Thank you, I am IN VANCOUVER (or rather in the GVRD, the surrounding area), so it's GREAT to learn of another resource IN MY AREA, as decades of experience have reinforced the suggestion so kindly shared with me so long ago: LEARN what thrives (but is not overly invasive or pernicious) IN YOUR biome/microbiomes...thus TALK TO gardeners IN YOUR AREA, and ASK QUESTIONS, such that their SHARED KNOWLEDGE increases your own. I've met countless strangers who have been INCREDIBLY kind with their PRESCIOUS experiences/knowledge. Thanks for INTERwebs/Introducing me to this woman.
Chris + Epic Gardening - Thank you for this video. The "soft" creeping thyme at 4:13 is exactly what I am need for a project. Do you have any more information on the specific variety???
So inspirational! My back garden had a dying lawn choked by weeds, and after putting in raised beds I seeded the ground with clover. It's a carpet now, and the soil went from dusty dry to rich and healthy - I was super excited when I found my first worms in the dirt after a few years. And we get so many bees and butterflies.
Us as well! I joke that our lawn is like a Disney movie with all the animal life enjoying the clover. So many more birds, bees, butterflies, rabbits. Now when the grass is going more dormant in the heat of summer the clover is still lush and green. AND... I discovered clover jelly. So good!
@@emeraldwaters7289 Yes! It is very simple to do and there are many recipes online. It is a little tedious to pick all the flowers, but I have my kids help. We leave enough behind for the bees.
Can I ask what clover you used? I have never been a fan of grass, and now that I own a house, I am hell bent on not wasting my money or time on any grass lol. I just bought some white clover seed to start. What was your success in applying the seed? Throw the seed, and then add top soil?
My husband, the non-gardener, once looked out at the yard and asked, "Didn't we use to have grass?" Not any more. Garden beds have replaced it, along with paths of pine bark nuggets. The flower beds get compost and mulch, so the soil improves every year. My new project is to place vegetables and herbs among flowering plants. The bees love the flowers and herb combinations. Did you know that daylilies were originally grown in China for food? Observe hot and sour soup for tiger lily buds.
Hostas are also grown as a food crop in Asia. The young shoots taste similar to asparagus, but I actually like them more than asparagus (and I love asparagus). I usually harvest about 1/3 of the shoots and let the rest of the plant grow. You can't tell anything was taken.
I live in a small town and have been converting our backyard. The deer love it and for the past 8 years have decided to have their babies there. We are watching a pair of fawns graze now. They are welcomed here.
@@herculesmclovin It's very easy. I think we've mowed the grass 4 times since the spring. We did have a few spots were the clover didn't take as well and weeds were able to come up (we just spot seed them). But where it is nice and thick is only clover, it smothers out anything else. We don't water and our 'lawn' is nice and green all summer.
So glad you brought up native wildflowers! I live in Missouri and just recently found out that natural prairie and glade habitats are swiftly disappearing, and the insects and animals with them. Invasive species are VERY important to know, recognize, and remove, but you can of course use non-native plants that won't take over the space.
You are speaking my language. I have always wondered, who decided a plant was a weed? Undesirable? Thank you for sharing your knowledge and support of plants.
We have a clover garden. It started by accident and then turned into a happy positive! We bought our home 4 years ago from someone who extensively sprayed pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers (like the rest of our neighbors still do). We stopped all that and moved around patches from hearty areas of the lawn to the barren and scorched areas. Let nature take its course and we now have the lushest, prettiest lawn full of white and red clover and tons of native "weeds". Our neighbors water their lawn, we don't, the lawns look pretty similar health-wise. :)
Wondering if you have resources (blogs YT, books, etc) that you found helpful in your process? Or others could share too! I live in zone 7a & have lawn I'm converting but I have some challenges. If you or others have ideas for me/others that allow a gradual conversion - so appreciate! Congrats on your living carpet success!
@@kellkatz If you have a local university or college that has an agricultural program, sometimes they have good resources or partner with counties to provide services, information, and education for residents. For us, it was more of a case of "we are getting a dog and don't want to use chemicals because our parents never used them so let's see what happens". I will say that it was a rough first 2 years and the lawn still has some less-than-lush areas where the clover hasn't taken over yet. It was a very intuitive process. When we created our garden, placed it in an area where the drainage was poor due to the previous owners using sand to fill in where they had an aboveground pool rather than fill dirt. The area had sunken in and eroded so we had to raise that up with top soil. Our town luckily gives that away for free so we just had to borrow a friend's truck. Then we expanded the garden past the sandy area and transplanted some of the patches of lawn where there was already clover into areas where crabgrass was taking over due to the lack of fertilizer. We tried seeding in some patchy areas, but did not have much luck. I think a lot of it is a wait-and-see approach. And time, lots of time. I hope that helps a little and good luck on your conversion!
