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Downsize Your Lawn

By Linda Brown-Kuhn
March 19, 2009
File under: Living Space

small-lawn.jpg

When my husband and I bought our house many moons ago, one of his few requirements was that it have a small yard. He didn’t want to dedicate a chunk of his summer weekends to the monotonous, sweaty job of mowing the lawn.

Our two kids, who came a few years after the house purchase, complain periodically that there’s no room for a swing set or big fort. I ask, “Which park do you want to play at today?” All in all, it works out fine.

My husband still chuckles with satisfaction when he hears about friends spending hours fertilizing, mowing, and trimming their seas of green.

A smaller lawn benefits the environment through less watering, fertilizing and chemical use. There’s also less time spent mowing (another green move) –  which translates to more free time. Who wouldn’t like that?

And when you think about it, how often do people with ginormous lawns really use more than 10% to 20% of the space?

I’d guess not very often, if ever. So what can you do if you’re being dragged down by the care and maintenance of a huge lawn? There are plenty of solutions that allow you to chip away at the size of your lawn with attractive results.

Here are some options:

  • Plant a hedge, especially if you want to screen out neighbors or the street.
  • Turn part of your yard into a lush meadow or prairie, depending upon where you live.
  • Plant ground cover or moss to replace some grass, particularly in shady or steep spots.
  • Create a tree island. Or pick an existing tree and dig out an interesting-shaped area around it, mulch, and plant flowers or a few shrubs. My mother did this when I was a kid. She called them her “wild areas”. I didn’t appreciate them then because as a designated mower, navigating around these irregular-shaped places annoyed me. I see her point now.
  • Build a patio, deck, or pond (for frogs and fish) if you want to take your efforts up a notch.
  • Go native by devoting part of your yard to native wildflowers and other native plantings. Plants indigenous to your locale are typically very hardy.
  • Try xeriscaping using plants such as drought-tolerant ornamental grasses to replace part of a water-sucking lawn.
 
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