• TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    I love native alternatives to lawns, but OP, I feel like it’d be more environmentally friendly if you didn’t trap the birds who visit your yard inside white void spheres. Please let them out. They don’t deserve this fate.

  • Malle_Yeno@pawb.social
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    4 days ago

    Much prettier and I love birds, but on what planet is the bottom one less work? Every one of those plants requires maintenance.

    • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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      4 days ago

      damn you’re lucky if it’s that easy to keep a lawn that lush and full in your area

      keeping a shitty grass lawn is easy, keeping one perfectly manicured is not

      • howrar@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        I’ve been told they’re very low maintenance as long as you have some clovers in there. I’ve never maintained a lawn myself though, so no experience to draw on.

  • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
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    4 days ago

    I’ve been breaking my back over something closer to the bottom image for about 10 years. It’s not less work. It’s real easy to just drown a yard in water, crossbow, and fertilizer and mow once a week. I don’t want to do that, so that’s why I put the effort in.

    • AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today
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      4 days ago

      I think it’s dependent on where you live to be honest. Lawns aren’t native in my area, and are easily overtaken by other non-native plants. If you xeriscape or create a native garden it can be easier, or at least the same amount of work to maintain after it gets established.

      Where I’m at, lawns quickly get overtaken with numerous types of (non-native) weeds and blackberries - it’s a constant fight to maintain a lawn. Sprinkler systems are also not common here, so you typically have to manually water an entire lawn by hand as opposed to specific plants with drip lines.

      • stupe@lemmy.zip
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        3 days ago

        I do no work at all to my property, other than a small area around the house that we walk. I have a family of deer that spends most of their day relaxing in my yard.

        • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
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          3 days ago

          You have what looks like a mature, stabilized woods. You’re lucky. My yard was just disturbed bare clay and weed seeds when I got to it. I left it alone for a few months and ended up with wall to wall invasive weeds, 8 feet tall. I didn’t have a few hundred years to let it stabilize itself.

  • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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    4 days ago

    Live in one of those “rural suburbs” (line of houses surrounded by fields) in Louisiana.

    Was smokin a bowl outside last night. Saw the mosquito truck come down the road, spraying a fog of insecticides to keep the population down and all I can think is “if we didn’t flatten everything for miles around with empty lawns and mono crops, we’d still have enough dragonflies to eat the mosquitoes instead of spraying chemicals into our air that kill the dragonflies too”

      • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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        3 days ago

        Yea, that’s what we call it around here. Just a regular truck with an IBC of insecticides and a low-pressure sprayer that drives around once a week to kill the swarms of mosquitoes along with every other insect in the area.

        • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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          3 days ago

          Heck, before colonizers, the natives called my area “place where the edible fern grows”, but now there are no ferns :(

  • LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I started having the guy who mows my grass leave one small back section of the property untouched so I could hopefully attract more native birds and insects. It’s a part of my yard that I don’t go into and neither do my dogs, so I figured it was as good a spot as any for the experiment. After a couple months, it worked to bring in birds. I have a pair of bluejays with a nest in my tree. I hadn’t seen bluejays anywhere around before now, and I’ve lived in my house for 3 years.

  • im_me_but_better@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 days ago

    Less work? 🤣

    I had a garden with wild flowers, it was planted by the previous owner. An horticulturist.

    It was beautiful but required a lot of work. Way more than mowing a couple of days a week.

    I still tried to keep up, though.

  • OldChicoAle@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Yay more animals for my dog to terrorize! /s

    I live on the side of a hill so we have lots of wild plants, trees, shrubs, etc. So many birds and little creatures here. Occasionally a bobcat will stroll through. Owls, cranes, and quails are fun to see. There are mountain lions in the area but thankfully we have not seen any on our cameras. I love the ecosystem around my house. The sound of the coyotes howling in the night or the birds starting to chirp as the sun starts to rise…so blissful.

  • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 days ago

    Amount of work depends on if you’re trying to live in a naturally hostile environment (a desert) or a more temperate climate.

      • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        3 days ago

        If your environment has native plants, it isn’t hostile to… YOU? Or the native plants?

        Because constructing a society in a hostile environment and living successfully doesn’t change the natural environment from being hostile to humans.

        I like to think of it this way: if you got lost away from society in that climate/environment, how much would it suck to try to survive, from scratch, for a year?

        • stray@pawb.social
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          3 days ago

          I’m not sure what you mean. If I die of thirst in the desert or cold in the far north, the cactus and conifer will continue living happily without my interference.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    I’d rather some more of it be human food, but maybe that’s out back. I’m slowly turning areas around the house I just bought into native stuff and food. It is, however, a constant battle against kudzu strangling and bamboo encroaching. I generally avoid having anything that tall and unkept (as some areas look to be) due to venomous snakes that can bite when surprised :/

    • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Is it bamboo or knotweed?

      Kudzu is hell. That is a battle you can’t win without fighting every day for quite a while.

      An old buddy of mine spent 30 years fighting it back up the mountain behind his house. He died in 2020 and his house is draped in kudzu today.

      • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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        3 days ago

        It’s bamboo common here in rural Japan. We have two types, one of which has edible shoots in the spring so there’s that at least. It does hold the ground together along the riverbank so I never plan on fully ripping it up; last thing I need is for a chunk of my property to slide off in the next big quake.

    • cobysev@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Agreed. I live on 6 acres of land out in the forested countryside. There are untouched, natural fields and forests all around me. There are literally 40 acres of natural preserve right next to my property, where no development of any kind is allowed to happen.

      I like having a clean, mowed patch of land in the middle of it all. When I go adventuring in the forest, I always come home covered in ticks, mosquito bites, and sticky plant pods. It’s nice to not experience that just walking through my own backyard.

      Not to mention, natural habitats invite snakes, mice, rabbits, possums, skunks, etc. into my home. I currently have field mice living in my garage and I can’t keep them away because the forest grows right up to my garage. I keep having to bring my cars to the shop because mice and squirrels keep building nests in them and chewing through cables.

      I also have moles tearing up my backyard in the un-mown field out back. Maintaining a patch of lawn helps to keep them away from my house and makes my life more comfortable here.

      People who fantasize about natural gardens instead of mowed lawns live in the cities or suburbs. If you actually live in the countryside, it’s much nicer to have a freshly mowed lawn around the house, to keep the wilderness at bay.

      Otherwise, nature will just swallow up your home. I actually need to cut down a tree behind my garage because it’s gonna crack through the foundation of the garage if it gets any bigger. And I need to re-side my garage as well, because vines and other plants have started working their way into the siding. That’s probably how the mice keep getting in.

      It’s a multi-year project for me to cut back the wilderness trying to encroach on my home, and it’s a very expensive lesson to learn. I’d much rather just mow a chunk of land around my home and call it a day.