Shaded Yard — Family-owned, 4.9★ rated, 15-year warranty
Stockbridge homeowners in the Eagles Landing and Reeves Creek areas deal with a unique challenge: those mature trees that make your yard beautiful also mean serious shade. A putting green in that shaded corner? That's exactly where artificial turf shines. We've installed dozens of greens across Henry County, and we've learned what works in our clay-heavy soil and humid Georgia climate. Real grass struggles under tree canopy—it gets thin, patchy, and honestly, frustrating. Synthetic turf doesn't care about shade. It stays lush, playable, and maintenance-free year-round. Whether you've got a 500-square-foot backyard in Eagles Landing or a larger lot near Panola Mountain, a putting green transforms that unused shaded space into something your family actually uses. No more dead patches. No more watering bills. No more fighting nature. Just a perfectly green, perfectly playable surface that handles Henry County's clay soil and our unpredictable spring rains without drainage headaches. We're based about 40 minutes away, so we know this area well—we know which shade patterns kill grass, which neighbors have HOA rules about landscaping, and exactly how to prep your yard for a green that lasts.
Henry County's clay-based soil is dense and doesn't drain like sandy soil does, which is one reason artificial turf works so well here. Real grass in shaded yards gets compacted easily, stays wet longer after rain, and develops moss and fungal issues. Your putting green eliminates that problem entirely. Shade is the real story in Stockbridge neighborhoods. If you're in Eagles Landing or near Reeves Creek, you likely have mature oak and pine trees creating dappled or heavy shade across your yard. Synthetic turf thrives in those conditions—it doesn't need photosynthesis. Installation on clay requires proper base preparation; we typically add crushed stone and a perforated drainage layer to handle Georgia's humidity and sudden downpours. Most Stockbridge lots are 0.5 to 1.5 acres, so you've got room for a serious green, not just a tiny practice mat. Check your HOA guidelines if you're in a deed-restricted community—most allow artificial turf greens, but it's worth confirming. Our greens are built to last 10–15 years in this climate, and they play true year-round, even in winter when real grass would go dormant.
Yes, if it's installed correctly. Clay doesn't drain naturally, so we build a base layer with crushed stone and perforated drainage pipe underneath your turf. Water moves through the synthetic surface and drains away instead of pooling. Henry County's heavy rains won't cause problems—we've designed hundreds of installations for exactly this soil type.
Synthetic turf handles full shade better than any real grass ever could. Even under dense tree canopy in Eagles Landing or near Panola Mountain, your green stays playable. The turf doesn't need sun to stay green or functional. Just make sure tree branches don't hang so low they prevent you from swinging a putter.
Most do. Eagles Landing and Reeves Creek communities generally permit landscape improvements that enhance property value. We recommend checking your deed restrictions to confirm, but we've never encountered an HOA that banned a well-maintained artificial green. It actually looks better than struggling real grass.
A typical 400–600-square-foot green takes 2–3 days, depending on site prep complexity. If your yard has significant slopes or tree roots, we might need an extra day. We're local (40 minutes away), so scheduling flexibility isn't a problem. Most homeowners see their new green ready to play within a week of first contact.
Call (706) 701-8873 or visit instant.lawnlogicturf.com — 60-second quotes, no pressure.