Winter Care — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Roswell's got that perfect blend of Southern charm and year-round golf vibes, but keeping a natural putting green alive through Georgia winters? That's a different story. Between the Chattahoochee River humidity that rolls through Historic Roswell and the red clay soil that likes to stay damp, your turf's working harder than most. We've installed synthetic putting greens all over Fulton County—Martin's Landing, Horseshoe Bend, right up to Downtown Roswell—and honestly, the folks who go artificial never look back. No brown patches when January hits. No dead spots from winter dormancy. No fighting that clay underneath. Just pristine, playable green year-round. The real question isn't whether you should make the switch; it's whether you want to keep watering and maintaining a natural green through unpredictable Georgia weather, or hand-rake an artificial one twice a year and call it done. We're about 25 minutes away, and we've learned exactly how Roswell yards behave.
Roswell's terrain is beautiful but demanding. That Fulton red clay you've got underneath your yard holds moisture like nobody's business, especially near the river areas. Winter means that moisture just sits there—perfect breeding ground for fungal issues on natural turf. Then there's the tree coverage. Lots of neighborhoods around Historic Roswell and Martin's Landing have mature oaks and pines that create shade patterns that shift seasonally. Natural putting greens hate that inconsistency. Synthetic turf? Completely indifferent to shade or sun exposure. Installation matters here because we're dealing with drainage. The red clay doesn't percolate well, so we build in a proper base layer that keeps water from pooling under your green. Most Roswell yards run between 300 and 600 square feet for a residential putting green, which is that sweet spot where synthetic really shines. No fungicide applications. No overseeding come fall. Just honest, consistent playability through every Georgia season, including those wet winters when natural grass just surrenders.
Not the way it hammers natural turf. That river humidity near Chattahoochee makes fungal pressure intense from December through February. Synthetic turf won't develop disease, won't go dormant, and won't trap moisture the way natural grass does. Drainage underneath matters—which is why we engineer it specifically for Fulton clay conditions—but the turf surface itself stays playable.
Not if we install properly. Historic Roswell and Horseshoe Bend lots are tree-heavy, which is beautiful but complicated. We remove problem roots during prep, lay down a solid base, and use a perforated underlayment that lets water through without letting roots creep underneath. Your natural grass battles root competition; your synthetic green sits above it.
Minimal. A light rake once or twice a year to keep debris off, rinse it down if pollen settles in (Georgia's famous for that). No winter fungicide sprays, no aeration, no overseeding stress. Compare that to fighting dormancy and disease on natural turf from November through March, and you see why Roswell homeowners prefer artificial.
Most do, especially in Martin's Landing and the neighborhoods near Downtown. We've got experience navigating Roswell HOA requirements—some want specific turf brands, some care about drainage specs. We handle that conversation before you sign anything, so there's no surprise rejections down the road.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.