turf battle

When we moved into the house twenty years ago one of the first things we did was to take out the front lawn. South­ern Cal­i­for­nia is a desert, and it seemed like the envi­ron­men­tally sen­si­tive thing to do. And besides, there are piles of inter­est­ing drought-tolerant plants, and replac­ing the lawn let us sam­ple some of the neat plants from South­ern Cal­i­for­nia and around the globe that don’t require con­stant water­ing. Although it doesn’t look its absolute best with no added water, most of the front yard has endured most of the mid­dle of sum­mer with no rain or water­ing. The back yard, how­ever, has been a dif­fer­ent story.

Turf Battle Location

For the longest time the lawn area was some­thing like thirty feet square after you sub­tracted space devoted to walk­ways, a green­house, a deck, a shade bed, and a big zone for veg­eta­bles. The lawn, scrappy-looking much of the year and noth­ing I had any inter­est in main­tain­ing, was John’s indul­gence that I lived with grudg­ingly, know­ing that his Snap­per lawn­mower from his yard main­te­nance busi­ness days thirty years ago wouldn’t last for­ever. Even after we pushed into the back yard with a room addi­tion a cou­ple years ago, reduc­ing the lawn to less than half its orig­i­nal size, John was still attached to the green waste­land, still insist­ing it was worth his trou­ble to maintain.

Then, three weeks ago, it finally hap­pened. The engine on the Snap­per died, and John decided he didn’t want to replace it. An ad on Craigslist and a day or two and the mower found a new home, some guy with a lawn busi­ness who has other Snap­pers and wanted this one for parts.

I took the mower’s death as a sign from Gaia that it was time for the lawn to go. John took it as a sign that he needed a new machine. So the com­pro­mise was a battery-powered mower that didn’t have nearly the same pol­lu­tion pro­file as the old Snap­per. Bet­ter would have been a corded model, some­thing that would use the power directly and not waste it charg­ing bat­ter­ies. Bet­ter yet would have been a nice push model that uses noth­ing other than human umph. But I at least feel bet­ter that we’re cut­ting down on green­house gases. And at least the lawn is a low-water Saint Augus­tine, so it’s not gob­bling up the water other turf options would require.

Shop­ping for the mower then started to push another of my but­tons: boy­cotting items man­u­fac­tured in China. Every model we looked at was made there. I have noth­ing against the Chi­nese peo­ple, but its gov­ern­ment sup­ports repres­sion in Tibet and Burma (aka Myan­mar) so that I try to avoid buy­ing stuff made there when­ever pos­si­ble. (The Chi­nese Embassy knows I’m doing this, if they read their let­ters.) I lost that one too. Dang, it’s hard doing any­thing else some­times. Sarah Bon­giorni has a book, A Year With­out “Made in China,” in which she recounts her attempts for her fam­ily to go a year with­out pur­chas­ing any­thing made in China. She had so much trou­ble she could write a book about it.

Some talk­ing points and data on the pol­lu­tion from lawnmowers:

Lawn mow­ers and other machines with engines under 25 horse­power now account for 7 per­cent of California’s smog-forming emis­sions from mobile sources, the equiv­a­lent of more than 3 mil­lion cars, accord­ing to the Cal­i­for­nia Air Resources Board.–San Diego Union

Low-horsepower machines account for at least 10 per­cent of the nation’s smog-forming pol­lu­tion, which has been linked to res­pi­ra­tory and heart dis­ease, accord­ing to the EPA. A sin­gle lawn­mower emits as much pol­lu­tion in an hour as 50 cars dri­ving 20 miles.–Washington Post

As an exam­ple, mow­ing grass with a gaso­line pow­ered lawn­mower causes as much pol­lu­tion as oper­at­ing a car for 13 hours.–Senator Dianne Fein­stein cit­ing the EPA study

And…the good folks at Envi­ron­ment Canada have a nice online cal­cu­la­tor that lets you see a close approx­i­ma­tion of how much your mower pollutes.

April 27 2008 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | No Comments »