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New Hope Landscaping

New Hope Landscaping

New Hope, MS
Landscaping Services

Phone : (888) 524-1778

Homeowners in New Hope, Mississippi trust New Hope Landscaping for steady, year-round yard care. We handle trimming, edging, planting, and irrigation work.
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Q&A

Is a wood deck or a paver patio better for our backyard fire safety and longevity?

For durability and fire mitigation, a concrete paver patio is superior. In New Hope's Moderate Wildland-Urban Interface rating, creating defensible space is advised. Non-combustible materials like pavers and crushed limestone perform this function. They also resist decay and insect damage inherent to wood in our humid climate, providing a permanent, low-maintenance surface that does not require chemical treatments or replacement.

Do we need a permit to regrade our half-acre lot, and who is qualified to do the work?

Yes. Any significant regrading that alters water flow patterns requires review by Lowndes County Planning & Zoning to ensure compliance with drainage ordinances. On a 0.50-acre lot, the scale of earthmoving necessitates hiring a contractor licensed by the Mississippi State Board of Contractors. This ensures proper engineering for soil stability and protects you from liability related to downstream erosion or property damage.

We need immediate storm debris cleanup to meet our HOA deadline. What's your fastest response?

Our dispatch protocol for New Hope routes crews from the New Hope High School staging area directly onto MS-182, bypassing local traffic. This allows a consistent 20-30 minute arrival window, even during peak periods. We deploy electric chippers and trailers for immediate, compliant operation upon arrival, focusing on clearing driveways and public-facing areas first to satisfy common HOA visual standards.

How can we keep our Tifway 419 Bermuda healthy during a dry spell without violating water rules?

Wi-Fi ET-based irrigation controllers are the operational standard. They automatically adjust watering schedules by downloading local evapotranspiration data, applying water only when the turfgrass needs it. This system often reduces water use by 20-30% compared to standard timers, maintaining turf health within voluntary conservation guidelines. It prevents the shallow rooting and stress that come from manual or calendar-based watering.

Our yard floods in heavy rain. What's a lasting solution for this soggy soil?

Moderate runoff in Sandy Loam is often due to a seasonal high water table and compaction. A French drain system, daylighting into a swale, is a primary correction. For patios or walkways, using open-graded crushed limestone as a base beneath concrete pavers creates a permeable surface that meets Lowndes County Planning & Zoning runoff standards by allowing infiltration rather than directing sheet flow to the street.

We want to reduce mowing and gas-powered noise. What are our options?

Transitioning high-maintenance turf areas to a xeriscape of native plants like Purple Coneflower, Black-eyed Susan, and Switchgrass is a forward-looking strategy. These species are adapted to Zone 8a and require no irrigation once established, eliminating weekly mowing. This shift pre-emptively addresses future noise ordinance trends by removing the need for gas blowers and mowers, creating a quieter, pollinator-supporting landscape.

Our lawn looks tired no matter what we do. Could the soil itself be the problem?

Properties in the New Hope Residential District, built around 1990, now have soil with over 35 years of development pressure. Acidic Sandy Loam is naturally low in organic matter, and decades of standard mowing have compacted it further, reducing permeability. This creates a shallow root zone. Core aeration and incorporating composted organic matter are necessary to rebuild soil structure and water retention before any fertilization can be effective.

A fast-spreading vine is taking over our flower beds. How do we stop it safely?

This is likely an invasive species like Japanese Honeysuckle or Kudzu. Correct identification is critical. Treatment involves a targeted, foliar-applied systemic herbicide in early growth stages, strictly following Mississippi BMP guidelines to avoid off-target damage. We time applications outside of any local fertilizer ordinance blackout dates to ensure compliance and prevent nutrient runoff into the local watershed.

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