Episode 12 14:09

Why Most Lawn Programs Fail (Even Expensive Ones)

Kicking off a new series on lawn care, soil health, and turf management by breaking down some of the biggest misconceptions in the industry.

Show Notes

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.