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10 Ways to be Green in Your Yard
By John Bruce | March 2010

The 10 Ways

Here are 10 ways you can be environmentally friendly when caring for your lawns and gardens:

  1. Feed regularly. Maintaining a healthy lawn involves regular feedings. A healthy lawn is able to absorb and use water more efficiently and recover from drought quickly once water becomes available.
  2. Water wisely. Pumping water requires power. Rely instead on rainfall for watering lawns and gardens as much as possible. Before watering, watch for signs of lack of water such as dry soil or wilting. For your lawn, the time between needed irrigation is up to 20 days for heavy, clay soils and about 5 days for light, sandy soils.
  3. Mow high. Set your mower to its highest appropriate setting. Longer grass blades promote deeper roots that help retain moisture. Mow St. Augustine and buffalo grass at three inches, one inch for Bermuda grass and two inches for centipede and Zoysia grass.
  4. Leave grass clippings on the lawn. Recycled grass clippings return organic matter and nutrients to the soil. It saves clean-up time and improves soil quality.
  5. Keep fertilizer on the lawn. Sweep fertilizer and grass clippings off driveways, sidewalks and curbs and back onto your lawn. Making this a habit protects rivers, lakes and streams while keeping nutrients where the belong—on the lawn.
  6. Choose the right plants. Pick easy-to-grow plants and lawn types that are well adapted or native to your region. Avoid plants with known pest problems.
  7. Be green in your yard. Use a push mower, which, unlike a gas or electric mower, consumes no fossil fuels and emits no greenhouse gases.
  8. Compost your food and yard waste. Doing so reduces the amount of garbage sent to landfills and reduces greenhouse gas emissions. For tips, visit the Environmental Protection Agency’s GreenScapes Web site at www.epa.gov/greenscapes.
  9. Apply mulch to your yard and garden. Use mulch to help moderate soil temperature and retain moisture during dry weather, reducing the need for watering. Learn all about mulch, plus free sources of mulch, from the U.S. Department of Agriculture at www.nrcs.usda.gov/feature/backyard/mulching.html.
  10. Plan your landscape wisely. Choose plants that are low-maintenance and require less water and fewer pesticides.

John Bruce is an editor, writer and gardener.

Photos provided by The Scotts Company.

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