This document discusses the benefits of removing lawns and replacing them with more sustainable landscaping options. It notes that lawns require large amounts of water and pesticides. Some alternatives to lawns mentioned include habitat gardens, edible gardens, meadows, rain gardens, rock gardens, and children's gardens planted with native species. Native plants are advocated because they are adapted to the local environment and provide benefits like requiring less water and maintenance than non-natives. Examples of lawn removal projects and their before and after appearances are also shown and described.
Shorline Plants of Pigeon Lake - Shoreline health is critical for a healthy lake. This is is a 3-part presentation filled with photos from Pigeon Lake on to steward the shoreline plants.
Chicago Illinois - Plant a Rain Garden in your Yard - Help Protect Our Water Resources, & Beautify Your Yard & Neighborhood
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For more information, Please see websites below:
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Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214 ~
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Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079 ~
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
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Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348 ~
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City Chickens for your Organic School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440 ~
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Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110 ~
Our beautiful wild pollinators need help! Support bees, butterflies and other pollinators by converting your lawn into a meadowscape or let your lawn grow wild!
City of Sunnyvale's SMaRT Station project using native plants to creat ecofriendly landscaping at the recycling center for both beautification and sustainability.
Many gardeners want to know how to incorporate Oregon native plants into their existing gardens. This presentation was created for the St. Paul Garden Club, but the information is relevant to many gardeners in the region.
This presentation was presented by the Abington Township Environmental Advisory Council in April 2011.
It discusses Abington's watersheds, non-point source pollution, riparain buffers, native plants, invasive plants, no-mow zones, stream erosion, bank stabilization and stream restoration techniques, stormwater, and rain gardens.
This was funded by a grant from the Water Resources Education Network a program of the League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania Citizen Education Fund through a Section 319 federal Clean Water Act grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, administered by the US Environmental Protection Agency.
Arlington, Virginia - One Rain Garden at a Time - Controlling Stormwater, Improving Our Lives
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214 ~
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079 ~
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348 ~
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440 ~
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110 ~
Similar to Sacaramento CA: Lawnless and Loving It Manual (20)
2. Why go Lawnless?
Water is a scarce natural resource
but 60 %+ of summer water in the
Sacramento area goes to maintaining
LAWNS. (Audubon)
The average gardener applies 20 times
more pesticides than farmers do. (EPA)
Most commonly used mowers emit 11 times
the air pollution of a new car for each hour
of operation. (EPA)
3. What is a lawn anyway?
A lawn is a monoculture.
4. How to get rid of lawn?
There’re probably 50 ways to loose the lawn!
Here are just a few ideas: California Aster
Shade it out
Allow leaves to pile up with leaves or newspapers and smother it.
Organic herbicides
Herbicides work well but be sure that no chemicals run off into
waterways.
Dig it out
Like hand-weeding but harder!
Go slowly. Take out only the amount of lawn that you have
a plan for.
14. Vineyard
Lady Bug on Fiddleneck Pipevine Swallowtail
Butterfly on Poppy
Wildflowers between the rows will bring in pollinators for your vines!
15. Rain Garden
“A Rain Garden is a
planted depression that
allows rainwater runoff
from roofs, driveways,
walkways, and
compacted lawn areas
the opportunity to be
absorbed.”
This house is below street
level and this ‘rain garden’
absorbs all runoff.
Valley Oak, Silver Bush Lupine, Miner’s lettuce
16. Meadows
2 views of wildflowers at Table Mountain
Carex praegracilis ‘lawn’
Cornflower Farms Nursery, Elk Grove
17. Rock Garden
Dudleya cymosa Dudleya cymosa flower
Saxifraga Californica
Photos by Randy Smith
Goldback Fern
18. The Native Plant Advantage
Go native. But which ones you ask?
Plants indigenous to your area. The
more local the plant, the more likely Pipevine swallowtail
you’ll provide habitat for critters. and Blue Dick
Nature has grouped plants in plant communities. So if
you think about what grows together in nature, those
plants can grow together in similar conditions in your
garden.
19. Native Plants
Save Water:
Once established, many native plants need
minimal irrigation beyond normal rainfall.
Black Phoebe
Low Maintenance:
If you remove the weed seed bank before planting and plant
according to watering needs, you’ll have a low maintenance
garden.
Pesticide Freedom:
Native Plants have developed their own defenses
against many pests and diseases.
Wildlife Viewing:
Research shows that native wildlife prefers native Native Bee
plants.
Support Local Ecology:
As development replaces natural habitats, planting gardens,
parks, and roadsides with California natives can provide a
“bridge” to nearby remaining wildlands.
30. Simple Replacements
A. Pink Spires Flowering Crabapple Pink blooms are followed by small purple-
red fruits; leaves are bronzy green. 15’-20’ tall.
B. Kelsey Dwarf Dogwood Compact, mounded shape, red stems. 2’-3’ tall.
C. Blue Mist Fothergilla Honey-scented white blooms, bluish foliage. 4’ tall.
D. Bird’s Nest Spruce Gray-green, globe-shaped evergreen. 3’ tall.
E. Periwinkle (Vinca minor) evergreen leaves, blue flowers, creeping stems.
6"-12" tall. (This is actually INVASIVE!)
Local Native Alternatives (little to no water needed once established)
A. Western Redbud (Cercis occidentalis) Magenta flowers in spring, fall color varies,
informal look. 20’ tall.
B. Redtwig Dogwood (Cornus stolonifera) White flower in spring, red stems in winter.
C. Buck brush (Ceanothus cuneatus) fragrant evergreen shrub, flowers vary from blue to
white, in late spring 6’-8’
D. Coyote Brush (Baccharis pilularis) White flowering in winter, evergreen 3’-6’
E. Yerba Buena (Satureja douglasii) evergreen groundcover with white flowers; then
add California fuschia (Epilobium canum) fall flowering 12”; and Wooly sunflower
(Eriophyllum lanatum) summer flowering 8”, (use Sonoma Sage if full sun)
Above: Yerba Buena flower and Monarch butterfly caterpillar
31. City of Santa Monica’s
GardenGarden Project
Native Landscaping Traditional Landscaping
6,000 250 pounds 15 hours 57,000 670 pounds 60 hours
Gallons Yard waste Maintenance Gallons Yard waste Maintenance
32. Playing with Oak galls under
a Christmas Berry Bush.
Create a place to explore, learn, and play among trees and the natural world.