Seasonal Regional Buying Guides
Spring Regional USDA Buying Guides
Get season-ready recommendations tailored to your region and USDA Hardiness Zones—what to prioritize first, when to apply, and which products to stock now for the work coming next.
- - January 05, 2026 - 9 min read
Navigate New England's unpredictable spring with pro-grade tools matched to zones 3-7. From frozen northern sites to coastal warmth, get the right gear for turf, weeds, and storm cleanup timing.
- - January 05, 2026 - 9 min read
From chilly mountain mornings to fast-warming coastal lawns, the Mid-Atlantic shifts fast. Use this Zone 4–7 buying guide to time turf nutrition, seeding, watering, and weed control right.
- - January 05, 2026 - 9 min read
Spring timing is everything in the Upper Midwest. Discover proven products and equipment matched to your zone—whether you're a pro or serious DIYer tackling frost, salt damage, and saturated soils.
- - January 05, 2026 - 10 min read
Spring in the Lower Midwest moves fast. This guide matches tools, seeds, and fertilizers to zones 4–7's mix of cold winters, quick warmups, and hot summers for landscapers and horticulture pros.
- - January 05, 2026 - 11 min read
Spring success in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana starts with the right tools and products. This guide matches fertilizers, seeds, and equipment to your zone's heat, clay, and humidity.
- - January 12, 2026 - 10 min read
Master Pacific Northwest spring landscaping with zone-specific strategies for turf, weeds, water management, and pruning—tailored for CA, OR, and WA's unique climate challenges.
- - January 12, 2026 - 11 min read
Mountain West Spring Buyer’s Guide
Built for landscapers and horticulture pros in Colorado (CO), Utah (UT), Arizona (AZ), New Mexico (NM), Nevada (NV), Wyoming (WY), Montana (MT), and Idaho (ID).
These states sit in USDA Hardiness Zones 3–9. In this band, average extreme winter lows run from about -40°F in the highest and northern areas to around 25°F in the milder valleys. This guide helps match tools and supplies to the Mountain West mix of altitude, dry air, big temperature swings, and short growing windows.
Jump to Sections
Introduction
Spring in the Mountain West is short and sharp. Snow can sit on north slopes while south slopes are already dry and dusty. Zones 3–5 around high plains and mountains stay frozen and wet longer. Zones 6–9 in lower valleys and deserts warm early and swing quickly from cool to hot and dry. This guide helps pros and serious DIYers match fertilizers, weed control, seed, gear, watering, and pruning tools to that mix of altitude, sun, and low humidity.
- - January 12, 2026 - 8 min read
Spring landscaping in the Southeast demands precision. This guide matches fertilizers, weed control, watering tools, and pruning gear to your zone's clay soils, humidity, and storm season.