Our front lawn is the only one I can see on the block with a bunch of clover in it. I weeded out the front garden area, letting the sorrel take over the back section. The mallow and creeping charlie was getting to be a bit much, so we pulled most of it out to make room for pumpkins and put in a rock garden on one side. I'm trying to keep as many dandelions as I can, and let the local weeds have the bottom of the hedgerow (minus the climbing vine ones, don't want to suffocate the hedge bushes).
Plus, you can harvest the clover blossoms, dry them, and use them for tea! It is an extremely nutritious herb that contains lots of vitamins and minerals, and it helps fortify the nervous system and balance hormones. The taste isn’t bad, pretty mild. Win win!
Priceless! I heard recently that in horticulture classes they are being taught that a "traditional" turf lawn with grasses is considered invasive.... I agree. And IF I ever have my own yard again (hopefully soon), I hope to eventually, slowly, but surely replace those invasive species with something more productive. Why spend time and energy growing stuff that is useless... Unless of course you have livestock that can graze it. I don't think too many HOA's would appreciate sheep or goats grazing lawns in their subdivisions. They probably wouldn't aprpeciate my changes either. Thus why I do not want to ever live where there is an HOA.
We've got a clover lawn now and it's so much greener and prettier than grass. Our city also gets water from lake Ontario so we never have water shortages, and the groundwater and evaporated water goes back to the lake, so wasting water is much less of an issue for us
I noticed more content that is outside of your region ( San Diego area)- so I appreciate the title letting us know it’s for cold climates. Do you have a video about lawn alternatives for warm and drought climates like San Diego ? Thanks!
@@joshuaarmbrust6918 i am in CA. We don't get rain and I am only allowed to water on Sundays and Wednesdays. It is impossible to get grass to establish here if you dont already have it. Believe me, I would love grass but it is not gonna happen anytime soon.
I second the native plant comment. We have some native grasses and sedges here in Mohave County that I'm planning to integrate, as well as some native flowers. Lawn is great for pathways or heavy traffic areas, but your pollinators will thank you if you basically turn your yard into a native meadow in places you don't frequently traverse. A bonus is that a lot of native plants have edible parts or have been used by indigenous peoples for medicinal use BONAP (Biota of North America Program) is a really good resource for finding native plants by county
I used to seed about 3 of my 5 1/2 acres with a mix of red clover and creeping red fescue. They stay beautiful all year round and when they bloom it was a beautiful carpet of vivid green and red!💜
Great video, appreciating this since I live in colder climate! Also Chris is so clear at explaining and sharing information, as a non native speaker it’s easy to listen and understand her and her garden is gorgeous!
I have a large backyard (about 14,000 sq ft) and fescue grass. I have a couple big live oaks and a pond as well. I bought my house about 5 years ago, and the grass was in okay shape, but also had quite a few patches, especially in the shade of the live oaks, and was a lot of work to maintain. 3 years ago, I just threw out a ton of clover seeds and creeping thyme seeds all over the back yard and used a compost roller to roll out composted cotton burrs to anchor the seeds down and fertilize a little. And OMG, it has been 3 seasons now, and my back yard is a lush flower field of about 50% lush fescue grass, and the other 50%, mixed in all over the place, a combo of the beautiful thyme and clover. It was a brilliant decision and it is my oasis now.
I love what Chris did with her lawn! I'm not a fan of 'traditional' lawns either and I wish folks would get away from the idea that their lawn must look perfect to be acceptable.
It only took one season of working at a farming co-op to learn one solid lesson, natural practices are still the most effective. Everything you buy at the store is an upsell. We used all the same language and practices as this video here; cardboard sheeting, compost, sew, mulch, drench, and end of season, chop & drop.
I've never cared much about grass and choose to focus my attention on my garden beds I've been lazily seeding white Dutch clover into my fescue lawn in Virginia 7a the past two years because I've always liked white clover and thought it would be good for the pollinators. I now have a lush, beautiful green lawn with zero effort (no watering and no fertilizer ever) other than flinging some seeds out 2 springs in row. 🍀🍀🍀 There were a lot of great suggestions in this video! I'd never heard of some of these groundcovers and will be keeping an eye out for some of them in the future.
Thanks for this. My backyard in 5b is semi-shaded under a huge 80 year old locust tree that we’d never want to get rid of - consequentially, our “lawn” is about half “weeds” that you mentioned. I always stress about the thought of how much work it would be to “fix” the yard, but I really like your more natural style and it’s given me some new ideas to chew on!
