Lawless lawns

First published in the September 2022 issue of Woman magazine

“… an ecologically dead status symbol.” Douglas W. Tallamy

Let’s talk about lawns.

I remember doing a profile on a gardening couple who took great pride in their lawn. “Visitors say they just want to take their shoes off and luxuriate in the grass,” declared the lawn man of the pair. I had taken my gardening and life partner, Mark, along for moral support and as soon as we were safely in the car and departing, he expostulated, “People want to let their bare skin touch that?”

We both knew what sort of chemical arsenal was used to achieve a lawn that looked like green velvet and we would not be wanting our skin touching it. It is a value that originates from American suburbia – all those perfect street frontages – and I am not sure that is of merit.  

There is the perfect lawn and then there is mown grass. It is many years since Mark declared that he would not routinely spray the lawn to try and keep it to the chosen grass varieties that give a handsome sward. As long as it was small-leafed, green and able to be mown, that was fine.  I notice that it is me, not him, who goes around on my hands and knees rooting out the flat weeds but the excessive daisies, dandelions and docks worry me more than him.

I would make an exception if we had small children in our lives. I might then agitate for spraying Onehunga weed, or prickle weed as it is often called. It makes going barefooted unpleasant. If you are going to resort to spraying it, you need to understand that it germinates in winter, grows madly all spring and, when the prickles appear in summer, it has already set its seed and the plant will die so there is no point at all in spraying at that time. You need to spray in spring when it is in full growth to break the seeding cycle and you will need to do it for several years as dormant seeds will keep germinating.

If you are not keen on spraying, you can let the grass grow long in the spring flush which will force the Onehunga weed to grow taller to reach the light. Then set the mower level lower than usual and you will be cutting off most of the Onehunga weed before it has a chance to flower and seed.

Our front lawn, seen here in autumn, is a fairly major feature and I wasn’t sure about letting it grow wild.

What about not mowing at all? It is a controversial position to take in an urban setting. We recently  let our front lawn grow over summer and there is no doubt it is alive with bees and butterflies when in flower. The Californian quail love it too with its abundance of seed. Our main interlopers are clover, lotus major and self-heal (Prunella vulgaris) which means it flowers pink, white, yellow and blue. Mark refers to it as a low meadow.

Mowing the perimeter of the lawn and paths gave instant form to what would otherwise look unkempt. It would look better had we raked the paths or collected the clippings as well. The mulcher mower was not equal to the sheer volume of grass to be cut down on this occasion.

Because our front lawn is quite a major statement, it worried me when it looked …. well… rank and unloved in the early stages. I had a stroke of genius, drawing on what I had seen overseas, and asked for a double width to be mown around the perimeter and our most used paths across the lawn to be mown, again a generous two mower widths wide. It made all the difference visually and transformed it from unmown lawn to managed meadow. We kept it that way until the flowering was finished and then cut it all down again.

Our ‘low meadow’ in full flower

On the topic of mowing, get yourself a mulcher mower that chomps up the clippings to a fine tilth that is absorbed back into the grass. It means you don’t ever need to feed your lawn with nitrogen fertiliser again and it makes mowing faster without faffing around with lawn clippings which are the bane of landfill. The only reason lawns need fertilising is because constant mowing and collecting the clippings strips out any goodness and doesn’t allow for a natural cycle of replenishment. We haven’t fed our lawns for years, maybe even decades, but they remain green, well-covered and healthy simply because we use a mulcher mower.

If you choose to spray your lawn, then at least educate yourself as to what the active ingredients are and choose accordingly. There are more environmentally friendly options coming available but lawn sprays in the past – some of which will still be in garden sheds around the country and some may still be available – were a toxic brew.

Contrary to widespread opinion in NZ, this is not a wildflower meadow. It is a pretty sowing of annuals in a casual style and is not an easy-care alternative to lawn.

Proper meadows and wildflowers are a whole different topic. When wildflowers are mentioned, most people think of wildflower seed mixes – the ones that are soldier poppies, cornflowers, cosmos, daisies white and daisies yellow and a whole lot more. Pretty though they can be at their peak, they are neither meadow nor wildflower, or certainly not our wildflowers. Essentially it is gardening with annuals and such plantings are generally short-lived and need quite a bit of work to stop them deteriorating to a flattened, weedy mess. There are alternative approaches but they are not an easy answer and take a much higher level of gardening skill than a simple lawn requires.

What does a lawn achieve? If you are the sort of family who gets out for wholesome games in the garden, be it backyard cricket, rugby, badminton or even croquet, then yes, the lawn provides a suitable recreational space. Most of us persist with lawns long past the time when we have children frolicking outdoors, assuming they ever did.

Mondo grass creates a green breathing space that is every bit as effective as mown grass.  

I came to the conclusion that there are two reasons for lawns. The first is practical; they are lower maintenance than most styles of garden. The second reason is aesthetic; an expanse of mown grass gives a breathing space in a garden and can frame the more detailed, decorative areas. The mistake is to think that you can only get that breathing space with a lawn. There are other ways and it doesn’t have to be the courtyard approach of paving or decking. I remember Gil Hanly’s garden in Auckland where she created a simple breathing space with green mondo grass beneath palm trees. It would have been lower maintenance than mown grass and, in a highly detailed garden with lots of colour, it gave that space to draw breath and relax.  

In the end, lawns are on a spectrum. At the extreme end are the lawn fanatics who will de-thatch, aerate (because they have killed off the earthworms), core, oversow, irrigate, use sprays frequently, fertilise extensively and mow every day or every second day to maintain a perfect velvet monoculture comparable to a bowling green. I see this as an environmental travesty and a political statement from people who are proudly declaring total control and supremacy over nature by every means in their chemical and mechanical arsenals.

