Landscaping & Snow Removal in Sedalia, CO
JLS Landscape & Sprinkler is headquartered right here in Sedalia at 7265 Reynolds Drive. No drive time, no delays -- your local landscape and snow management partner since 1975.
Your Neighbor on Reynolds Drive
Sedalia is more than our mailing address -- it's where JLS was founded in 1975 and where our equipment yard, office, and crew staging area sit today at 7265 Reynolds Drive, just off Highway 85 at the northern gateway to Douglas County. When you hire JLS for landscape work in Sedalia, our crews are literally minutes away.
This unincorporated community straddling the Douglas County-Jefferson County line sits at approximately 6,100 feet elevation along the base of the Palmer Divide. Sedalia's landscape character is distinctly different from the suburban subdivisions to the north and south. Properties here tend to be larger -- 5 to 35+ acre parcels with a mix of native grassland, Gambel oak, Ponderosa pine, and irrigated turf around structures. Many Sedalia residents keep horses, manage livestock pastures, or maintain natural open space that requires specialized care including field mowing, fire mitigation, and fence-line vegetation management.
The Indian Creek corridor running through Sedalia creates a unique micro-environment with cottonwood stands, riparian vegetation, and seasonal flooding that affects landscape drainage and planting decisions. Properties along Jarre Creek Road, Perry Park Road, and the Reynolds Drive corridor face different soil conditions than the clay-heavy subdivisions in Castle Rock -- rockier, thinner topsoil with better drainage but poorer water retention. Our 50 years of working these specific conditions means we know which species thrive here and which ones struggle.
Sedalia at a Glance
Population: ~300 (unincorporated)
Elevation: ~6,100 ft
County: Douglas County (census-designated place)
Water: Individual wells (most properties)
JLS Office Distance: 0 minutes -- we are here
Climate Zone: USDA Zone 5a-5b
Key Features: Cherokee Ranch & Castle, Indian Creek, Perry Park, Gabriel's Restaurant
Annual Snowfall: ~65 inches
Services Available in Sedalia
Every service tailored to Sedalia's larger lot sizes, well water systems, mixed terrain, and proximity to wildland areas.
Landscape Maintenance
Mowing, pruning, bed maintenance, and seasonal cleanup for Sedalia properties -- from small residential lots to multi-acre estates along Perry Park Road.
Fire Mitigation
Sedalia's proximity to the Wildland-Urban Interface makes defensible space critical. Tree thinning, brush clearing, and Zone 1-3 vegetation management for properties along the foothills.
Irrigation Services
System design, repair, and maintenance for well-fed and municipal irrigation systems. Smart controller upgrades to maximize water efficiency on Sedalia's well-dependent properties.
Snow & Ice Management
Our plows are staged right here in Sedalia. When a storm hits, we're on the road immediately -- no commute, no delay. Highway 85, Jarre Creek Road, and local access roads served first.
Field Mowing
Acreage mowing, weed abatement, and pasture management for Sedalia's larger rural and equestrian properties. Commercial-grade equipment for rough terrain and native grass.
Sprinkler Repair
Head replacement, valve repair, line fixes, and backflow testing. Well-pump-fed systems require different pressure management than municipal -- we handle both.
Landscape Challenges Unique to Sedalia
Sedalia occupies a transitional zone between the plains grassland to the east and the forested foothills to the west. This creates a diverse set of landscape management challenges that most suburban landscape companies never encounter.
Well water dependency defines irrigation management in Sedalia. Unlike municipal-served properties in Castle Rock or Parker, most Sedalia homes rely on wells with limited flow rates. Irrigation systems must be designed for lower gallons-per-minute output, with careful zone sizing and scheduling to avoid drawing down the well. We design systems that respect your well's capacity while keeping your landscape healthy.
Wildfire exposure is a constant reality for Sedalia properties adjacent to Roxborough State Park, the Cherokee Ranch, and the Pike National Forest foothills. Homes along Perry Park Road, Upper Lake Gulch, and the Highway 105 corridor sit squarely in the Wildland-Urban Interface. Defensible space maintenance is an annual requirement -- not a one-time project.
Wildlife interaction shapes landscape choices. Deer, elk, and bear are regular visitors to Sedalia properties. Plant selection must account for browse pressure from deer and elk that will strip unprotected ornamental plantings. We use native and wildlife-resistant species that coexist with the local wildlife population rather than fighting it.
Soil variability is dramatic. Properties along Indian Creek have alluvial soils with decent organic content. Move uphill toward the mesa tops and you hit rocky, thin soils with poor water retention. A property can have three different soil types across a few hundred feet. Our crews adapt planting, grading, and irrigation to match what's actually in the ground.
We Live Here. We Work Here.
JLS doesn't commute to Sedalia -- we are Sedalia. Our office, equipment yard, and crew staging area are at 7265 Reynolds Drive. When a February blizzard drops 18 inches overnight, our plows are already on the road before Denver-based companies even load their trucks. When your irrigation system springs a leak on a July afternoon, we're five minutes away -- not 45.
- Headquartered at 7265 Reynolds Dr, Sedalia since 1975
- Zero drive time -- fastest response in the area for emergencies
- 50+ years managing Sedalia's unique terrain and conditions
- Deep knowledge of well water irrigation, wildfire risk, and rural property needs
- Active member of the Larkspur Chamber (Sedalia's closest business association)
- Equipment staged on-site for immediate storm response
Sedalia Landscaping FAQ
Yes. Many Sedalia properties are 5 to 35+ acres with a mix of irrigated landscape, native grassland, and wooded areas. We provide field mowing, fire mitigation, and landscape maintenance scaled to large properties with rural terrain. Our equipment includes tractor-mounted mowers and brush cutters designed for the conditions found on Sedalia acreage.
Absolutely. Well-fed irrigation systems require different design and management than municipal-pressure systems. We size zones to match your well's flow rate, install pressure regulation where needed, and program controllers to avoid drawing down the well during peak household use times. Many Sedalia properties have wells producing 5-15 GPM -- more than adequate for a properly designed system.
Yes -- critically important. Sedalia sits at the base of the Palmer Divide foothills with Gambel oak, Ponderosa pine, and dry grassland surrounding most properties. The Wildland-Urban Interface designation applies to much of the Sedalia area. Maintaining defensible space protects your property, satisfies insurance requirements, and may qualify for Colorado's fire mitigation tax deduction.
Immediately. Our equipment is staged at our Reynolds Drive location in Sedalia, which means our plows are on the road at the first accumulation trigger. For contracted commercial and residential accounts in Sedalia, response time is measured in minutes, not hours. This is the fastest snow response available in the Sedalia area.
Sedalia's 6,100-foot elevation places it in USDA Zone 5a-5b with well-drained soils that vary from rocky hillsides to creek-bottom alluvial. We recommend native and wildlife-resistant species including blue grama grass, Karl Foerster feather reed grass, rabbitbrush, Apache plume, Russian sage, and Pawnee Buttes sand cherry. For irrigated areas, Kentucky bluegrass and fine fescue blends perform well with proper management.