Imagine you hired a Lawn and Gardening Service in El Cajon that leaves your yard looking fabulous. Imagine not worrying about working in the yard over the weekend. You have come to the right place because we are the El Cajon Gardening Service you need. We have many clients in El Cajon. We service this area on Thursdays and Fridays every week. 🙂
Setting up your service is super easy! Just click here to go to our service page and let us know if you want us there every week or every other week. It’s that simple. Or give us a call at 619-440-3762
“Our Gardening Service and Landscape Maintenance include:
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- mowing and edging
- cleaning plant beds
- trimming bushes and shrubs
- trimming ground cover
- pruning low-hanging branches from trees
Mueller Landscape is a full-service landscape maintenance company. We currently offer Gardening Services, Tree Trimming, Irrigation Repairs, Fertilizing, and one-time Yard Clean-Ups.
Sunset Climate Zone 23 for El Cajon Landscaping
El Cajon is a city in San Diego County, California, nestled in a valley surrounded by mountains; the city has acquired the nickname “The Big Box.” Its name originated similarly from the Spanish phrase “el cajón,” which means “the box” or “the drawer.” The city has a total area of 14.4 square miles, all land. It is bordered by San Diego and La Mesa on the west, Spring Valley on the south, Santee on the north, and unincorporated San Diego County on the east. It includes the neighborhoods of Fletcher Hills, Bostonia, and Rancho San Diego. El Cajon encompasses areas of Mediterranean climate and semi-arid climate. As a result, it is often described as an “arid Mediterranean.”
Like many inland areas in Southern California, the climate varies dramatically within short distances, creating a variety of microclimates. El Cajon’s climate has greater extremes compared to coastal San Diego. The farther east from the coast, the more arid the climate gets until one reaches the mountains, where precipitation increases due to orographic uplift.
El Cajon is designated Sunset Climate Zone 23, one of the most favored areas in North America for growing subtropical plants; Zone 23 has always been Southern California’s best zone for avocados. Frosts don’t amount to much here because Pacific Ocean weather dominates 85 percent of the time; interior air rules only 15 percent of the time. On that 15% of days when hot, dry Santa Ana winds blow, Zone 23 lacks either the summer heat or the winter cold necessary to grow pears, most apples, and most peaches. But it enjoys enough heat to put the sweetness in ‘Valencia’ oranges—but not enough for ‘Washington’ naval oranges, which must be grown farther inland. Temperatures are mild here, but severe winters descend at times.
Average lows range from 43 to 48°F, while extreme lows average from 34 to 27°F.
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Call us at (619) 440-3762 or Click Here to sign up online.