Columbia Landscaping Pros
Serving Muletown & the Duck River Valley
Columbia · Spring Hill · Mount Pleasant · Culleoka
From antebellum estates around the Square to brand-new lawns off Bear Creek Pike, Columbia yards sit on shallow, rocky, karst-riddled Central Basin soil — some of the most fertile dirt in Tennessee, and some of the trickiest to landscape. We know the rock, and we know what grows on it.
Tell us about your yard. A local pro calls you back — usually same day.
Zone 7a/7b
Planting calendar tuned to Columbia's real frost dates — safe from ~April 26
Central Basin
Limestone-and-phosphate ground — shallow, fertile, and unforgiving of guesswork
60% growth
Maury County home values in 5 years — and a lot of new lawns that need help
Every service below is shaped by the ground it happens on — the shallow soils, the karst drainage, the transition-zone turf calendar. That's the difference local knowledge makes.
Weekly mowing, fertilization, and full renovations for tall fescue and bermuda lawns. We specialize in rescuing builder-graded new-construction yards where topsoil was stripped and the clay packed hard — aeration, compost topdressing, and a September overseed bring them back.
Planting plans built for shallow Maury County ground. We site trees and shrubs where the soil is deep enough to hold them, and lean on limestone-tolerant natives — eastern red cedar, oakleaf hydrangea, little bluestem — that thrive where imported ornamentals sulk.
Karst ground drains strangely: water vanishes in one corner of a yard and ponds in another. We read the rock before we cut — French drains, dry creek beds, and regrading that work with Columbia's limestone instead of fighting it.
Natural limestone and fieldstone hardscaping that looks like it grew out of the Central Basin, because the material did. Patios, walkways, fire pits, and engineered retaining walls for the rolling lots off Trotwood and Sunnyside.
Columbia is the Antebellum Homes Capital of Tennessee, and old properties deserve careful hands. Mature tree preservation, period-appropriate foundation plantings, and boxwood care for downtown's historic district and Graymere's tree-lined lots.
Spring and fall cleanups timed to Columbia's real frost calendar — safe planting after late April, leaf season through Thanksgiving. Hardwood mulch installed deep enough to hold summer moisture in shallow soil.
Drive twenty minutes in any direction from the Square and the dirt changes under you. Columbia sits in the Central Basin — the old limestone floor of Middle Tennessee — where bedrock runs close to the surface, phosphate darkens the soil, and rainwater plays tricks through the karst below. It's why Maury County farmland is legendary and why the cedar glades east of town grow like nowhere else in the world.
It's also why landscaping advice imported from Nashville's Highland Rim, or from a national franchise playbook, quietly fails here. Trees planted too deep hit rock and drown. Drainage "fixes" ignore where karst actually sends the water. Fescue seeded in April dies by July. We build around what the ground actually is — and it shows a season later.
The new-lawn problem
Columbia is growing faster than almost anywhere in Middle Tennessee. Builders strip the dark topsoil during grading, and new sod goes down on compacted clay. By the second summer it's thin and yellow. Rebuilding that soil profile is now one of the most-requested jobs we see in North Columbia and the Spring Hill corridor.
The old-property problem
Downtown and Graymere hold some of the oldest landscapes in Tennessee — mature oaks, century boxwoods, antebellum foundation plantings. They need preservation, not replacement. Pruning schedules, root-zone protection, and period-appropriate plant choices keep historic properties looking like themselves.
The water problem
Karst ground swallows water in one place and spits it out in another. Before we cut a single drain line, we watch how a lot actually sheds a storm — then work with the rock, not against it.
Based in Columbia, serving the Duck River valley across Maury County and its edges.
Historic Downtown
Antebellum estates & Victorian-era yards around the Square
Graymere
Country-club lots with mature shade trees
North Columbia
New-construction lawns needing soil rehab
West 7th Street
Historic cottages near Columbia Academy
Sunnyside / South Columbia
Modern farmhouses on acreage
Spring Hill & Santa Fe
Fast-growing subdivisions north & west
Mount Pleasant
Phosphate-country soil, deep and dark
Culleoka
Rural lots along the Duck River valley
Maury County's phosphatic limestone soils really are some of the most fertile in Tennessee — but on new-construction lots in North Columbia and the Spring Hill corridor, builders strip that dark topsoil during grading and leave compacted clay subsoil behind. Sod laid straight on it struggles by its second summer. The fix is mechanical: core aeration, compost topdressing to rebuild organic matter, and a tall fescue overseed in the September window. Two seasons of that treatment and the lawn starts acting like Maury County ground again.
Completely normal. Columbia sits in the Central Basin, where limestone bedrock runs close to the surface — it's the same geology that gives us cedar glades and the occasional sinkhole. It changes how we plant: trees get sited where soil pockets run deeper, root balls get set high with soil mounded rather than dug deep, and we favor species that evolved on this rock. It's also why irrigation matters more here — shallow soil dries out faster than deep Highland Rim ground.
For tall fescue — the backbone grass of Middle Tennessee lawns — the window is mid-September through mid-October. Soil is still warm, the summer disease pressure is fading, and seedlings get two cool seasons to root before their first July. Spring seeding mostly feeds the weeds. Columbia's last hard frost typically lands in mid-April, with the 50/50 date around April 10, so tender plantings wait until the end of April.
That's textbook karst behavior — water finds cracks in the limestone and resurfaces somewhere inconvenient. We map how the lot actually sheds water before proposing anything, then use surface regrading, French drains, and dry creek beds to move water where it should go. If we see signs of genuine sinkhole activity, we'll tell you honestly — that's an engineering matter, and we'll point you to the right people rather than sell you a fix that won't hold.
Weekly mowing for a typical quarter-acre lot runs $45–$65. Full-service lawn programs (mowing, fertilization, weed control) generally land between $200–$350 monthly in season. Landscape installations start around $2,500 for foundation bed renovations and range to $15,000+ for full designs with hardscaping. Every property gets a written quote — Columbia lots vary too much, from downtown historic parcels to five-acre Sunnyside spreads, for honest one-size pricing.
One call gets you a walkthrough and a written quote — usually within 24 hours.
Call (936) 252-9475