Grow bumper crops of fruits and vegetables
Attract birds, butterflies, pollinators, and beneficial insects
Create beauty
and save water!
Showing posts with label natives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natives. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Lawn Gone


Ready to rethink your lawn? Start planning now so that in the fall you'll be ready to start. Your options are “intoxicatingly plentiful,” according to the authors of the book Reimagining the California Lawn: Water-conserving Plants, Practices, and Designs (Cachuma Press, 2011). 

Carol Bornstein, David Fross, and Bart O’Brien detail the compelling reasons for replacing lawns and offer a variety of garden styles featuring low-growing plants. For each garden style, the authors show examples of landscapes and discuss maintenance considerations for some of the plant choices. They talk about the historical background of lawns and the alternatives and mention public gardens where you can see more variations of a given style. 

A short list of plants for each garden style is augmented by detailed plant profiles that fill over half of the book. The book is well-designed and written, easy to use, and authoritative, and at 154 pages, compact enough not to overwhelm readers.

Whether you want to do the work yourself or hire it out, you’ll want to consult this useful manual at every step, from reducing or removing existing turf to deciding between, say, blue grama and red fescue. You’ll be guided to analyze the uses and functions of existing lawn areas, and look closely at whether problem areas could be managed more intelligently by choosing different plants.

The plants highlighted in this book are better adapted to California’s mediterranean climate, so they require fewer resources and less work than traditional lawns. Many of these plants also attract birds and pollinators, creating a livelier and more interesting place to live. Gorgeous photos of plants in the landscape by John Evarts and others offer inspiration and a hint of the endless possibilities if you lose the lawn.

If you’re interested in California natives, you can narrow down your plant list by looking for the plant names printed in green ink. This book offers a nice selection of drought-tolerant plants from other parts of the world as well.

The simplest garden style is the greensward: a sweep of grasses or sedges that requires less water, infrequent or no mowing, and no fertilizers or pesticides. If you use natives, you can also increase the habitat value of your landscape. Greenswards can often accommodate foot traffic and serve as a play surface.

The joy of meadows, according to Fross, is that they are ever-changing. This is not a garden style for micromanagers. Adding annual and perennial wildflowers and bulbs to greenswards creates meadows. Though meadows are informal and naturalistic, they require a lot of attention to weeds in the first couple years.

Four other garden styles featured in the book are

* Rock gardens, which need plants that complement the rocks and don’t overwhelm them. 

* Succulent gardens, which take advantage of the colors and forms of the plants.

* Carpet and tapestry gardens, which use drifts of colorful plants or mounds of foliage. Some carpet plants, such as yarrow, can be planted between pavers and tolerate occasional foot traffic. 

* Kitchen gardens, which can be visually appealing year-round and provide significant yields of herbs, fruits, and vegetables.

The photos above show the range of California natives that can be used as groundcovers.
1. Woodland strawberry is ideal in dappled shade under deciduous trees. 
2. California fuchsia brightens tapestry, rock, and meadow gardens from summer to fall.
3. A carpet of Radiant manzanita cascades down a slope and over the edge.
4. Tufted hair grass is ideal for meadows or greenswards as well as rock gardens.

copyright 2011 Tanya Kucak

Mountain View Neighbors Discuss Waterwise Front Yards



Drought is the gardening theme for the year. 

In February 2014 I sat in on a meeting with Mountain View residents who are exploring waterwise gardening and thinking about taking out their lawns. Alan Whitaker was invited to share what he’d learned about waterwise and native plantings with his neighbors.

Whitaker has lived in and around the Bay Area all his life, and he has been gardening with natives since 2005. His sun-baked Monta Loma front yard is in its fourth incarnation. His grandmother introduced him to plants, and 20 years ago, his water-hungry plants were a reflection of his grandmother’s garden. To reduce water use, he transitioned to succulents, and then to Australian and South African plants, but he missed the birds and bees he’d had before. Finally, in 2005 he planted drought-tolerant natives. The fourth time was a charm. He has been “hooked on [natives] ever since.”


His front yard gets no water except winter rainfall, and is hand-watered this droughty season. Above, sage in the foreground and blue-flowering ceanothus in the background require little or no water once established. Various sages as well as California poppies, tansy-leaf phacelia, clarkias, hummingbird fuchsia, and several buckwheats promised flowers later in the year. At left, the lush foliage and red flowers of a native gooseberry hide the long, sharp spines that make it a great plant for wildlife cover, protecting them from predators. Below, golden currant and especially pink-flowering currant are show-stoppers in this drought-tolerant winter garden. The lovely fragrance from the resinous leaves permeates the garden.

The neighbor who called the meeting was motivated to look for do-it-yourself alternatives after getting  an estimate of almost $5000 to replace 250 square feet of lawn with natives. “You can spend $2000 on mistakes of your own and feel better about it than writing a check,” Whitaker said. 

He learned from experience -- by losing $600 worth of plants -- that natives don’t like soggy roots. To promote good drainage, raise the roots a foot or two using berms. If you mound the existing soil excavated from other projects, you don’t have to buy additional soil. Or you can use a sod cutter to dig up your lawn, flip the pieces of sod, and use them to create mounds.

