Episode 12: “Why Most Lawn Programs Fail (Even Expensive Ones)”
Why Most Lawn Programs Fail (Even Expensive Ones) | AG & Culture Podcast Ep. 12
Why do so many lawns struggle… even when homeowners are spending thousands on lawn care?
In Episode 12 of the AG & Culture Podcast, Mike Usry and Joseph Boehm kick off a new series on lawn care, soil health, and turf management by breaking down one of the biggest misconceptions in the industry: most lawn programs are built on the wrong foundation.
From brand-new neighborhoods to established lawns, this episode explains why grass often looks good at first—but declines over time—and what’s really happening beneath the surface.
Topics Covered in This Episode
• Why homeowners’ expectations for lawns are often unrealistic
• How modern neighborhoods are built on poor, compacted soil
• Why topsoil is removed during construction—and why that matters
• The problem with monoculture lawns (Bermuda, fescue, zoysia, etc.)
• Why most lawn care programs focus on fertilizer instead of soil health
• The truth about NPK fertilizers and short-term results
• Why over-fertilization is a growing problem in the U.S.
• How fertilizer runoff contributes to environmental issues
• Signs of an unhealthy lawn (thin grass, pests, disease, weak growth)
• Why insects target weak grass
• The difference between treating symptoms vs fixing root causes
• Why soil biology is the foundation of a healthy lawn
• The role of soil conditioners, humic substances, and carbon-based products
Mike explains that most lawn programs are designed for speed and volume, not long-term soil health—leading to fragile lawns that require constant inputs just to maintain appearance.
Key Takeaway
If you want a better lawn, stop focusing only on the grass.
Healthy lawns are built from the ground up—starting with soil biology, structure, and long-term system health, not just fertilizer applications.