One of the main problems faced by communication systems is the presence of skip-zones in the targeted areas. With the deployment of the fifth-generation mobile network, solutions are proposed to solve the signal loss due to obstruction by buildings, mountains, and atmospheric or weather conditions. Among these solutions, re-configurable intelligent surfaces (RIS), which are newly proposed modules, may be exploited to reflect the incident signal in the direction of dead zones, increase communication coverage, and make the channel smarter and controllable. In this paper, we tackle the skip-zone problem in near-terrestrial free-space optical (nT-FSO) systems using RIS. We carry out a performance analysis of RIS-aided nT-FSO links affected by turbulence and pointing errors, for both heterodyne detection (HD) and intensity modulation-direct detection (IM/DD) techniques. Turbulence is modeled using the Gamma-Gamma (G-G) distribution. We analyze the model and provide exact closed-form expressions of the probability density function, cumulative distribution function, and moment generating function of the end-to-end signal-to-noise ratio, $\gamma$. Capitalizing on these statistics, we evaluate the system performance through the outage probability, $ P_{out} $, ergodic channel capacity, $\overline{C}$, and average bit-error-rate, $\overline{P}_b$, for selected binary modulation schemes. Numerical results obtained for different turbulence levels and pointing errors confirm that the HD technique outperforms IM/DD even in RIS-aided nT-FSO systems. These results also show that using a blue color offers better channel capacity and communication performance compared to red and green colors.