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green lawn equipment, not green
There's a pill you can put in your lawnmower to reduce emissions from that too. It works in cars, trucks, snowmobiles, farm equipment, lawn mowers, weed whackers etc etc., ...any gasoline or diesel powered combustion engine. The website is www.FuelFreedomProducts.com
I live on a corner. The front yard is bordered by hemlock trees and the back is fenced. We let the lawns go to meadow. This summer someone cut my front lawn on a day I wasn't home. I don't think it was one of my neighbors, but I don't know. The lawn really isn't visible from the street.
I grew up having to maintain "country club" appearance in the yard, so my fallowing reaction is possibly a bit extreme. I've got 2 mowers, a JD 42" rider and a Toro 20" 5hp mulcher. Neither one burns oil, I don't see why a good engine should.
We never watered the lawn (except when newly seeded) and never used fertilizer either. It wasn't as thick & green as it might have been, but it wasn't scrawny either (except outside the hemlocks).
But here's the thing. The property value has taken a **HUGE** hit! Gotta be honest, when we go to sell, the lawn will be bright green new turf, well fertilized, watered & clipped. I just can't see forfeiting tens of thousands of dollars to a buyer who'll do the same thing the day he moves in.
Anyone want to start a "Meadow as Lawn" organization and give it a the clout to demand higher real estate prices? As it stands now the 2-3 pints of black blackberries we get are worth about $6-$9 (retail). Any takers for next season?
I have a very large yard and rely on electric and the now nearly
forgotten reel mower. The approach I have taken is to use as much
ground cover and native plantings as possible while still leaving some
grass for our dogs and grandchildren to play on. I don't about other
parts of the country, but here in TX the homeowner's
association seems to be king (not in my neighborhood thank you) and
many have very specific rules about your lawn or lack thereof. It
still amazes me that property values apparently trump water
conservation. One gated community up the road from me actually requires
St. Augustine, maybe the biggest water hog of all. I guess I
don't understand the mindset. A well thought out xeriscape is as
attractive, in some cases more attractive, than a large expanse of
green. I would think that a more maintence free landscape would be a
plus rather than a minus to property values.
We have a mostly traditional lawn, other than some raised beds for growing vegetables in the back yard. We don't use any pesticides, herbicides or fertilizers on the grass. We live in the midwest and get enough rain to keep the lawn green (except in August, when it turns brown and goes temporarily dormant). We don't water anything but the garden and some wildflowers growing beside the house. We have a fair number of weeds mixed in with the grass, but the lawn really doesn't look bad, and most of the neighbors' yards look the same way. Rabbits like the clover in our yard better than the vegetables in our garden. Birds eat the weed seeds. Many of the weeds (clover, plantain, etc.) are nitrogen fixers, meaning that they take nitrogen from the air and put it into the soil, making it more fertile. We don't have any prickly weeds, so our son can play in the yard bare footed.
I have used a electric Black & Decker mower for six years and have had no problems with it. The only regular maintenance I have had to do with it is plug it in and sharpen the blade each season. I also had to replace the batteries (lead acid batteries that can be easily recycled) after about five years.
Houses in our neighborhood keep appreciating, and people have no trouble selling them when they want to move. I know it's not like that everywhere. In some places, the neighbors will complain if there is one weed anywhere in the yard, and in arid parts of the country, you can't have grass without irrigating. Options like xeriscaping, permaculture, and using organic lawn care are good options in those situations.
Not sure where Joseph lives but in Northern California its a selling point to not have much of a lawn and have lots of Native plants in the garden. Reduces water consumption and norcal is subject to water conservation and drought conditions (many summers) so it keeps the place looking nice without watering. Greywater is a great solution for watering the garden, though. Getting rid of the lawn is EASY too through sheet mulching - which builds soil, gets rid of the grass/weeds without motorized equipment, and reduces the water needs significantly!


You bring up some great points. Unfortunately it's still considered normal, almost "required," to have the standard grass lawn with the sprinklers going most of the year. I have come to think about this personally, but I keep falling short thinking about the long-term attractiveness of my home without having grass, especially if it should come time to sell the house. I have to be honest that I think for most people it would unfortunately still be a sore point for selling your house if you did not have the standard green lawn. If I knew that I was going to stay where I am for a very long time then I wouldn't care and would do what I wanted such as having a desert type of landscape that needed little if any watering. It would be wonderful if we had enough water in the form of rain so that we could store it to be used watering. I have thought about using grey water for watering plants and lawn, but I'm not sure how practical it would be.
- Joseph
You should check out a line of mowers that are electric or human-powered. Sunlawn makes an efficeint line of mowers and trimmers/edgers etc. Their website is www.sunlawn.com. A great alternative with zero emissions and a safer option for your family!
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Many people have a green lawn. Most equipment to maintain that lawn is not green at all. These dirty little devices produce about 5% on all air pollution.
The lawn equipment many people have are small 2 stroke gas engines. A few have 4 stroke engine. The big question is why ? You can many times get electric mowers and leaf blowers. This is much cleaner and safer.
Think about it, a can of gas in your garage has the explosion power of 2 sticks of TNT !! You have to tune up these little engines, change the oil and start them for each use. Isn't electric much better ?
As long as your thinking about this you should also qustion why even have a lawn. In the Southwest where I live you can have a desert zeroscape yard. Just a few local plants and if you want some drip irrigation. Simple and smart. This saves a lot of water and pollution.
What do you use for your lawn ?
solar stacks