Hooper stretches across the county's southwestern flats out toward the Great Salt Lake, a fast-growing mix of new subdivisions and old farm ground. Felter Landscape builds complete yards here, where the wind off the lake and the sandy soil shape every plan.
Hooper occupies the low, flat southwestern edge of Weber County, running out toward the Great Salt Lake wetlands where former farmland is steadily filling with new subdivisions. The terrain is dead level and the soils trend sandy and loamy, draining quickly but holding little moisture without help. Its position near the lake means open exposure and real wind across the flats, which dries lawns and stresses irrigation. At roughly 4,300 feet in Zone 6b, it shares the valley season, but the lakeside wind and bare new-build lots make efficient irrigation and full-scope installs the defining work here.
Complete new-build installs from bare dirt for Hooper's growing subdivisions
Wind-aware sprinkler systems engineered for sandy soil near the Great Salt Lake
Premium sod and grading to establish lawns that hold up to the open lakeside flats
What we build in Hooper
Hooper landscaping questions
The wind off the lake dries out my Hooper yard. What helps?
Smart irrigation and the right plants. We design sprinkler zones that account for the open lakeside wind, often watering early to cut evaporation, and choose hardy, drought-tolerant species so the yard holds up instead of scorching on the flats.
My Hooper subdivision lot is brand new. Can you do the whole thing?
Yes, start to finish. New Hooper lots come as bare graded dirt, so we handle the full scope: design, grading, irrigation built for sandy soil, hardscape, and sod, leaving you a finished yard rather than a piecemeal one.
We also serve nearby:
Ready to start your Hooper project?
Free consultation, 3D design, and a fixed quote before any work begins.
