I'm not having much luck with the Fancy Ladies Guild convincing them that in general, deadheading has no redeeming horticultural value, that a lazier approach holds kinds of beauty they are missing out on.
So when they turn to brown, off with their heads.
Joe Pye will never suffer such a fate.
Or you could just not do it all.
Just mow it down twice a year and be done with it.
This is a baby wild flower meadow planted by the homeowner where I had planted a whole new landscape around the house.
I give him a B for his prep and seed sowing work. For a novice homeowner that is miraculously good. Then it came up and started blooming and he crapped out.
I stepped in to take care of the baby meadow before it became a highly visible failed experiment. And because I wanted to.
It lives in a no mans land between the golf course and houses that I believe is at a minimum a sewer line right of way. For years this land has been a hillside display of varying mowing regimens.
One third of it is now a baby wild flower meadow.
Step number one: Mow a system of pathways regularly and invite people in. Once they enter, the newness will force their thinking to change. Then pick a weed or two and let the editing begin.
Saturday, August 4, 2018
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4 comments:
Bravo.
Why thank you Lisa.
Baby meadow sounds wonderful. I would love to have one myself.
Go for it Sallysmom.
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