Feed Your Lawn.Love Your Yard.
Lawn Adore custom-blended liquid fertilizer, built for your grass, your climate, and what your lawn actually needs. Organic options too.

Formula
Seasonal Nutrient Guide
Click any season for the nutrient needs, tips, and the product we recommend for that time of year.
- Nitrogen
- Phosphorus
- Potassium
Spring
Kickstart Growth Season
Spring is the most critical feeding window. As soil temperatures rise above 55°F, grass breaks dormancy and enters rapid growth mode. Nitrogen demand peaks now, fueling blade growth, color, and tillering.
Expert Tips
- +Apply a high-nitrogen starter fertilizer when soil temps hit 55°F and stay there
- +Pre-emergent weed control pairs well with early spring feeding
- +Water deeply after application. 0.5 inches minimum to activate nutrients
- +Mow at 3 to 3.5 inches to encourage root depth while blades establish
Plant Nutrient Needs
- →Nitrogen (N): High demand. Drives leaf growth and chlorophyll production
- →Phosphorus (P): Moderate. Supports root establishment after winter
- →Potassium (K): Moderate. Builds cell structure for the season ahead
- →Iron & Micronutrients: Boost green color without pushing top growth
Recommended Product
Starter +PLUS Kit (12-20-6)
Find Your Perfect Blend
Four quick questions. We match you to the right fertilizer for your lawn.
What type of grass do you have?
Step 1 of 4Common Problems, Real Solutions
Here is what Gulf South lawns run into and how our blends handle it. Every problem below is solved by products we carry right now.
Fresh sod on builder-grade clay, roots not knitting in
Deep root establishment, sod locks down fast
Water runs off the lawn instead of soaking in
Compacted clay opens up, water and nutrients reach the root zone
Established lawn pale and tired between feedings
Steady deep green through the growing season
New construction yard, bare dirt with zero organic matter
Soil starts to come alive, grass can actually root
Summer heat stress, lawn thinning out
Stronger cell walls, better drought tolerance
Lawn rebounds in spring but growth stalls by June
Sustained feeding keeps the lawn going all season



