Thompson's Station sits right between Spring Hill and Franklin, and the lawns reflect it. Newer HOA builds share Spring Hill's graded-soil and gravel-contamination profile — boulevard strips run hot, Bermuda invades from hardscapes, Dallisgrass shows up from old construction straw. Mature corridors lean closer to Williamson County's profile: wild violet pressure, higher disease load in shaded sections, and the fungal pressure every fescue lawn here fights from May through August.
The treatment plan adapts to which side of that spectrum your lawn lives on. New builds typically run extra nitrogen year-round; established lawns often skip summer nitrogen entirely. Either way, the 28-day fungicide cycle runs the same — Middle Tennessee's climate doesn't negotiate on that one.