head start on spring now with Southwest Landscape Management

“April showers bring May flowers.” My first-grade teacher used to say that a lot, and at the time she may have been right. In my memory, it seems like Northeast Ohio used to have springtime between March and May before those months began to deliver unpredictable, alternative days of blizzards and teasingly warm temperatures. The...

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