Whitaker also suggested using urbanite to displace soil in berms or dry streambeds. Urbanite, a plentiful material available for free, is simply chunks of concrete from demolished sidewalks or driveways. It can also be used to make low walls. A dry streambed is often featured in drought-tolerant gardens for channeling rainwater where you want it. If you dig an extra-deep channel for the streambed, you can line it with urbanite and buy cobbles to top-dress it. The deeper channel can handle a larger volume of water, and using urbanite means you can spend less on purchased rock.

Rather than planting single plants, as he did, Whitaker said a more designed look results from choosing fewer varieties. Plant groups of 3, 5, or 7 plants of a single variety. 

Whitaker advised waiting until September or October before planting natives. It takes soaking rains over one to three rainy seasons, plus some supplemental water their first year or two, to help natives grow the roots that make them drought-tolerant.

This summer, he suggested, you can pay neighborhood kids to dig dry streambeds, make mounds, move earth, or sheet-mulch so you’ll be ready to plant in the fall.

For the rest of the yard, Whitaker said, “Know what your neighbors are doing on the other side of the fence.” Because his neighbors water a lot, he never has to water his fruit trees along the fence.

See the facebook page entitled Mountain View Water-wise Gardens, created by Erin Brownfield, for more ideas.

copyright 2014 Tanya Kucak



Low-Cost and No-Cost Tips




Think about where you want to spend your water budget this year. In the garden, natives, edibles, and herbs offer the best return on investment.

Edibles are always a good investment, especially this year when farmers will be growing less, letting fields lie fallow because water is not available. it's likely produce prices will increase sharply this summer, and it will be more cost-effective to grow your own, provided you plant the appropriate varieties and amounts so that your harvest does not go to waste. With a productive garden, you won’t skimp on eating the 5 to 9 daily servings of fruits and vegetables needed for optimal health. 

For container gardening, an EarthBox or a do-it-yourself equivalent is a great way to save water and have a productive crop. As long as you keep the water reservoir filled in such containers, the roots can wick water as needed, and the soil stays uniformly moist.

A drought-tolerant garden is another good investment. Depending on the weather, an established native garden will need no water or infrequent deep watering. Native perennials, shrubs, and trees that were planted in the past year or two often need some water every few weeks to grow the deep roots that make them drought tolerant. The relatively small amount of water they get this summer will pay off for many years. 

Drought-tolerant shrubby groundcovers such as ceanothus (at left), a California native, need little or no summer water once established. 

Trees and shrubs can take up to 4 inches of mulch, and unplanted areas can handle a lot more.

Always pull the mulch a few inches away from stems and trunks so they won’t rot. 

Here are some low-cost and no-cost approaches to having a garden and saving water.

The first step is to stop wasting water. The EPA’s Fix a Leak Week web page (http://tinyurl.com/6pubdq7) offers statistics on the amount of water wasted, as well as helpful guidance for finding and fixing leaks. If you use sprinklers or drip irrigation, be sure to check regularly for leaks or malfunctioning heads.

Runoff is another obvious waste of water. Whether you water by hand, with sprinklers, or with a drip system, all the water should be getting absorbed into the soil. If it’s not, water slower and longer. Cycle an automatic system on and off, with fewer minutes per cycle, until runoff is eliminated. For manual watering, use a good water breaker (Dramm is the best) with a gentle flow.

Don’t water too high, as shown at right, which loses water to evaporation. Instead, direct the flow of water downward and water near the roots of plants.

Protect tomatoes, squash, and cucumbers from waterborne diseases by keeping the leaves dry.

Reduce losses from evaporation by watering early or late in the day, and adding mulch. You can get a free truckload of mulch from tree trimmers. Add 3-4 inches of mulch to established trees and shrubs. If weeds are a problem, lay down a couple layers of cardboard or newspaper (3-5 sheets thick) first. Adding mulch keeps your soil alive and your plants healthy. The only exception is plants native to dry rocky hillsides, which may do better with a thin layer of mineral mulch.

At one community garden, a fellow gardener doesn't water her tomatoes after July 4. Well-mulched tomatoes, winter squash, and dry beans don’t need water once they’ve set fruit, even in our summer-dry climate.  The tomatoes don’t get as large, but the flavor is intensified.

With minimal mulch, watering is needed at most every 5 days. Grow your own and experiment with interesting varieties! Mediterranean herbs such as oregano and thyme are drought tolerant, and herbs in general are easy to grow and a delight to have on hand when all you need is a snippet.

If you grow more than you can use (or even if you don't), give some to food banks, which expecially appreciate donations of fresh fruits and vegetables. For smaller amounts, try the South Palo Alto Food Closet behind Covenant Presbyterian Church (near E. Meadow & Middlefield, 10-2 MWF). If you have more than 4 flats, try St. Anthony Padua Dining Room at 3500 Middlefield Rd., Menlo Park (8-2 daily except Sun.).

Adding compost to your vegetable beds (or your lawn!) will increase the water-holding capacity of the soil. For a lawn, sift the compost to remove larger chunks, then add about 1/4 inch at a time, enough to partially cover the grass but not enough to smother it. Usually the compost disappears within a week. Vegetable beds can take a couple inches of compost, either incorporated into the soil before planting or as a top dressing before mulch is added.

Residents of Los Altos, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Sunnyvale can get free compost from the Sunnyvale SMaRT Station (301 Carl Road); call ahead for availability and details. Horse stables such as Portola Pastures (1600 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto) offer as much free composted horse manure as you want.


copyright 2014 Tanya Kucak