A Greener Backyard Is Not About Grass
A Greener Backyard Is Not About Grass
By Kendra Bobowick
How green is your grass? If the lawn is plush and emerald, it probably is not âgreenâ at all.
Many lawns are treated with chemicals, a practice that Conservation Commission member Mary Gaudet-Wilson would love to see disappear. âItâs one of those things thatâs nice to think about,â she said.
A green, or environmentally safe, approach to gardening and lawn care is more a concept, Ms Gaudet-Wilson said. âItâs a way of thinking about how youâre interacting with your environment and how to do things,â she said. Some people may compost, for example. âIt could be a lot of things â your behavior.â Her commission âwants to get people thinking about behaviors.â
In a perfect world people âcertainly would notâ use chemicals, she said. Her vision of a backyard is âless lawn and more meadow. It gives the little creatures a place to live,â she said.
Mature goldenrod, grasses, native sunflowers, joe-pye weed, butterfly weed, bee balm, milkweed, and âhundreds of different native grassesâ could potentially thrive in a backyard meadow, said Holmes Fine Gardens owner Dan Holmes.
Hummingbirds and nesting songbirds love meadow features. The flourishing native cluster is âso much better for the environment,â he said. In his own meadow he has goldfinches, but without it the birds âwouldnât be there,â he noted.
Meadows are pretty to look at with more interesting things going on than turf, he said. They can withstand extended dry spells and heat waves. His own meadow âwas blooming without a hitchâ this year, he said.
Meadows are âthere for us, but also for other wildlife,â said Mr Holmes. âItâs better to think outside ourselves. Better for the environment and better for the wildlife.â
Residents might choose a location in their yard and leave it alone to âsee what comes up,â he suggested. âYouâll be surprised by the natives suppressed by the mower.â
The section will eventually need to be tilled and a mix fed in. Different mixes apply to different environments for wet, dry, sandy soils, etc.
Meadows can contain secret spots, Mr Holmes said. âMow a path or pattern into it and tuck away a sculpture, a little bench,â he suggests.
âFocus on alternatives to lawn care,â said Land Use Deputy Director Rob Sibley, who is also a certified organic lawn care manager through the New England Organic Farmerâs Association. âKeep in mind that the fastest vanishing habitat, aside from the shoreline, is meadow â nonwoody habitat.â
âWe have created little islands of monocultures,â Mr Sibley said. Meadowlands, if maintained as such, âcreate something in high demand,â he continued.
Approach yard work with one organic tenet in mind: do no harm.
âGet away from a culture of short grass,â he said; imagine only mowing once or twice a year. Start small. Maybe incrementally reduce the mowed areas, he suggested. âHow much lawn do you really use?â he asked. Native plantings and encouraging meadows are two easy steps residents can take around their homes.
He also offers another principle: the right plant in the right place, which is based on a sustainable approach with the plantâs long-term health in mind, âwhich is something we can work on at home.â
As residents, town officials, gardeners including Mr Holmes, and farmers promote green efforts or organic standards, Mr Sibley said, âItâs interesting to watch the culture move toward what we believe we need; itâs nice to see us embrace [green] lawn care.â
One natural and highly visible meadowland in Newtown with fields of goldenrod and milkweed, among other natural growth, is along Wasserman Way, opposite Nunnawauk Road, adjacent to the Pootatuck Aquifer.
âIt is replete with wonderful meadow larks, red wing blackbirds, and a lot of other things,â pointed out Mr Sibley.
Regarding the townâs open spaces, he said, âAt first it looks like weâre just mowing, but when things begin to grow or bloom, people say, âOh!ââ
Newtown Forest Association President Bob Eckenrode also confirmed that all the associationâs properties are green.
Ms Gaudet-Wilson provided a sheet about âgoing green in your backyard,â which takes an approach of âworking with nature, not against it.â The sheet proposes âhomeowners allow unrestricted growth of grasses, clover, wild daisies, chamomile, yarrow, rye, fescue, and other plants commonly regarded as weeds.â The growth can be mowed once a year and done in certain areas of the yard.
She also offered the Freedom Lawn concept for basic lawn care, including spreading a thin quarter-inch layer of compost or organic fertilizer on the lawn each fall. Mulch the top layer of leaves for healthy grass in the spring. Overseed in the fall and spring with hardy grass mixes. Mow on a high setting and leave clippings on the lawn. Water only when necessary and deeply at either dawn or dusk. Maintain soil pH of 6.8. Avoid high nitrogen chemical fertilizers as well as organic fertilizers that contain heavy metals and toxins.