Is Palmetto Sod the Right Choice for Your Shaded New Orleans Yard?
A premium St. Augustine cultivar bred for shade, finer texture, and lower maintenance. The correct choice for yards under heavy oak tree coverage.
Why Palmetto Works in New Orleans Yards
Palmetto is a cultivar of St. Augustine, not a separate species. What makes it different is what it was bred to do: perform in lower light conditions than standard St. Augustine varieties like Floratam. If your yard sits under a significant live oak canopy, Floratam will thin out and fail within one to two seasons. Palmetto stays dense. It is one of four warm-season grass varieties Big Easy Sod installs across the New Orleans metro, and for shaded NOLA yards, it is typically the correct answer.
New Orleans neighborhoods like Uptown, the Garden District, Mid-City, and Lakeview are defined by mature oak trees. These trees create beautiful yards and significant shade. Palmetto was developed specifically for these conditions. Its finer blade texture and semi-dwarf growth habit also mean less mowing than Floratam, an advantage during a nine-month Gulf South growing season.
Palmetto still needs some sun. True deep shade with less than two hours of direct light will challenge any warm-season grass. Big Easy Sod assesses your yard's sun pattern before recommending Palmetto or any other variety. Compare all grass types we install if you are deciding between Palmetto and standard St. Augustine.
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What We Offer
Shade Performance
Performs in as little as three to four hours of direct sun per day. Standard Floratam requires six or more. The difference is measurable in neighborhoods with mature oak canopy.
Finer Blade Texture
Semi-dwarf growth habit and a softer, finer blade than Floratam. Better appearance in residential settings where aesthetic quality matters.
Cold Hardiness
Handles brief cold snaps better than Floratam. An advantage for properties on the Northshore or in areas that see occasional hard freezes.
Lower Mowing Demand
Semi-dwarf growth means Palmetto grows slower than standard St. Augustine. Fewer mowing events per season during a nine-month NOLA growing calendar.
The Big Easy Standard
No mystery. No runaround. Here's exactly what happens when you call Big Easy Sod.
Free Consultation
Tell us about your yard. Or we'll come out and look at it ourselves. We assess your soil, drainage, sun exposure, and give you an honest quote. No pressure, no mystery pricing.
We Prep and Install
Our crew handles everything: removing old turf, grading the soil, laying the sod correctly the first time. Most residential installs are done in a single day.
Enjoy Your Lawn
We walk you through care instructions, answer your questions, and leave the yard clean. Then we get out of your way and let the grass do its thing.
Don't Take Our Word for It
Real results from New Orleans homeowners and property managers.
Other Ways We Can Help
Bermuda Grass
Best for full-sun, high-traffic yards. Fastest establishing grass we install.
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Palmetto Sod: Common Questions
Palmetto is a cultivar of St. Augustine grass, bred specifically for improved shade tolerance, finer blade texture, and a semi-dwarf growth habit. It is not a separate species. The practical difference is that Palmetto performs well with three to four hours of direct sun per day, while standard Floratam St. Augustine requires six or more. In New Orleans yards with mature oak canopy, that difference determines whether the lawn survives.
Palmetto performs well with three to four hours of direct sun daily and tolerates filtered or dappled light for the rest of the day. This covers most New Orleans yards under a partial live oak canopy. Yards with true deep shade, less than two hours of direct sun, will challenge any warm-season grass including Palmetto. Big Easy Sod evaluates your specific sun exposure before recommending it.
In shaded conditions, Palmetto establishes more slowly than it would in full sun. Plan for three to four weeks before light foot traffic and six weeks before regular use. Consistent daily watering during the establishment phase is essential. Shaded yards retain moisture longer, which means overwatering is a more common mistake with Palmetto than underwatering after the first week.
Yes, in two ways. Its semi-dwarf growth habit means it grows slower than Floratam, which reduces mowing frequency during a nine-month NOLA growing season. It also requires less fertilizer than full-sun St. Augustine, particularly in shaded yards where less growth means lower nutrient demand. Two to three fertilization events per year is typically sufficient.
Palmetto has moderate flood tolerance, similar to standard St. Augustine, and can handle short periods of standing water better than Bermuda or Centipede. It performs reasonably well in NOLA clay soil as long as drainage is adequate. Yards that flood frequently or stay waterlogged for extended periods after rain need a drainage assessment before any sod installation, regardless of grass type.
Large patch fungus is the primary threat, and it is more common in shaded yards where humidity stays higher and air circulation is lower. It appears in fall and early spring as circular brown patches with yellow edges. Mowing at the correct height, avoiding evening watering, and not over-fertilizing are the three strongest preventive measures. Chinch bugs, the main St. Augustine pest, are less common in shaded Palmetto yards but still possible in areas that receive direct afternoon sun.
Get Your Free Palmetto Sod Quote
Tell us about your yard and we will get back to you within 24 hours. Free assessment, honest quote, no runaround.
- Free, no-pressure assessment
- Soil and shade conditions evaluated
- NOLA-specific variety recommendation
- Response within 24 hours