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Lawn Gone! Low-Maintenance, Sustainable, Attractive Alternatives for Your Yard

by Pam Penick

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923293,712 (3.81)3
Homeowners spend billions of hours--and dollars--watering, mowing, and maintaining their lawns. Free yourself with this colorful, accessible guide to the basics of replacing a traditional lawn with a wide variety of easy-care, no-mow, low-water, money-saving options.
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This book considers what else you can do with your own little patch of ground besides compete with Mr. Jones for the most emerald green perfect lawn. In reality, the author doesn’t advocate making the lawn entirely disappear, unless you happen to live in a zone where the resources needed to keep it going are outsized. It’s a pretty balanced discussion of all sorts of options. Hardscaping, buildings, ponds, perennials, and grasses that don’t need mowing – even discussing the pros and cons of artificial lawns. It’s meant to get the reader out of a thinking rut and being creative about low maintenance yarding. She has regional experts make a few recommendations specific to each part of the US. ( )
  2wonderY | Feb 1, 2016 |
Garden designer Penick offers good inspiration and instruction for getting rid of water hogging lawns and the tedium of weekly mowing and replacing them with lawn alternatives and good garden designs. Similar to another new (2012) book from Timber Press, Hadden's Beautiful No-Mow Lawns. Penick lives in Texas and the pictorial examples she provides are often from western states like Texas and California, with a bit more of a xeric drought tolerant focus, though the advice is applicable across the U.S. Definitely worth a read if you're considering removing some or all lawn.

The book is divided into three parts; part one covers design ideas for grasses (that don't need mowing), ground cover plants, perennials and shrubs, hardscaping with paths, patios, ponds and the like, or simply downsizing the lawn. Part two covers the techniques of lawn removal, installation of hardscape elements, bed preparation and planting, and maintenance tips. Part three offers advice on dealing with HOAs, city codes, skeptical neighbors, ticks, deer, rodents, and fire resistant landscaping. There are 30 pages of regional plant recommendations at the end covering U.S. regions.
This book was provided to me as an e-ARC from Netgalley courtesy of the publisher.
( )
  amanderson | Mar 31, 2013 |
Received from NetGalley as an ARC.

When I moved into my current house, the first thing I did outside was to dig up all the grass and shift the landscaping to reflect the natural character of the yard (wet on one side, dry on the other) and to increase native plantings, including bird attractors and deer inhibitors. A decade later, it's hard to imagine that there was ever a hard-to-mow lawn with wet sinkholes and dry clay outcroppings. I was greatly helped, both in imagining possibilities and in practical matters, by gardening manuals on hard-to-plant areas, but I would have loved a well-illustrated book devoted to replacing the whole lawn.

Lawn Gone! is a terrific source of ideas for non-lawn yards. It features a large number of attractive, clear photos of alternatives to basic grass surroundings for the home. Penick begins with answers to the question of why one might want a different kind of yard. These include issues such as maintenance, environmental considerations, visual texture, and the use of local plants, all of which appeal to me. In addition to many how-to sections (including very useful advice on how to negotiate with Home Owners' Associations and other covenant-generating entities), she provides numerous examples and stories.

Among the major subjects covered are using different ecological lawn mixes; planting ornamentals (with attention to the problem of invasive species), ground covers, shrubs and perennials; hardscapes (and their drainage); ponds; and child-friendly features. Penick provides sufficient coverage of tasks such as solarizing, or planning bed edging, though some instructions (such as "Use a tamper or vibrating plate compactor to compact the paver base" [p. 101]) are over-technical yet would require more detail to be useful.

In addition to the pros and cons of different materials, yard aesthetics, decreasing pests, and fire safety, Penick includes an entire section on the politics, health, and safety of lawn-free yards. I haven't seen this covered so well in other landscaping manuals.

Penick doesn't devote a lot of space to mixing food plants into the landscape. While most of my fruits and vegetables are inside a deer-deterring fence, I do have neighbors in the non-deer parts of town who have converted their whole lawns to vegetable garden-as-landscaping, and many more who grow artichokes and other dramatic food plants as their primary landscape plants. Perhaps Penick will consider including more coverage of this alternative in subsequent editions. ( )
  OshoOsho | Mar 30, 2013 |
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Homeowners spend billions of hours--and dollars--watering, mowing, and maintaining their lawns. Free yourself with this colorful, accessible guide to the basics of replacing a traditional lawn with a wide variety of easy-care, no-mow, low-water, money-saving options.

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