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When Duty Calls Home: How National Guard and Reserve Families Navigate Yard Care During Deployment

June 15, 2026 · I Want To Mow Your Lawn

The Double Life of Part-Time Service

A National Guard member leaves for a two-week mobilization in July. Before departure, the lawn is mowed, the gutters are clear, and the exterior looks managed. But mobilization often stretches longer than expected. By August, the grass has grown thick. By September, weeds have claimed the flower beds. The family is stretched thin—one parent working full-time, children in school, financial resources tight—and yard maintenance has slipped to the bottom of an already overwhelming to-do list.

This scenario plays out across thousands of American households. As of fiscal year 2024, there were 427,361 National Guard members serving in all 50 states, Washington D.C., and three U.S. territories. Many hold civilian jobs or attend school while serving. For these families, the challenge of maintaining a home during deployment is neither fully recognized nor easily solved.

The Hidden Complexity of Part-Time Deployment

The word “part-time” can be misleading. While National Guard members are generally required to perform one weekend of training each month and two weeks of training each year, the reality on the ground is far more complex. Deployments happen. Emergency activations happen. And when they do, the family left behind doesn’t simply pause civilian life.

Unlike service members stationed at active-duty installations—where family support centers, base services, and military community understanding are built in—National Guard and Reserve families are geographically dispersed throughout civilian neighborhoods. They return to the civilian workforce, where understanding of deployment is limited. Neighbors may not recognize the military sacrifice. Employers may not fully accommodate the unique demands. And community support systems rarely account for the specific burdens these families carry.

Add to this the fact that financial strain remains the most persistent challenge facing military families, and yard maintenance—which costs money to hire out and time to manage—becomes another item that gets deprioritized.

The Isolation Problem

Research from the 2025 Military Family Lifestyle Survey reveals a sobering truth: only 53% of military families report feeling a sense of belonging in their local communities. Among those who don’t feel connected, only 32% believe their neighbors truly appreciate their sacrifices. Even more telling: only 16% feel their community is prepared to support them during times of crisis.

A deployed service member’s family may be physically present in a civilian neighborhood, but emotionally and practically isolated. The yard grows. Code enforcement notices arrive. Stress compounds. And rarely does a neighbor knock on the door and offer help—because the deployment itself may not be visible or widely known.

Why Yard Care Matters More Than You Might Think

Yard maintenance might seem like a minor concern compared to the emotional weight of deployment. But it’s not. An overgrown yard can trigger code violations, fines, and additional financial pressure on families already stretched thin. It can become a source of shame or anxiety—a visible symbol of struggle in the neighborhood. And practically speaking, when a family is managing a deployment, coordinating contractors, budgeting for services, or even finding the energy to mow becomes another task that pulls focus from what matters: staying connected to the deployed family member and maintaining stability at home.

Free yard care relief removes one burden during an already difficult season. It says, without words, that the community sees the sacrifice and wants to help.

What Community Support Can Look Like

I Want To Mow Your Lawn connects volunteers across all 50 states with neighbors who need free lawn and exterior home care relief. The organization works with older adults, veterans, and neighbors in need—including military families navigating deployment. A volunteer showing up to mow the lawn or clear the yard isn’t a handout; it’s temporary, practical relief during a specific season of strain.

For a National Guard or Reserve family, this kind of support can matter tremendously. It’s one less thing to worry about. It’s recognition that the sacrifice is real and that the community cares.

How to Help

If a National Guard or Reserve family lives nearby and is managing a deployment, consider offering direct help—or connecting them with free resources. IWTMYL’s network of 1,800+ volunteers stands ready to help. Families can request support, and volunteers can find opportunities to serve in their own neighborhoods.

Ready to volunteer? Join the movement. Or explore the MOW app (available on the App Store) to discover yard care needs near you and connect directly with neighbors who need relief.

Small acts of help during deployment season create ripples of stability that last long after the service member returns home.

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Deep Dive

Yard Care 101 for Deployment Season: A Maintenance Guide for Military Families Under Strain

When a service member deploys, yard maintenance becomes one more impossible task. This guide walks families through realistic options—from minimal upkeep during mobilization to quick recovery when duties ease—plus how to connect with free relief resources.

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