Some weeds are pretty. I saw a yard full of dandy lions and the small purple flowers i dont remember the name of. It was really pretty. I also say an abandoned golfing rangen with a huge field covered in yellow, super pretty. Honestly, you could get 1 to 2 east to care for plants for ground cover and let it be. Another option was soneone else i watched who looked at where the grass became dried and planted in islands. Stripping out the dry grass in a circles/oval shape and planting that way over years. Costing less money and eventually less maintenence. Another was moss. You can still walk on it but it does well in shaded areas.
Saw a comment down below, I’ll reiterate that same sentiment. I think it’s really awesome that the channels multi tasking in different climates. It’s so much more relevant to the audience. Ty guys!!! Maybe I’m giddy because I’m close to one of them!!!
Beautiful. This senior had to share my experience while living in Quebec. Both my back and front garden were invaded by grubs and my beautiful lawn turn into brown mess. Then the whole backyard was full of dandelions. Initially I was getting discouraged because they grow faster than my hard work of digging. It took me 3 years to finally get rid of those pesky dandelions. Now my neighbours call my front and back "Botanical Garden" as I planted perennial flowers. I have few veggies at the back but I concentrate more on flowers. Some even take pictures when they pass by. I'm in my garden most of the day watching bees, birds, monarch butterflies and few rabbits.
I live in a neighborhood that seems to compete on who has the most perfect lawn. I hear lawnmowers going all day and evening here. I must say that it does look beautiful and it makes the neighborhood look elegant and it makes the houses look stately. However I think I may change my backyard. This is the time on the planet to start growing your own food and use water wisely.
There are a lot of ground covers that will stay low growing and will be lush and green year round. They require no mowing or little mowing and will still stay neat as a pin. Only edging is needed and your no mow "lawn" will soon be the envy of the neighborhood.
İ have been ripping up grass around our house patch by patch , i think if anyone complained I'd rather up my insurance and torch the place than maintain a short grass lawn Ugh the incessant drone of leaf blowers and gas lawnmowers it is insane The thoughts that come to my mind are not stately, but rather green puke , decadence , trashy , i was never a fan of short grass lawns even before i learned they were a waste
I love this idea. During our drought that lasted a couple of years, here in the Northeast, most of my grass died because I refuse to waste water on grass. My yard was still quite green because the native plants in the soil took the place of the grass. They just needed the grass out of the way. It is beautiful and in the spring many native flowers bloom in a variety of colors. Also started adding straw to my veg garden and use ollas because of this channel. We are no longer in a drought but I enjoy saving on water and this is just a good practice to use always and it just looks really pretty.
Many of us have our own water supplies instead of relying on government to sell us water - water the lawn and it goes right back into the ground where it came from. No waste here. Maybe some of you just need a better method of getting water instead of adapting to poor government leadership in your area.
Thanks! the lawn where I live is beautiful. I've identified 39 non-grass species in it. It's durable- never needs chemicals, water, frequent moving, and stands up to use. It blooms, often in large patches of color- where we skip mowing for a few times (we never need to mow more than every other week). Our lawn is an active biome that supports native species.
Lawns are effectively 'deserts' in biodiversity terms so choosing the aforementioned approach in the video, means you're not only doing your bit for biodiversity, your also attracting more pollinators to the rest of your garden, especially the vege patch, & ensuring better cropping.
I am a fan of grass lawns because I use the clippings in the garden as a mulch and for compost. Having said that, there are some sections of my lawn that I think would be better served by some kind of grass alternative ground cover. Thanks for the video
This is where the invasive properties of mint can be a huge benefit. In addition to the creeping thyme mentioned, I'd also recommend oregano and peppermint. Oregano spreads pretty fast and is used in a ton of recipes, so it's always useful to have around. Peppermint is one of the most hardy and aggressive mints, and also the most potent, which makes it good at repelling certain pests.
@@Eryalb Funnily enough the native ground cover in this area is Creeping Charlie, often considered a weed, but it's a wild mint that is also edible, albeit on the very mild side.
@@FrozEnbyWolf150 That's cool that it's a native one. I've just been learning a lot about how damaging invasive species are so when I hear mint I assume the worst
Just make sure lupins are native to your area. They are classed as an invasive species in some countries and once you have them they are almost impossible to get rid off.
I have seen more houses in my area. That have tons of ground covered plants, or a mix of lawn and ground cover. It looks so good. So much color you can play with. So attractive.
Exactly what I need!!!! We don't have any traditional lawn anymore in our house but perennial plants. Now our new project is to add ground covers (instead of just woodchips) and beautify it. Thanks to Chris.
