Lawn Aeration in Lower Cape May County

Core aeration for homes and commercial properties across lower Cape May County. We pull the soil open so water and air actually reach the roots, and a hard, thin, worn-out lawn can recover and fill back in instead of staying that way.

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Over a decade caring for lawns and landscapes across lower Cape May County.

Tell Us About Your Lawn

Send us the basics on your property and what shape the lawn is in, and we’ll set up a time to take a look and get you an estimate.

What's Included In a Lawn Aerate

Aeration is the reset a packed-down lawn needs. Over years of mowing, parking, and foot traffic, the soil under a lawn presses into a hard, sealed layer that sheds water and chokes off the roots, and on a shore property walked hard all summer it sets up even on sandy ground.

 

Aeration pulls thousands of small cores straight out of that layer and opens it back up, so water and air start moving through it again and the grass can grow the deeper roots a strong lawn runs on. It’s one of our lawn care services for homes and commercial properties across lower Cape May County.

What Aeration Includes

Whole-Lawn Core Aeration

We run a core aerator that pulls plugs of soil out of the ground across the whole lawn, not a spike machine that just punches holes.

The compacted and high-traffic zones get a second pass so they actually open up rather than getting pressed down harder.

The plugs are left on the surface, where they break down over a couple of weeks and work back into the lawn. The cores themselves come up a few inches long and a few inches apart, so the lawn opens evenly across the whole area instead of in a few scattered spots.

We bring equipment sized to the property too, so a large commercial lawn gets the same even, thorough coverage as a small yard.

Targeted Aeration for High-Traffic Areas

We do not just make one uniform pass over everything. We find the zones packed down hardest, the worn paths, the parking edges, the common areas a commercial property runs traffic across, and double-pass them so they actually open up.

The rest of the lawn gets a thorough single pass, and the worst of it gets the extra attention it needs. Those hard, beaten-down spots are the ones that thin out and go bare first, and they drag down the look of the whole property, so they are exactly where the extra work pays off.

We can read where the soil has gone hard and the grass has given up, and that is where we concentrate the passes.

Soil Compaction Relief

Compacted soil is the real problem under most struggling lawns, and it is what aeration is built to fix.

Years of foot traffic, mowers, and parking press the ground into a dense layer that water cannot soak into and roots cannot push through, so the grass stays shallow and thin no matter how it is cut.

Pulling cores cuts open channels through that layer, loosening the soil so water and air move down to the root zone and the grass can finally root deeper than the top inch it was stuck in. The more packed and trafficked the ground, the bigger the difference opening it up makes.

Thatch Breakdown

Thatch is the dead layer of roots, stems, and clippings that collects between the green grass and the soil.

A thin layer is normal, but once it gets much past half an inch it starts shedding water like a roof and sealing off the surface, so rain and air never reach the soil underneath.

Aeration cores punch straight down through that layer and mix soil into it, so it breaks down instead of getting thicker every year. If a lawn feels spongy underfoot, heavy thatch is usually what you are feeling.

Lawn Recovery After Aeration

We leave the cores to break down on their own and topdress the lawn as they go, so there is no raking up after us. Then we walk you through simple aftercare so the lawn recovers and fills back in.

It is a short window of looking a little rough before it comes back thicker than it was. For the first week or two you will see the plugs sitting on top and the lawn will look a little torn up, which is normal and passes fast as they crumble back in.

You can keep mowing and using the lawn through all of it, there is nothing you need to rope off or work around while it recovers.

Why Aeration Matters for Your Lawn

Over time, soil packs down, from foot traffic, mowers, kids and pets, and on a commercial property from steady use across common areas and walked-through turf.

 

Once it is compacted, water sheets off instead of soaking in, the roots stay shallow, and the lawn thins out and gives way to weeds and bare spots no matter how often it gets cut.

 

A layer of thatch on top makes it worse, sealing the surface so nothing gets through. Aeration breaks that cycle at the source: it opens the soil back up so water and air reach the roots, and lets a tired lawn recover and thicken instead of being mowed shorter and shorter over dead ground. It is the difference between working on the lawn and working on the soil it grows in, which is where the real problem usually sits.

01

Core Aeration, Not Spikes

There are two ways to aerate, and only one of them does much. Spike aeration punches holes by shoving the soil aside, which can pack it down even tighter around each hole.

