The only thing I would object to it the visibility of the fire hydrant.
No Lawns
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I thought the same thing. But it does look like there’s a stone path leading to it. Still, perhaps a post with a sign would be a practical solution.
Hopefully there is already a blue reflector on the road. Where I am they are used to mark hydrant locations for easy finding at night.
I imagine other areas could use a different color reflector though.
I’m a bit surprised at how far into the parcel the hydrant is placed but they also practically don’t exist around here, is it common to have them basically on your lawn?
Around here, if they are not directly in the sidewalk, (or there is no sidewalk) they still have a cement apron around them and are near the curb.
Cannot believe that someone would prefer 2022 photo instead of 2023...
The 2023 pic is beautiful and looks really nice. But if we're comparing in good faith, it's also pretty obvious that the 2022 photo was taken in early spring when nothing is growing.
There's surely a lot more plant life on the bottom anyway, but it would not look that vibrant if it was all dormant right after winter like the top pic.
TBF, the 2022 photo looks like it was taken in the winter (no leaves on trees, empty/dead garden beds), and a 2023 winter pic would look about the same but with more empty/brown garden instead of grass.
Once established it's probably significantly less water and maintenance too. Just trimming and weeding every quarter instead of mowing, fertilising and/or watering every few weeks.
My yard is becoming 2023 and my neighbor's yard is 2022, and he complains about my yard every opportunity he has, but he never complained when it was only grass
home owners association: "I'm calling the police!"
Doesn't even need to be an HOA, plenty of municipalities don't accept anything but lawn in front of the house.
Or just a neighbor with no life that studies ordinances.
My parents have a neighbor that waked around the block with a tape measure, measuring how far from sidewalk people had trees or shrubs. Township ordinance said it had to be 6 feet away.
She then called the city and reported everyone in violation. The neighbor never met most of those people. She was just bored with no life.
Wish we could pass a law against nuisance tattle tails. Have to prove you were somehow affected by the issue in order to report it otherwise you get fined for being excessively nosey and ignored.
I'm sure there are all sorts of problems with this idea, but a guy can dream.
Yeah unfortunately we just cannot plug all the holes these dickhead people take advantage of.
The only thing that works is people not being dickheads. Society is held together by people being morale and nice without laws or rules making them do so.
No way the bottom one doesn't need any watering? No?
If it's local, it's designed to survive on its own. I'm in North Texas and this summer has been hell on everyone's lawns and gardens. The exception for me is my garden with trailing lantana. It is completely unaffected and growing like mad while everything else is drying up and dying.
Also in North Texas and also have thriving lantana while nearly everything else is dried up. I'm kinda at my wits end.
The goal is to have local plant which can survive in local climates. Then you don’t have to water as much or ever.
Big reason why grass lawns require so much constant watering is because they have pretty bad water retention. Having a thick layer of foliage protects the soil from direct sunlight which prevents it from drying out too quickly. Much of that water you see people spraying onto their lawns is actually just gonna evaporate back into the air before the grass even has a chance to use it.
Turf grasses are also very shallow rooted.
The real question is do you have to weed or do other maintenance? I'm looking for a zero maintenance yard not just a zero watering
I'm sure no HOA would ever fight you for this. /s
And that's why when buying a house, avoid ones with a HOA
I think HOAs are luckily rare in Canada.
a whole tree in one year? that seems misleading...
I think the tree was already there. It just didn't have any leaves.
There's two trees, the big one is more in frame in the second image
While working on my graduation thesis at the natural sciences faculty, this is exactly what we studied: the usage of autochthon plants as a replacement for garden varieties in an urban context
Edit: grammar correction
The comments here really are interesting.
"2023 is going to attract snakes or bugs" ah yeah that's how nature works.
2022 is when you work against nature.
I immediately thought about insects. Is it not how it works?
If you do it right yup, and your yard becomes a hotspot bees and other pollinators
It's a legit question. Are these yards more likely to result in additional home repairs due to destructive pests? I'm significantly less pro nature when that nature has destroyed my home by chewing wires, eating the wood from my support structure or causing leaks and water damage. I've dealt with rodents causing thousands of dollars in damage before and it completely sucks.
After attracting pollinators the last few years, I finally attracted crickets, grasshoppers, and spiders in my little urban sanctuary this year. I considered it a compliment from nature
looks good. wonder about the total cost (garden + burned down house).
I want to do something similar to our front yard, which is currently mostly grass as well. Also some patches for butterflies and bees will be needed.
simple start is adding native clover and dandelion to the grass (and obviously not spraying herbicides or pesticides)
- clover adds nitrogen (and was a traditional part of lawns up until WWII)
- dandelions attract pollinators and every part of dandelions are edible
- don’t trim/mow shorter than 6" (15cm) – triggers grass grazing response rather than damage response
- once that’s established, then you can move onto planning and design
- native wildflowers, bunching grasses, erosion control, vegetable garden, fruit trees
- for a garden area, the turf can be flipped over for a basic sheet mulch starter