๐ŸŒฟLawn Schedule
Zone 9bSouth Belt

Lawn Care Schedule for Miramar, Florida

Zone 9b is frost-free in most years, with warm-season grasses active nearly 12 months. Lawn care revolves around summer heat management, consistent irrigation, and year-round weed pressure rather than cold hardiness or dormancy timing.

Florida's year-round growth and sandy soils require a 12-month fertilization calendar, with careful attention to county-level nutrient ordinances that restrict fertilizer use in summer rainy season months.

Zone 9b Timing Guide

Pre-emergent window:
January
Active growing season:
Year-round active

Local Pests & Diseases

Chinch bugs are the most destructive pest in Florida St. Augustine lawns; year-round monitoring is necessary given the state's continuous growing season.

Recommended Grass Types for Miramar

Month-by-Month Treatment Calendar

January

Light winter feeding where county ordinances allow; check local nutrient restrictions

February
Pre-EmergentCritical

Apply early โ€” Florida soil crosses 55โ€“60ยฐF well before most of the country

March
FertilizationRecommended

Spring feeding as growth accelerates statewide

MowingRecommended

Regular mowing resumes for St. Augustine and Bermuda lawns

April
FertilizationRecommended

Continue feeding through peak spring growth

Post-EmergentRecommended

Treat emerged weeds

May
FertilizationRecommended

Feeding continues; many counties begin summer nutrient-ordinance blackout periods around this time

June
Grub ControlCritical

Preventative application before the rainy season's peak egg-lay

WateringRecommended

Rainy season typically reduces irrigation need

July
FungicideCritical

Peak brown patch and take-all root rot pressure in St. Augustine during summer humidity

WateringRecommended

Supplement only between rain events

August
FungicideRecommended

Continue fungal disease monitoring through late summer humidity

Grub ControlRecommended

Curative treatment if damage appears

September
FertilizationRecommended

Resume feeding as summer nutrient-ordinance blackout periods typically end

October
FertilizationRecommended

Continue feeding through Florida's extended fall growing season

November

Light feeding continues; growth slows but rarely stops in most of the state

December

Year-round growth means light winter feeding is often appropriate, where local ordinances allow

Related Guides

Treatment Guides for the South Belt

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