Core aeration, which is what we do, pulls plugs of soil out of the ground and leaves open channels behind, so the compaction is actually relieved instead of just moved around. The cores break down on the surface and work back into the lawn over the next couple of weeks.

It is more work and it is the right way to do it, which is why we run a core aerator and double-pass the hardest, most worn areas instead of making one quick pass and calling it done.

Our Aeration Process

01

Lawn Assessment and Estimate

We come out, look at the lawn and how hard and worn the soil is, and figure out what it actually needs: the whole lawn or just the high-traffic areas that have packed down.

 

You get a clear estimate up front before anything is scheduled.

02

Aeration Timing and Lawn Prep

We aerate in the cooler part of the season so the lawn recovers and fills in rather than stressing in summer heat.

 

Before we run the machine we mow the lawn down and flag anything on the property we need to work around, so the cores reach soil and nothing gets caught.

03

The Core Aeration Pass

We pull cores across the entire lawn with a core aerator, going over the compacted and high-traffic zones a second time so they genuinely open up.

 

The plugs get left on the surface to break down on their own and work back into the turf.

04

Aftercare and Lawn Recovery

The cores get left on the surface to break down and work back into the lawn over the next couple of weeks, so there is nothing to rake up after us.

 

We leave you with simple aftercare for the recovery window, and the lawn comes back thicker than it started.

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Towns We Serve in Lower Cape May County

We aerate lawns across the lower county, out of our base in Villas, covering Cape May, West Cape May, Cape May Point, North Cape May, Erma, Town Bank, and Cold Spring.

We also run north to Cape May Court House, Rio Grande, Whitesboro, Burleigh, Green Creek, Del Haven, and Mayville, along with Diamond Beach. Homes and commercial properties alike, if your lawn is in any of these, we can take it on.

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Why Property Owners Choose Our Aeration

People bring us in for aeration because we set the lawn up to actually come back, not just to say it got aerated.

We core-aerate properly and double-pass the worst of it, we time it for the season so the lawn recovers instead of stressing, and we treat a single home lawn and a commercial property’s common areas to the same standard.

Most of it is repeat work, the same properties booking us again the next year once they have seen the lawn respond.

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Signs Your Lawn Needs Aeration

Most lawns we get called out to aerate are showing the same handful of signs.

Water pooling or running straight off after rain instead of soaking in.

Soil so hard you cannot push a screwdriver into it, and grass that stays thin and pale no matter how it gets cut.

Bare, packed paths worn across the lawn where people cut through, common on commercial common areas and any high-traffic yard, with weeds and moss moving into the thin spots because the grass has nothing to grab onto.

When a lawn is doing these things, mowing and watering will not fix it, because the problem is the soil, and that is what aeration opens back up.

Your Local Lawn Aeration Crew

Boyes is a family-run crew based in Villas, and aeration is part of how we keep lawns healthy across lower Cape May County, on homes and commercial properties alike.

It is the same crew and the same standard behind our residential lawn care and commercial lawn care. We would rather aerate a lawn at the right time, the right way, so it genuinely comes back than run a machine over it to check a box.

Aeration Questions We Get a Lot

Most lawns down here do well aerated once a year, usually in the cooler part of the season.

 

A lawn on heavy, compacted, or high-traffic soil can use it more often, and we will tell you straight what yours actually needs instead of selling you a schedule.

Spike aeration pushes holes into the ground and can compact the soil further around them.

 

Core aeration pulls plugs of soil out and leaves open channels, which actually relieves the compaction.

 

We core-aerate, because it is the version that does the job.

It can, yes. Sandy soil drains well, but the top few inches still pack down hard under foot traffic, mowers, and steady use, and thatch builds up just the same.

 

Anywhere the lawn gets walked or driven on, the soil compacts and the grass thins, and that is what aeration opens back up.

The cooler parts of the season are best, when the lawn has time to recover before the heat sets in.

 

Aerating in the heat of summer stresses the turf, so we schedule it for the right window for the shore.

Yes.

 

We aerate residential lawns and commercial properties, from a single yard to the common areas across a managed property, on the same schedule and to the same standard.

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Let's Get Your Lawn Breathing Again

Tell us about your property and the shape the lawn is in, and we’ll come take a look, talk through whether aeration is what it needs, and get you a free estimate.