Preview spring blooms through winter structure before we plant a thing. We design your North-Texas landscape to look intentional in March, lush in July, warm in October and built-to-last in January.
Every yard we design carries color and structure across all four North-Texas seasons. Click through to see what we plant, build and maintain at each turn of the year.
We wake your yard up — cut back winter growth, refresh every bed with new color, lay fresh mulch and dial in the irrigation so the lawn greens up fast and even.
Peak season. We install heat-tough sod, run irrigation checks against the Texas sun and keep everything mowed, edged and watered so your yard stays the greenest on the block.
The reset season. We clear the leaves, aerate compacted soil, overseed for a winter-green lawn and swap in cool-season color so your beds stay alive through the cooler months.
When the color rests, structure carries the yard. Evergreens, clean bed lines and hardscape do the work — and it's the perfect window to build patios, walls and plan next year.
North Texas throws every kind of weather at a yard. Here's exactly what R&R does at each turn of the calendar to keep yours looking its best.
The wake-up. Beds get refreshed and replanted for the season ahead.
The peak. Heat-tough installs and steady upkeep through the dog days.
The reset. Cleanup and soil work that pays off all winter long.
The bones. Structure and builds while the planting beds rest.
A yard that only looks good for three weeks isn't a good investment. Previewing the full year up front is how we make sure yours earns its keep every month.
You see the spring bloom and the bare-branch winter before we plant. What we show you is what you get — every season.
We layer plants so something's always working — early blooms, summer green, fall warmth and evergreen structure that holds the winter.
Planning the whole year up front means fewer redo's, fewer dead plants and one clear roadmap instead of scattered weekend fixes.
Free walkthrough, honest quote, no strings. We'll map out your full-season plan before a single plant goes in.