lawn gone
from Grist:
A "delawning" movement is sprouting up around the U.S., as a handful of
homeowners switch from resource-intensive grassy green expanses to
drought-tolerant, native, and/or edible gardens. "It's about shifting
ideas of what's beautiful," says Fritz Haeg, an L.A. architect whose
Edible Estates project transforms front yards into fruit and vegetable
gardens. A new report from the Public Policy Institute of California
provides more fodder for the anti-lawn set: It asserts that thirsty
home landscaping will suck up a troubling amount of water in the state
over the next 25 years if the love affair with lawns continues.
California is expected to add 11 million new residents by 2030, with at
least 50 percent settling in hotter inland regions where single-family
homes with lawns are common, according to the report. Some neighbors,
however, don't appreciate creative gardening. "What happens in the
backyard is their business," said one man who lives near a yard now
being used to grow 195 various edibles. "But this doesn't seem to me to
be a front yard kind of a deal."
sources:
New York Times
San Francisco Chronicle
Comments
I love that it says "COULD" stress state water supplies. 'Cause we haven't been sending our water to LA for lawns for DECADES, and the delta hasn't been geeked for DECADES. Argh! Has no-one read "Cadillac Desert"? Rathchafratcha, etc. I guess at least they're covering it, though...
We have lots of lawn at the new Leckmansion, but our guilt is offset by the fact that we get enough rain that we'll only have to water it occasionally. That and I just ordered our deluxe, human-powered, rotary mower! Oh, and I don't eat meat :)
We also have a cute little kid who will soon be running around on the lawn, chasing the big fuzzy dog.
It is nice to be out of the California/Nevada water madness.
yay for rotary mowers! yeah i don't think you tree-huggers are part of the problem. the patch of lawn outside my house that my landlord has to water three times a day, on the other hand...