Kiss Your Lawn Good-Bye

Tiarella cordifolia in flower

Tiarella cordifolia – one of my favorite lawn alternatives for shade.

Many homeowners would like to reduce the size of their lawns but they have no idea how to begin, what’s involved or what makes sense for their own gardens.

Let’s face it, while lawns are resource intensive, most of us have a basic idea of how to grow a lawn. But the idea of growing a ‘lawn alternative’ is foreign and seems difficult, maybe not even worth the effort.

Regardless of where you live, whether you garden in Connecticut , California or points in between, shrinking the size of your lawn is easier than your think.

Getting Started Kissing Your Lawn Good-Bye

♦ Easy Ways to Shrink Your Lawn ~ An article I wrote for the May/June edition of Connecticut Gardener magazine with all sorts of plants possibilities to use instead of lawn grass.

 

♦ Lawn Alternatives ~ A collection of posts on the Garden Designers Roundtable from garden bloggers across the country filled with ideas on how to green your garden and shrink your lawn all at the same time. This is a great place to find regionally appropriate lawn alternatives no matter where you garden.

 

♦ Lawn Alternatives  ~  An interesting look at using weeds as a lawn alternative from the Ecological Landscaping Association.

 

♦ Planting a Meadow ~ Planting  a meadow is a wildlife-friendly alternative to a lawn. Take a look at one community’s efforts to revitalize their streets in this post over at Native Plants & Wildlife Gardens.

 

♦ Reinventing the Lawn ~ A look at ‘eco-friendly lawns and lawn alternatives’ from the New England Wildflower Society.

 

♦ Shade Gardening as an Alternative to Lawns  ~ Stop struggling with growing lawn grass in the shade and embrace these native plant alternatives from the Ecological Landscaping Association.

 

Have you started shrinking your lawn? If so, please share your experiences, both good and bad…

Garden Designers Roundtable: A Connecticut Yankee’s Guide to Socially Acceptable Lawn Alternatives

This month the Garden Designers Roundtable explores the important topic of lawn alternatives, along with our guests, the members of the Lawn Reform Coalition. Since the trend of shrinking the size of your lawn is just starting to take hold here in southwestern Connecticut, I offer a slightly tongue-in-cheek look at why it seems to be taking a bit longer than it should for some of my fellow Nutmegers to embrace the lawn alternative movement…

Here on the Connecticut gold coast, in quaint little towns like Greenwich, Darien and New Canaan, the streets are dotted with modest multi-acre estates. Most are hidden behind stone walls, fences and rows of evergreens. A quick glimpse inside often reveals a meticulously manicured lawn sweeping almost as far as the eye can see. Getting these homeowners to reduce the size of their lawns in any way, shape or form, is, quite frankly, a very difficult proposition.

You see, we’re conservative, some might even call us uptight. And we love our lawns. We certainly don’t grow food in our front yards, like some hippy-dippy southern California gardeners are doing. Really, what would the neighbors say? And a meadow garden? Like the unruly and overgrown mess on the grounds of that new progressive church? Certainly not on my property. We couldn’t possibly cut back our lawn area, after all the kids play out there at least once a week and an acre of grass per child seems to be the gold standard.

We may cling to tradition a little too tightly at times but we are open to new ways of thinking. We like to support local wildlife (after all, many of us are card-carrying members of the Audubon society) and increased biodiversity is a laudable goal. We’re concerned about the environment and increased levels of pollution and pesticides, just like regular people.

The perfect place to begin embracing lawn alternatives

But we love our lawns. And the status quo. What’s a humble homeowner with just the ‘right’ amount of lawn to do?

I’d like to suggest an easy and painless way to start embracing the lawn alternative trend. Why not plant something other than grass in that narrow strip of land on the other side of the fence? Since no one really pays any attention to it, it offers the perfect opportunity to throw caution to the wind and do something a little crazy. In fact, some of the neighbors are already leading the way. Goodness, they must not be from around here!

Baby Steps 

From a maintenance standpoint, this grove of hosta is a better alternative than simply having more lawn area. And it’s much more attractive. But from a biodiversity standpoint, it’s really not offering much.

Adding a few ferns to the mix helps liven things up a bit. And the area still looks manicured and well-kept, important qualities when you’re keeping up with the Joneses.  We’re getting there but I know we can do better.

From Baby Steps to a Leisurely Walk

So I offer a few socially acceptable, eco-friendly lawn alternatives that won’t embarrass you in front of the neighbors and also won’t bring down your property values. Not only will these lawn alternatives help support local wildlife since they are all native, they will tolerate winter road salt much better than the grass you’re trying to grow there now.

Go ahead, try one or try them all. Just take that all important first step.

I invite you to continue exploring the topic of lawn alternatives by simply clicking on the links below:

Susan Harris : Garden Rant : Takoma Park, MD

Billy Goodnick : Cool Green Gardens : Santa Barbara, CA

Evelyn Hadden : Lawn Reform.Org : Saint Paul, MN

Saxon Holt : Gardening Gone Wild : Novato, CA

Ginny Stibolt : Florida Native Plant Society : Green Cove Springs, FL

Susan Morrison : Blue Planet Garden Blog : East Bay, CA

Shirley Bovshow : Eden Makers : Los Angeles, CA

Scott Hokunson : Blue Heron Landscapes : Granby, CT

Rochelle Greayer : Studio G : Boston, MA

Rebecca Sweet : Gossip In The Garden : Los Altos, CA

Pam Penick : Digging : Austin, TX

Lesley Hegarty & Robert Webber : Hegarty Webber Partnership : Bristol, UK

Laura Livengood Schaub : Interleafings : San Jose, CA

Jocelyn Chilvers : The Art Garden : Denver, CO

Ivette Soler : The Germinatrix : Los Angeles, CA

Genevieve Schmidt : North Coast Gardening : Arcata, CA

Douglas Owens-Pike : Energyscapes : Minneapolis, MN

Susan Harris : Gardener Susan’s Blog : Takoma Park, MD

Tara Dillard : Vanishing Threshold: Garden, Life, Home : Atlanta, GA