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Summer Landscaping Prep for Sarasota & Gulf Coast HOA Communities

Uploaded on: April 20, 2026

April on the Gulf Coast is a short window. The dry season is wrapping up, temperatures are climbing fast, and the summer rainy season arrives before you know it. For HOA communities and property managers throughout Sarasota, Lakewood Ranch, Anna Maria Island, and Bradenton, now is the time to get ahead of it.

At Grant's Gardens, we work with HOA boards and property managers across the Gulf Coast year-round. Every spring, we see the same pattern: communities that do their summer prep in April sail through the season. Communities that wait until June are playing catch-up, in the heat, in the rain, and often on a tight budget.

Here's what your HOA landscape program should be tackling right now.

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1. Audit Your Irrigation System Before the Rain Starts

Counterintuitive as it sounds, your irrigation system needs the most attention before the rainy season, not after. Summer rains will put your system in standby mode for weeks at a time, and that can mask broken heads, zone failures, and controller problems that go unnoticed until the dry spells hit.

In April, before the first summer storms arrive, your HOA landscape maintenance team should be:

  • Running a full zone-by-zone inspection to identify broken or misdirected heads
  • Checking controller programming and rain sensor function
  • Confirming pressure settings across all zones
  • Clearing any heads that have been overtaken by turf or mulch
  • Adjusting schedules for the seasonal transition

A system that's clean and calibrated heading into summer is one less thing to manage when it's 92 degrees and the afternoon storms are rolling in daily.

2. Prepare Your Turf for Heat Stress

Sarasota's summer combination, intense heat, high humidity, and daily afternoon rain, is tough on turf. St. Augustine, the dominant grass across Gulf Coast HOA communities, can thrive in these conditions, but only if it heads into summer from a position of health.

Lawn care in Sarasota, FL, this time of year should include:

  • A pre-summer fertilization treatment to build root depth and heat tolerance
  • Soil moisture checks to confirm your irrigation is providing adequate coverage without overwatering
  • Addressing any thin or bare spots now, before the summer growth rate makes renovation harder
  • Adjusting mowing height slightly higher (3.5–4 inches for St. Augustine) to shade root zones and reduce moisture loss

Getting turf into good condition in April pays dividends all summer. It's far easier to build on a healthy lawn than to recover a stressed one in the middle of August.

3. Review Your Tree and Palm Canopy

Summer means thunderstorms, tropical systems, and sustained wind. Sarasota landscape maintenance in spring should always include a thorough look at your trees and palms, especially in HOA communities where canopy failure means liability, not just aesthetics.

Your landscape team should be:

  • Removing dead fronds from sabal and queen palms (do not over-trim — no more than 2 o'clock position)
  • Identifying any trees with dead wood, crossing limbs, or structural concerns
  • Documenting any large trees within fall distance of structures, vehicles, or utilities
  • Scheduling structural pruning for anything flagged — before hurricane season, not during it

This is also a good time to review your HOA's tree inventory. Knowing what you have and where the risks are makes post-storm assessment much faster and less stressful.

4. Mulch Your Beds Before Summer

Fresh mulch in April does two important things: it moderates soil temperature during summer heat, and it helps retain moisture during the dry spells that still happen between summer storms.

For HOA communities across Sarasota and the Gulf Coast, annual mulching of entrance features, tree rings, and planting beds should happen now, not in June. By mid-summer, summer weeds will have taken hold in unmulched beds, and the cost of cleaning them up is higher than the cost of a spring mulch application.

A 3-inch layer of eucalyptus or melaleuca mulch is the standard for Gulf Coast conditions. It breaks down slowly, resists blowing, and provides good thermal insulation for plant root zones.

5. Plan Your Summer Color Rotations Now

Summer-appropriate annuals for Gulf Coast HOA entrances and common areas need to go in by early May at the latest, and that means ordering and planning in April.

The species palette shifts dramatically from spring to summer. Pentas, vinca, angelonia, and torenia all perform well through the summer heat. Petunias and snapdragons, popular in the cooler months, will not. If your HOA has entrance color beds, talk to your landscape contractor now about the transition plan.

Proper summer color installation for Bradenton landscape maintenance and Sarasota HOA programs means plants that perform through September, not ones that look great in May and limp through July.

6. Set Your HOA Landscape Expectations for Summer

Summer growth rates on the Gulf Coast are relentless. A property that looks perfectly manicured on Monday can look overgrown by the following weekend. This is especially true after sustained rain.

Before summer, HOA boards and property managers should confirm:

  • Your current mowing frequency is adequate for summer growth (many properties shift to weekly service from bi-weekly in summer)
  • Your contract includes provisions for extra trimmings or growth spurts
  • Your landscape team has a defined protocol for post-storm cleanup
  • Communication channels are clear, who calls whom, and how fast the expected response is

Lawn maintenance in Sarasota HOA communities works best when expectations are aligned before the season starts, not after the first complaint comes in from a resident.

Working with a Gulf Coast HOA Landscape Partner

HOA landscape maintenance on AMI, in Lakewood Ranch, or across Sarasota isn't just about grass and shrubs. It's about managing a shared community asset that directly affects resident satisfaction, property values, and board liability.

Grant's Gardens works with HOA boards and property management companies throughout the Gulf Coast to build maintenance programs that are proactive, not reactive. If your current program is leaving things to chance heading into summer, this is a good time to have that conversation.

Contact us to schedule a spring property walkthrough and discuss your summer landscape program.

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Grant's Gardens is ​a full-service landscaping company that has been creating beautiful and functional outdoor spaces in Sarasota, Florida since 2000. We are passionate about crafting environments that our clients love.

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