A smooth, closely shaven surface of grass is by far the most essential element of beauty on the
grounds of a suburban house," landscape designer Frank J. Scott wrote in 1870. "Let
your lawn be your home's velvet robe, and your flowers not too promiscuous
decorations."
This uncompromising view of lawns has held sway for more than a century in this country,
helping to create a $25-billion-a-year industry in products and services for America's 25 million
acres of lawns. However, experts assert, there are viable alternatives to the endless pursuit of the
perfect patch of green. "Low-input yards can be just as beautiful and more satisfying in the
long run as high-cost manicured lawns, and you don't have to replant your entire existing lawn to
make it sustainable," says Vera Krischik, an entomologist with the University of Minnesota
Extension Service.
America's love affair with lawns has its roots in the early English landscape-garden movement,
according to Robert Grese, associate professor at the University of Michigan's School of Natural
Resources and Environment. But England's green carpets are sustained by its wet climate; they do
not require extra watering or chemical applications. "We have developed an aesthetic taste
with no biological basis," Grese says.
In the United States, lawns often demand heavy watering and regular doses of fertilizers,
herbicides and pesticides. U.S. homeowners used 32 million pounds of pesticides on their lawns in
1994, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. "People should be aware of the
hazards of using chemicals," says Jay Feldman, head of the nonprofit National Coalition
Against the Misuse of Pesticides in Washington, D.C. "Children, the elderly, pets and
wildlife are all at risk."
The perfect lawn also requires frequent mowing, which not only takes time and energy, but also
has environmental costs. Gasoline-powered lawn equipment, notes Grese, causes nearly 5 percent
of the country's total air pollution during summer.
What are the options for people who are tired of mowing, watering, weeding, seeding and
feeding? One alternative is to convert your greensward into a wild lawn. Set your mower blades
as high as four inches to encourage species of low-growing wild ground covers--such as violets,
cinquefoil, blue-and-white-flowered speedwell, heal-all and white clover--to take hold and bloom.
While you can introduce some of these to your lawn by transplanting, many seeds are already in
your lawn and others will arrive naturally as seeds floating on the air. They will colonize your
lawn quickly and their blooms and leaves will feed beneficial insects.
A natural meadow, a taller option, requires no feeding or watering after the seeds and young
plants are established. It needs mowing only once a year (in late winter, to avoid destroying eggs
and larvae of butterflies and beneficial insects). To maximize success with a meadow, seed or
plant an area in full sun with a variety of annual and perennial flowers native to your region. The
following wildflowers grow in most areas of the country and attract a variety of creatures:
goldenrod, milkweed, butterfly weed, asters, coneflowers, sunflowers, yarrow, buttercups, bee
balm, phlox, tickseed and blazing stars. (Ask your local native-plant society or extension agent
which plants are native to your area and which will thrive for you.)
Another option is to replace your carpet of fescue, Kentucky bluegrass or Bermuda grass with a
ground cover. Such covers--especially dense, evergreen varieties--provide a beautiful and carefree
alternative to a conventional lawn. Besides providing food and shelter for wildlife, they define,
separate or unify areas in the landscape as effectively as a green velvet lawn. When choosing a
ground cover appropriate to your region, ask how quickly it grows, whether it is best suited to
sun or shade and how well it can withstand foot traffic. When planting ground covers sensitive to
foot traffic, create walkways with mulch or stepping stones.
There are several native ground covers that remain evergreen in many areas of the country. These
include partridgeberry, lowbush blueberry, wintergreen, bearberry, wild ginger, wild strawberry
and moss phlox. Easy-to-grow, nonnative evergreen ground covers include creeping thyme,
bugleweed, Roman chamomile and St. John's wort. (Check with your local nursery to find out
which species grow best in your region.) For fastest results with ground covers, reduce the
recommended space between plants by half.
What if a meadow or a ground cover is not feasible? One possible compromise is to keep some
grass for recreational use or aesthetic value and convert the rest of your lawn into areas of
easy-care plant-ings that provide food and shelter for wildlife. For example, create a small
woodland by planting a wide border between lawn and property lines with native evergreens and
fruit and nut trees such as holly, hemlock, persimmon, black cherry, oak, hickory, dogwood and
hawthorn. You can also create an island of trees and shrubbery--or native grasses and
wildflowers--in a sea of lawn.
If you would prefer not to do additional planting, you can also replace part of your lawn with
rock gardens strewn with heat-absorbing boulders and rock piles, or create small streams and
ponds with recirculating water.
What if you can't bear to part with your lawn? There are simple steps you can take to reduce its
environmental impact. Plant grass varieties that are suited to your climate and growing conditions.
Mow with sharp blades set at the recommended height and allow the grass clippings to fall back
on the lawn as natural mulch and fertilizer. "This way you create vigorous roots and it's
hard for weeds to grow in a healthy lawn," says Tanya Drlik, an integrated
pest-management specialist with the Bio-Integral Resource Center in California. And if you need
to use pesticides or herbicides, choose those that are organic or biological.
"You have to ask yourself how many weeds you can tolerate, because it's unrealistic to
think you can maintain a perfect monoculture. Nature just doesn't work that way," says
Drlik. "If it's a constant struggle then perhaps it's just not worth it."
For tips on growing a chemical-free lawn, visit the Backyard Wildlife Habitatâ„¢ website.
Writer Olwen Woodier's Virginia home is certified as an NWF
Backyard Wildlife Habitat site. For more information,
write: Backyard Wildlife Habitat program, National Wildlife Federation, 11100 Wildlife Center Drive, Reston VA 20190.