Coming Soon: The Death of the American Lawn
Garden expert Susan Harris discusses the American lawn culture, and why it desperately needs to change.
Breakfast on Pluto full movie The Broken divx Editor’s note: Susan Harris is a gardening coach and activist for urban and suburban greening. You can read more of Harris on her blogs GardenRant
and Sustainable Gardening Blog. She currently lives and gardens in Takoma Park, MD, a suburb of Washington, DC.
Flogging Margaret movie download
Dead Air video хочу хоророший секс в офисе
Did you Know?
Prom Night trailer * Acre for acre, the American lawn receives four times as much chemical pesticide as any U.S. farmland.
* An estimated seven million birds are killed yearly in the U.S. by lawn-care pesticides.
* Phosphorus runoff from lawn fertilizer causes algae blooms that suck oxygen out of our waterways, killing all aquatic life.
* In the summer, over half of municipal water usage goes to lawns.
Addicted to Green
Heathers movie So who’s to blame for all this? The American love of lawns began with wealthy homeowners copying the look of English estates and spread to middle-class communities after World War II. (In the new town of Levittown, NY, residents were encouraged to apply fertilizer a remarkable five to six times a year because super-green lawns “stamp inhabitants as good neighbors, desirable citizens.”) But more than anything, it was the invention of the power mower and widespread advertising for perfect lawns that sealed a new ethic of the American lawn for decades to come. Proof of the power of marketing (and of the malleability of the American consumer) is the fate of clover. While it had previously been routinely included in grass seed mixes for its nitrogen-fixing properties, when it was discovered that the new herbicide 2,4-D killed clover along with crabgrass, advertisers simply rebranded clover as a weed — and it worked! Advertising has also convinced us that lawns need to be fed in the spring to “green them up,” despite research proving that fast-acting fertilizers kill beneficial microorganisms in the soil and make lawns less drought-tolerant.
The New Anti-Lawn Movement
Mickeys House of Villains divx
Sex and the City: The Movie trailer Scary Movie 4 dvd Dragonslayer buy
The anti-lawn drumbeat started with local campaigns against gas mowers and gained momentum in 1991 when bestselling author Michael Pollan wrote an indictment of lawns in his book Second Nature, and declared in The New York Times that the lawn is a “symbol of everything that’s wrong with our relationship to the land.” In academia, Cornell’s “Turf Guy” Frank Rossi is leading the charge against overfertilization, among other ills of the corporate lawn-care regime. He writes, “We need to give up our perfect-lawn ideal — it’s costing the U.S. plenty.” So how about government action? Not waiting for the industry to reform itself, Madison, WI, and 70 towns in Canada, including Toronto, have banned phosphorus in lawn fertilizer. Five Canadian provinces have banned the use of all pesticides for ornamental purposes, including residential lawns, and the big-box stores have even removed them from their stores countrywide. Of greater threat to the conventional (perfect) American lawn are increasing water shortages due to climate change. Thirteen states now impose water restrictions and another 13 are predicted to impose them within the next five years. Lower-input alternatives like Buffalo grass and “No-Mow” grasses are coming on the market, and artificial turf is more popular than ever. Expect to hear lots more about this hot topic in the coming months and years.
To learn more, check out these websites and articles:
Lawn Reduction and Substitution on my website, Sustainable-Gardening.com.
SafeLawns.org promotes organic lawn care.
“Abolish the White House Lawn” by Michael Pollan.
Cornell University’s lawn-care advice Bill Maher: I’m Swiss hd .
Homeowners in the arid West can learn about UC Verde, a highly drought-tolerant Buffalo grass, at Grassroots Program.
Information on How To Seed a Lawn | Best Advice of Life
[...] Coming Soon: The Death of the American Lawn | blog … [...]
robbymonk
The death of the lawn? NO! Good article nonetheless. I love my lawn (and my neighbors yard more!). I get great lawn info. at http://www.penningtonseed.com. They’ve always helped me!