Every spring in Sherman and Denison, the same pattern repeats: homeowners wait until June, the lawn starts browning, they turn on the sprinklers for the first time all year, and three zones don’t work. By the time a repair crew can get out, the front lawn is already stressed.
Here’s the right timing and what a real spring sprinkler tune-up actually includes for Grayson County properties.
When to schedule
The right window for Sherman and Denison spring sprinkler work is mid-March through mid-April. That gives you:
- Past the last hard freeze (usually first week of March in Grayson County)
- Before the lawn needs heavy water (typically not until late April-May)
- Before peak season demand fills up every irrigation crew’s calendar
- Enough time to fix what’s broken before the first stretch of 90°F days
Schedule in February if you can. By March, every irrigation contractor in Grayson County is two weeks out minimum.
What a real spring tune-up includes
1. System pressurization
Slowly open the main valve and watch for hidden leaks. Frozen pipes from January don’t always leak immediately — small cracks open up under pressure. Watching the meter while the system is on with no zones running tells you if there’s a mainline leak.
2. Zone-by-zone walk
Every zone gets manually run while we walk the heads. We check:
- Heads that aren’t popping up (broken, clogged, or stuck)
- Heads spraying onto sidewalk, street, or house siding
- Missing heads from winter mower damage
- Tilted heads spraying the wrong direction
- Pressure problems (too low = poor coverage, too high = misting/wind drift)
- Coverage gaps where two zones don’t overlap properly
3. Controller reprogramming
Most controllers in Grayson County are set to whatever schedule was running last summer. Spring needs different timing — shorter runtimes, more days between cycles. A spring controller setup for Bermuda in Sherman or Denison usually runs:
- 2-3 days per week (Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday is common)
- 10-15 minutes per zone for spray heads
- 30-45 minutes per zone for rotor heads
- Pre-dawn start (4-5 AM)
By June we adjust to 4 days per week and longer runtimes. The point of the spring schedule is to wake the lawn up without forcing peak-summer water use too early.
4. Smart controller setup
If you have a Rachio, Hunter Hydrawise, or Rain Bird ESP-Me, spring is the time to confirm the Wi-Fi connection, update the zone descriptions, and verify the weather-based scheduling is enabled. Most homeowners installed the controller, then never opened the app again.
5. Backflow preventer check
Texas requires annual backflow testing for irrigation systems tied to municipal water. If your last backflow test was 2024, you’re due. We coordinate testing with licensed backflow inspectors.
6. Rain sensor / soil moisture sensor
If you have a rain sensor on the roof, check it’s wired in and not disabled. Most sensors fail silently within 5 years (sun rot on the cup or wire). If you have a soil moisture sensor, recalibrate it after winter.
Common spring problems we find
- Broken heads from mower or freeze damage — usually 2-4 per yard
- Controller batteries dead — wall power may be fine but battery backup is shot
- Zones that quit working due to wiring issues — squirrels, irrigation valve solenoid failure, corroded splice connections
- Wrong nozzles installed by previous “repair” — full-pattern heads in a quarter-pattern slot
- Drip lines clogged or broken — common in bed irrigation that ran all summer last year
Spring tune-up pricing in Sherman and Denison
Standard residential spring tune-up runs $150-$275 depending on system size (8 zones vs 16 zones) and what gets adjusted. That’s the labor — parts come on top if heads, valves, or controllers need replacement. Most yards need $50-$200 in parts during a tune-up. A complete system that hasn’t been touched in 3+ years can run $400-$700 in parts.
If we find a major problem (mainline leak, multiple failed valves), we’ll quote the repair separately before doing the work. No surprise bills.
Should I do this myself or call a pro?
If you have an 8-zone or smaller system, recent valves, and you’re comfortable diagnosing low-voltage wiring, DIY works. If you have a 12+ zone system, an older controller, or your last spring start-up was rough, get a tune-up. The cost of one zone running blind for a month during a Texas summer (dead grass, expensive water bills) usually exceeds the tune-up cost.
To schedule spring sprinkler service in Sherman, Denison, Pottsboro, or Van Alstyne, call (903) 462-0316 or see our Sherman sprinkler repair page.
FAQs
When should I do my spring sprinkler tune-up in Sherman?
Mid-March through mid-April is the right window in Sherman and Denison. Past the last hard freeze, before peak season demand, and enough lead time to fix problems before the first 90°F stretch. Schedule in February if you can to get on a crew’s calendar.
How much does a spring sprinkler tune-up cost in Denison?
Standard residential tune-up in Denison or Sherman runs $150-$275 for the labor, depending on zone count. Parts come on top — typical yards need $50-$200 in head and nozzle replacements. Systems that haven’t been touched in 3+ years can hit $400-$700 in parts.
Can I do my own spring sprinkler start-up?
If you have 8 or fewer zones, recent valves, and you’re comfortable troubleshooting low-voltage wiring, yes. If you have a 12+ zone system or your last start-up went badly, get professional help. One zone running blind through summer usually costs more in water and dead grass than the tune-up.
How often do sprinkler heads need replacement in Texas?
Most spray heads last 5-8 years before nozzles wear, internals weaken, or freeze damage breaks the body. Rotors last 8-12 years. Drip emitters clog faster — often every 2-3 years if not flushed. We replace 2-4 heads per tune-up on average in Grayson County.
Do you also do spring tune-up in Anna and McKinney?
Yes — we cover Collin County install and repair work. See our McKinney irrigation repair page for the full Collin coverage including spring start-ups.