Mira Mesa Gardening


Mira Mesa Gardening

Mira Mesa Lawn Care

Mira Mesa Gardening – Basic (Lawn) and Full (Lawn and Garden) Package Prices

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NOTES AND INCENTIVES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS:

Lot Size.  

All lawn and landscape pricing is based on lot size up to 5000 sq. ft. and does not include slopes.

Customer Referal Incentives.

We offer lawn and landscape referral incentives. You can receive up to $50.00 cash for referring neighbors and friends once you become one of our lawn and landscape customers.

Workers Comp and Liability Insurance.

By hiring us, you can have peace of mind that you are fully protected with regard to workers-comp and liability insurance issues. All our lawn and landscape workers are fully covered.

Mira Mesa Gardening Quality

You will receive the best lawn and landscape service in the county at the fairest possible price.

Sunset Climate Zone 21 for Mira Mesa Gardening

Mira Mesa is a community and neighborhood in the city of San Diego, California. The city-recognized Mira Mesa Community Plan Area is roughly bounded by Interstate 15 on the east, Interstate 805 on the west, the Los Peñasquitos Canyon on the north and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar on the south. Most of the community plan area is referred to as Mira Mesa; the community plan area also includes the neighborhoods of Sorrento Valley and Sorrento Mesa. Around the time of World War II the area now called Mira Mesa was used by the United States Army as a test area. Just west of U.S. Route 395 was a Navy auxiliary landing field that was known locally as Hourglass Field because the layout of the runways was a single piece of asphalt in the shape of an hourglass. The Navy also used the surrounding area as a bombing range.

Mira Mesa is classified Sunset Climate Zone 21, and gets weather influenced by both maritime air and interior air. In these transitional areas, climate boundaries often move 20 miles in 24 hours with the movements of these air masses. Your garden can be in ocean air or a high fog one day and in a mass of interior air (perhaps a drying Santa Ana wind from the desert) the next day. Because temperatures rarely drop very far below 30°F, this is fine citrus growing country. Zone 21 is also the mildest zone that gets sufficient winter chilling for most forms of lilacs and certain other chill-loving plants. Extreme lows—the kind you see once every 10 or 20 years—Zone 21 averages 28 to 25°F. All-time record lows in Climate Zone 21 were 27 to 17°F.