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October 14, 2007

Parkway Planting

Over the course of the last two weekends, Benia and I purchased and planted about 200 native plants. This was the culmination of the final phase our our lawn removal goal. Native Suburbia is 100% free of traditional lawn of any sort. Officially this happened earlier this summer, when we smothered the lawn in the parkway. It has been cooking under all that mulch and newspaper for over 3 months, so it was time to plant.

We had been seeing the barren mulch covered area in our front yard all summer, and we were very excited to be doing something about it. Since the parkway is a fairly narrow patch next to the sidewalk, we chose plants that tend to grow shorter than 24 inches. There may eventually be taller volunteers from other parts of the yard, but for now we are stacking the deck on the shorter side.

Some of the species we planted:

I cannot wait until next year to see how everything fills in. It will be nice to move on to the next phase of Native Suburbia. We will still be weeding, but now we can watch as our native landscape matures.

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Comments


Gloria wrote at 2007-10-22 13:34:

I like your plant choices. The purple love grass looks so pretty in late summer. I noticed a great picture of a bumblebee next to the one of your parkway. Have you seen the Bee Spotter site at UIUC? That would make a great addition along with any others you may have. Here is the URL... http://beespotter.mste.uiuc.edu/

BeeSpotter is a partnership between citizen-scientists and the professional science community designed to educate the public about pollinators by engaging them in a data collection effort of importance to the nation. It is a web-based portal at the University of Illinois for learning about honey bees and bumble bees and for contributing data to a nationwide effort to baseline information on population status of these insects.


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