lawn reform

Susan from Blue Planet Gar­den Blog dropped me a note about a new ini­tia­tive she was involved in. Lawn Reform, a col­lab­o­ra­tion of nine blog­gers from around the US, is try­ing to reshape how we all think about lawns and their roles in gardens.

If you’re not already out there cry­ing, “Kill your lawn” (or at least some­thing like “Reduce the size of your lawn”) the site lists six good rea­sons to think again about the green mon­ster out­side your house, “Pol­luted Water­ways,” “Pesticide-Treated Lawns that are Toxic to Humans and Pets,” “Guz­zling of Water, a Resource in Short Sup­ply,” “Single-Species Mono­cul­tures that Pro­vide Noth­ing for Wildlife,” “Fre­quent Mow­ing, with Air Pol­lu­tion” and “Overtreated and Over­wa­tered Lawns that Waste $$ and Keep Ask­ing for More.”

To that list I’d add a more philo­soph­i­cal rea­son to rethink a green expanse, the idea that a lawn rep­re­sents some weird macho dom­i­na­tion of all things nat­ural, that nature isn’t accept­able to live with until it’s been chopped to smithereens and reshaped into some­thing that’s a pale imi­ta­tion of itself. Start with this mind­set and it’s not a a big leap to Silent Spring, global warm­ing or The Bomb.

To promo Lawn Reform, Susan is host­ing an “I used to have a lawn but now I have…” con­test, where you’re encour­aged to sub­mit pho­tos and sto­ries related to trans­form­ing lawn into some­thing else. The win­ners, drawn at ran­dom, will receive a copy of John Greenlee’s new book, The Amer­i­can Meadow Gar­den: Cre­at­ing a Nat­ural Alter­na­tive to the Tra­di­tional Lawn.

Dead Grass

I’ll share a cou­ple of life-after-lawn pho­tos of my own. The newest expanse, which might be described as “I used to have a lawn but now I have dead grass,” is a fairly unat­trac­tive alter­na­tive to lawn, a patch of unwa­tered grass that’s in part a response to our cur­rent water rationing. This is prob­a­bly noth­ing that’s going to make any­one do some­thing else with their lawn, but it’s ugly enough that we’ll have to do some­thing about it.

Front yard overview

The sec­ond shot is an overview of my front yard, taken dur­ing the unflat­ter­ing light of mid­day in the heat of Sep­tem­ber, some­thing like 18 years after the we took out the front lawn. At the time we, along with much of South­ern Cal­i­for­nia, were into a lot of South African species, so there are a cou­ple dif­fer­ent forms of a stately tree aloe, Aloe bar­berae (a.k.a. A. bain­seii) to the right, along with a big mound of Aloe arborescens. To the left is a big clump of the maligned red foun­tain grass from far­ther up in the African con­ti­nent; it’s a plant that peo­ple tell you not to plant because of its inva­sive ten­den­cies, although this ver­sion hasn’t self-sown in two decades. (Other ver­sions of foun­tain grass, how­ever, can take over an ecosys­tem in no time.)

We’ve tried var­i­ous Cal­i­for­nia natives over the years in this space. The most suc­cess­ful has been the row of coy­ote bush brush cas­cad­ing over the front wall, Bac­cha­ris pilu­laris ‘Pigeon Point.’ It’s a plant that’s been said to have a ten year use­ful life. For us it’s dou­bled that num­ber of years, though it’ll prob­a­bly get renewed this plant­ing sea­son. Another cor­ner of the ex-lawn, not shown here, fea­tures some buck­wheats and plants from the Chan­nel Islands. They’re fill­ing in nicely as they pro­vide more of a Cal­i­for­nia fla­vor to the yard and soften a yard that used to be a lot more about succulents.

Front yard succulents

Before we under­took this big lawn replace­ment we asked a ques­tion about what we really used the front lawn for. Mostly we walked through it on the way to the front door. Why not put big mound­ing accent plants where we’d never walk? And in the place of where we used to have one species of grass that required lots of water and pam­per­ing we now have sev­eral dozen species of plants, almost all of which will make it through the sum­mer with next to no addi­tional water­ing. Greater diver­sity, check; less water use, check. The project also suc­ceeds in all the other ways Lawn Reform sug­gests a lawn replace­ment would succeed.

But that’s just one suc­cess story. There are prob­a­bly as many dif­fer­ent ways to replace a lawn as there are gar­den­ers. What would you do?

September 22 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape design | Tags: | 11 Comments »