Tag: low-maintenance yards

Eco-Friendly Weeding Tip: Pressure Washing

I have come to love our pressure washer. We end up using it for so many things. Some people might be fine with the water pressure from their regular hose but since we are on a well system, the water pressure can be pretty anemic. 

January’s Theme: Cleaning

Since January is generally a time most people think of fresh starts and clean slates, I thought it would be appropriate to devote a month to the topic of cleaning. Cleaning is in a different but related category from organizing. “Organized” implies a skeleton of 

Guest Blogger Kathy Jentz with 9 Options for Zero Lawn Landscaping Designs

by Kathy Jentz, editor of Washington Gardener Magazine.

We’re coming up on the season for lawn renewal. Before you go to all that trouble, take a few minutes to consider replacing all that turf with some easier, more attractive, and Earth-friendly alternatives.

Maintaining a lawn of turf grass is one of the most expensive and time-consuming uses for your land. Constant mowing, fertilizing, weeding, watering, re-seeding, edging, and aerating not only eat up your resources, but it can be harsh on the environment. Lawns do not absorb water run-off as well as planting beds and many of the chemicals you use to maintain it are toxic to the nearby streambeds and Chesapeake Bay.

Our DC area lawns are not necessarily the green dream we envision. For a better part of the summer and again in the winter, your yard is a brown mess. In additions, with encroaching weeds and attacking insects (such as grubs), the dream of a solid green field of glossy grass is next to impossible to achieve.

Why put yourself through the stress and heartache? Here are a few ideas to get you started in reclaiming that lawn for better use:

1)  Expand your planting beds and establish new ones. Fill them with a mix of perennials, annuals, bulbs, ornamental trees, and shrubs. Once established the maintenance is minimal, just cut back the perennials in late winter and replant the annuals in late spring.

2) Cover slopes with shrubs that grow to form solid plantings. You’ll be relieved not to have to push a mower up and down that hill ever again. For full sun look at groundcover roses and for slopes in shade try out cotoneaster. Both will give you year-round interest and will flower nicely each spring.

"Cotoneaster." Photo by Muffet. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

"Shrub Groundcover Rose 'Kent'." Photo by Drew Avery. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

3) Replace wide-swaths of lawn with green ground covers: ajuga, vinca, ivy, and pachysandra do well here under many growing conditions. Bishop’s Weed, hardy Geranium, and Lamium are all also nice lawn alternatives especially under shade trees. Others to try include different varieties of sedums, lily of the valley, liriope, daylilies, creeping phlox, and creeping jenny.

"Ajuga Reptans." Photo by belgianchocolate. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

"Lesser Periwinkle (Vinca Minor)." Photo by Phil Sellens. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

"Pachysandra terminalis." Photo by Carl E. Lewis. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

"Ridolfia segetum (Bishop's Weed)." Photo by aviplot. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

4) Get trendy. One of the newest ground cover fads is moss. From a distance, you’ll achieve the same solid green look without anywhere near the maintenance. Moss is an ideal lawn alternative for areas in deep shade that stay moist such as near your gutter drains. You can also lay it out in interesting color patterns and styles. For a touch of whimsy, try a checkerboard or plaid.

"Moss garden (Hondo-ji(temple), Matsudo city Chiba-ken(Prefecture), Japan)." Photo by TANAKA Juuyoh. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

5)  Go to back to basics: growing your own edibles at home is a vast improvement on constant lawn grooming. Start a vegetable patch, plant a fruit tree, or an herb garden. Get the kids involved and make it a family project.

6)  Dig in and build a water feature. A pond, waterfall, or stream-bed is one of the most charming and desirable elements you can add to your home landscape. You’ll soon find that your water feature is a gathering place for friends, family, and many types of wildlife as well.

"Lee Garden Pond (at the National Arboretum)." Photo by cliff1066. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

7)  Map out hard-scaping. Is there a space where lawn is being worn into a natural path from foot traffic? Stop fighting it and go with the flow. Put in pavers, stepping stones, or formal brick walkways. Line it with interesting plants. Add a bench or hammock at convenient resting points.

"ipe deck, grass and grid." Photo by RO/LU. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

8 ) Let it go wild. Establish a wildlife habitat by re-seeding part of your property with native wildflowers. Joe-Pye weed, black-eyed susans, and goldenrods are just a few of the flower seeds you can buy by the pound and grow to attract birds, bees, and butterflies to your yard.

"Joe Pye Weed." Photo by Muffet. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

9) Consider other uses for your lawn. Look at places where your turf grass or other ground covers never get established. If nothing will grow in an area, maybe that is the place for your deck/patio, children’s playhouse, compost pile, storage shed, or wood pile.

"In the Patio de los Leones." Photo by amerune. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

"Trellis and Deck." Photo by Jeremy Levine Design. From the Flickr Creative Commons.

Go ahead and try one of these lawn alternatives out this weekend. Once you get started reclaiming that sod for better uses, you won’t want to stop!

Kathy has worked diligently to rid her yard of turf grass and is now down to just one small patch that is slowly being overtaken by moss. She is editor of Washington Gardener magazine (www.WashingtonGardener.com) and a long-time DC area gardening enthusiast. Kathy can be reached at washingtongardener@rcn.com and welcomes your gardening questions.

# # #

P.S.  From Anne:  For more total lawn replacement landscape designs, check out this Flickr Photostream from Sustainable Gardener.

Has Kathy inspired you to replace some or all of your lawn?  Please share in the comments.