At the other end of the scale are those who either dispense with lawns entirely or simply give up mowing. There is a lot of room to move in between those two extremes where most of us can find a level which sits better with us in environmental, aesthetic and practical terms.

There is a different charm to a casual seating arrangement in long grass rather than on mown lawn although my practical side says this probably works better in a drier climate.

We just need to stop thinking of one end as admirable and aspirational and the other end as disgraceful and lazy. Nature would prefer it if more of us were inclined to land on the laissez faire end of the spectrum.

“Over three-quarters of all garden chemicals sold in Britain are for the improvement of our lawns.”             The Curious Gardener’s Almanac by Niall Edworthy (2006)

Once was mown lawn at RHS Rosemoor. English friends tell me that the sight of mown grass in public parks and gardens is increasingly rare

12 thoughts on “Lawless lawns

  1. Paddy Tobin's avatarPaddy Tobin

    For many years I differentiated areas in the garden as “lawn” and “grass”, an acknowledgement of how the different areas were managed – one received fertilizer and broadleaf weedkiller while the other, the far greater area, was simply cut. There is also a smaller area called “the high grass” which homes bulbs and wildflowers (naturally occuring). “Wildflower meadows” have become very popular but are, as you allude, generally of non-native plants and are also very short-lived. The overall regime here has now become that of simply cutting all areas and removing offensive wildflowers – thistles, for example.

    1. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

      I am with you on all that, Paddy. It was an early Alan Titchmarsh book that differentiated between the perfect lawn and simply cut grass fro me (I am still in shock at that man being an active supporter of UKIP and Farage and can never look at him in the same light again). In this country, the notion of the immaculate lawn lingers on as a gardening value and that is what I am trying to challenge. Much of the UK has long moved past this notion and found alternative ways to manage grassy areas that are less demanding and more sustainable.

      1. Paddy Tobin's avatarPaddy Tobin

        The debate here has almost gone the opposite direction with enthusiasts very critical, even offensive, towards people who maintain a traditional lawn or even an area of tidily cut grass. Catering for wildlife is the catchphrase though it is often shouted by people who have no further experience of wildlife than the semi-tame robin at the bird feeder.

  2. Tim Dutton's avatarTim Dutton

    Our ‘lawns’ used to be paddocks a long time ago. For us they are mowed green breathing spaces between the garden beds and borders, or they are paths, and though we’ll weed out broadleaf weeds and thistles, everything else in them has to be able to withstand being cut short and being walked on. Some of them contain very little grass, but a lot of moss, so they get very soggy in winter. We get lots of daisies in the lawns too, which we like. A gardener who liked manicured lawns would probably have a fit if they visited our garden!

    1. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

      And buttercup? It took me a while to learn to love the buttercup in the park and I still prefer to keep it at bay in the house lawns. Moss, according to Alan Titchmarsh in one of his early books, is a sign of the avant gardener.

  3. sarahnorling2014's avatarsarahnorling2014

    My lawn is a ‘plant community’ – I used to say this in a semi-apologetic/ironic way but I like it. A daisy-strewn lawn under cherry trees as the blossoms fall is a lovely sight.

  4. Tim Dutton's avatarTim Dutton

    Yes, buttercup too, and selfheal, though there is far less buttercup than when we first moved here. I have a photo from 1990 of the front garden (2 months after we bought the property) that was a sea of gold from the buttercup in flower.

    I always thought moss was a sign of no drainage and clay soil? It certainly is here. Monty Don seems to differ from Alan Titchmarsh on that point.

      1. Tim Dutton's avatarTim Dutton

        He’s often said on Gardeners’ World that the only way to be able to get rid of moss is to improve the drainage: use a garden fork to make holes all over the lawn and brush coarse sand in them seems to be the best way. Great if you have a small area of lawn…

  5. Graeme's avatarGraeme

    Some people grow long hair and nails
    and beards identify the males.
    Unkempt toenails do deform
    and trimming is the social norm.

    A meadow is for cows and sheep
    a place for hares and snakes to sleep.
    But when a meadow’s manicured,
    clipped, fertilised and manured
    well then a lawn will be procured.

    So mowing is the better way
    you even get a crop of hay!

  6. Lisa P's avatarLisa P

    Abbie one of my favourite garden tasks is lawn renovating. I love doing pattern strips like at a mansion house with my new ride on. I will admit to owning a scarifier, but I mean you have to when your lawn dies off in the hot summer. It is not easy keeping a good lawn, I know and yes I do have butter cups and clover, and even a broad bean plant that appeared, on some on my lawn area. I also have cape weed which I personally love. I’m not too fussed about it but there are times when you need an exquisite lawn like when entertaining visitors from overseas and having family functions on it. I don’t use pesticides on my lawn but yes I may use Weed and Feed and fertiliers and such. I have improved it with new top soil and rotary hoes in the past. My biggest struggle is keeping it moist in summer and keeping the kikuyu away… I do like having real grass instead of kikuyu. Luckily although living in Onehunga, I do not have Onehunga weed. Maybe it isn’t from Auckland’s Onehunga. Where I hate Onehunga weed is in Rotorua! Anyway, I have too much garden area to worry about as it is, I don’t need my lawns to turn into another one!!!! Different horses for different courses. People have really bad lawns in Auckland – not meadow like ones but just dead kikuyu ones, and I was very surprised when they went on about lawn obsession at the Botanic Gardens. Even the historic lawns at Auckland’s Government House are in a poor kikuyed spongy state today

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