Posts by avalanchecreative
Spring Flower Bed Maintenance: A Western Washington Guide
Summary: Spring flower bed maintenance in Western Washington means tackling weeds early, refreshing mulch, cutting back winter-damaged plants, and preparing soil before our growing season hits full stride, while staying ahead of slugs. Spring arrives in Western Washington with a mix of promise and urgency. The first warm days reveal what winter left behind: beds…
Read MoreThe 16 Best Whatcom County Native Plants to Add to Your Landscaping This Spring
Spring in Whatcom County means it’s time to think about your garden or landscape. If you want plants that actually thrive here without constant babysitting, native species belong at the top of your list. Plants native to the Pacific Northwest have spent thousands of years adapting to our wet winters, dry summers, and the occasional…
Read MoreWhat to Look for in Spring Cleanup Services
The first warm days of spring in the Pacific Northwest can feel like a long-awaited exhale. Snow recedes, mossy layers thin out, and buried beneath months of fallen leaves and debris, your lawn starts sending up new growth. That’s the signal: it’s time for a spring cleanup. But who you hire for the job matters…
Read MoreMulch vs Bark: What’s the Best Ground Cover for Whatcom County Gardens?
For Whatcom County gardens, processed mulches (medium fir and black composted) outperform bark and cedar chips in moisture retention, weed control, and soil health by working with our wet winters and dry summers instead of against them. Walk through any garden center in Whatcom County, and you’ll face rows of bags labeled mulch, bark, and…
Read MoreSynthetic Turf: Pros, Cons, and How to Decide If It’s Right for Your Yard
Synthetic turf has come a long way over the last decade. Today’s products look more natural, drain better, and hold up far longer than the stiff, plastic grass many homeowners still picture. That said, it is not the right fit for every property, lifestyle, or budget. If you are weighing synthetic turf against a natural…
Read More9 Questions to Ask Before Booking a Spring Landscape Project
If you are comparing landscape companies right now, the questions you ask can make the difference between a smooth, well-run project and one that drags on, blows past expectations, or misses the mark entirely. Below are smart, practical questions to ask before you sign a contract. These go beyond surface-level pricing and get into how…
Read MoreSpring Pruning: Which Plants Benefit (and Which Should Wait)
Spring arrives early in Whatcom County. Buds swell, lawns wake up, and landscapes start asking for attention. That energy makes it tempting to prune everything at once, but in Western Washington, timing and technique matter more than urgency. Some plants thrive with a spring prune. Others lose blooms, struggle to recover, or become vulnerable to…
Read MoreWinter to Early Spring Is the Best Time to Plan Your Paver Project: Here’s Why
A paver patio is one of the most rewarding outdoor upgrades you can make in Western Washington. It creates usable space, adds structure to your landscape, and holds up well against our long rainy seasons. But timing matters more here than it does in drier parts of the country. If you’re wondering about the best…
Read MoreSigns Your Irrigation System Needs Repair (Before It Costs You More)
Many homeowners don’t realize something is wrong with their irrigation system until the damage is visible. Lawns fade unevenly, plants struggle in one corner of the yard, or puddles appear after a regular watering cycle. These issues often seem minor, or they get blamed on weather, soil, or even “just the way the yard grows.”…
Read MoreWhy a Professional Landscape Company Costs More & Why It’s Worth It
Landscape pricing varies more than most homeowners expect. One company quotes a surprisingly low amount. Another proposes a higher investment and confidently explains it. At first glance, the work may seem identical. Mowing looks like mowing. Fertilizer looks like fertilizer. A planted shrub is a planted shrub. But the gap between “someone who does landscaping”…
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