Power Brooming.
Flat turf, standing back up.
Traffic, heat, furniture, and pets press turf blades down. Power brooming lifts the pile so the lawn looks groomed instead of worn out.

What the finished work actually looks like.

The full visit, step by step.
- Turfmatic power brooming across traffic paths
- Blade revival for matted or crushed sections
- Debris loosened from the fiber base
- Final grooming pass for a consistent lay
Best for turf that needs more than a rinse.
Patio paths, dog runs, play spaces, and putting greens
Turf that feels packed down underfoot
Lawns that look darker in traffic lanes
Flat turf usually has a traffic story.
Power brooming is for the paths people and pets use every day. The difference is visible because flattened blades stop catching light evenly. We read the grain, work against the matting, and bring the surface back toward a groomed, upright finish without making the visit bigger than it needs to be.
Most matting is concentrated. A typical Mesquite backyard has a few obvious wear paths: the strip between the patio and the gate, the corner near the BBQ, the loop the dog runs every morning, the patch where the patio furniture sits all summer. Those are the lanes that read darker from a distance because the laid-over blades reflect light differently than the upright pile around them. The rest of the yard is usually fine and does not need aggressive work.
A Turfmatic power brush has a counter-rotating head that lifts the pile mechanically without ripping the fibers. We work against the lay direction in the flattened sections, then run a finishing pass to even out the grain. On older turf the result is more dramatic because there is more compression to release. On newer turf in heavy-traffic spots, brooming is a maintenance call, not a rescue. Either way, the visit is sized to what the yard actually needs.
- Photos of the flattest traffic lanes
- Whether furniture or pets caused the matting
- Age of the turf if known
- Any seams or edges lifting nearby
- Whether the lanes look darker than the surrounding turf
- How long since the last professional brooming

Tri state route. Mesquite based.
Power Brooming in plain language
What does power brooming actually fix? Flat turf, standing back up.
Traffic, heat, furniture, and pets press turf blades down. Power brooming lifts the pile so the lawn looks groomed instead of worn out.
Green Revive Turf Care
How we handle the visit.
Inspect the grain and traffic direction of the turf.
Brush against the lay to lift matted blades.
Work the high-traffic sections more aggressively.
Finish with a visual pass so the yard reads evenly.
Not sure which service fits? Send photos and we will tell you.
Questions about power brooming, answered straight.
What equipment do you use?
Turfmatic for the power brushing and turf vacuum. OxyTurf for the deodorizer and sanitizer. The full kit is what makes the before-and-after difference.
Can old artificial turf actually be saved?
Most of the time, yes. Matting, dust, pet odor, and faded color can all be addressed without replacing the turf. If the backing is failing or the seams have come apart, that is a different conversation, and we will tell you straight.
How often should I have it done?
It depends on pets, traffic, and how much dust your yard catches. Most homeowners do a deep clean once or twice a year. Households with multiple dogs do better on a quarterly plan.