We've been trying to figure out what random stuff is growing in our yard and just by happy accident ended up with a pretty large patch of wild strawberries. We mowed over them once before finding out what they are, but they produced a bunch of flowers and berries already. They did grow up within our grass so I've been weeding the larger invasive ones, but now we want to make intentional areas of it among other native ground covers. The color of the strawberry leaves are nice and the bees loved the flowers.
I've experimented with all kinds of lawn alternatives and have to say that I'm going back to turf for my front lawn. All of those recommendations create high maintenance gardens (lawns) that DO REQUIRE constant weeding, trimming, dividing, edging, mulching etc. Some of those plants wander and have to be edged. Many of them grow taller than 12" which is not allowed in my city. Yes, reduce the size of the lawn you have to mow every week but think ahead to long term maintenance.
I so appreciate Chris joining epic gardening!! Kevin has done an amazing job making his videos useful to as many people as possible but it’s nice that he realizes his expertise can’t cover everything, especially things that don’t apply to his area or specific interests. I’m really enjoying Chris’s videos!!
Use native ground covers! In Florida we often use our native sunshine mimosa and frogfruit. Perennial peanut is sometimes used even though it's not native
This is great information and very well presented. Traditional American lawns are highly overrated, extremely high maintenance and stressful to the environment. Glad to see people moving away from that and considering other options.
In my area when it gets really hot my lawn area goes dormant. That includes all plants considered weeds after a while. It technically isn't bare ground. The roots are still holding the soil there. In the fall it greens up. Then in the spring the Dandelions provide a thick yellow carpet. I am sure some people hate that, but they are trained to think they are blemishes in lawns. The reality is most of the Dandelion seeds don't germinate. I have seen birds eat the seeds. I don't recommend Grape Hyacinth because it will spread by tiny seeds and tiny bulbs. I would suggest growing bulb flowers in pots to make redoing beds easier. I like tulips because they tend to stay put. I recently had some Chicory and some Amaranth varieties blow in. They ad diversity, but their height can be a problem in places. This year I had huge areas of tiny violet looking flowers all over in places. They look pretty until they turn into a brown mesh. Even if my area wasn't in a permadrought; I still would not waste water on a lawn.
I’m literally in the midst of doing this! Patience is a virtue, because as fast as they say that ground cover is - it still takes awhile to fill in 😅 The whole lawn cycle (water to grow just to cut) was just not it for me.
Living in North Vancouver myself, Chris’ insight is so very helpful. Our short growing season and brutal rain really makes it hard to relate to others who live in more forgiving climate zones. Love her stuff
@@grandenauto3214 I have a north facing townhouse patio mostly shaded out by my building and trees with the mountains to the north. I get barely 4 hrs of full sun during peak summer because of it, so I for one have a short growing season. I’d love to grow dragonfruit and tropicals like EG, but I have to grow what works for my little area. Hence why I praise Chris for highlighting those options. I know the lucky ones do, but not everyone on the north shore has a south facing backyard garden with 10hrs of full sun. I would love a place like that, but I don’t have $2m, and I have to settle with what I have.
I have a north facing balcony and planters, our maple trees like this location and are growing really well on the balcony. We have hostas, brunneras and ferns that need shade. Ferns can come on multiple colours and sizes. There are great videos on shade gardens that might be helpful
Love this!! My yard is Northwest super shady and wet. The only things that grow are ferns, moss, and lots of mushrooms. I let the leaves and pine needles pile up and encourage the natural vegetation.
I love watching this type of video. I live outside of Houston and am doing the opposite though. Getting rid of the water hogging flower beds and mulch that blows/washes away all the time. Letting native grass and wildflowers (lots and lots of blue bonnets) take over. The native grass needs very little water and much less mowing, no fertilizer or weed killer. The wildflowers mean we start mowing at least a couple months after our neighbors. Just look around and see what Mother Nature is doing and mimic that for your area and you'll save yourself a ton of work.
This video is timed perfectly! Thanks for the ideas and the full list of plants Chris has suggested. My mom and I were just having a conversation about lawn alternatives. I feel that convincing folks about lawn alternatives can be a tough sell but if they realize they can also save money that can help I think.
I'm a fan of patchwork lawns. Taking different groundcovers/herbs/perennial&annual flowers to create a patchwork carpet for my lawn. Different textures and colors to make it stand out
Switching my lawn to clover a decade ago has changed everything for the better. I now love walking around barefoot, and doing yoga each morning on my clover lawn is magical. It’s definitely helped the quality of my soil.
Part of what was my Lawn, and now serves as a garden path, is covered in Buttercups. On the edges of the path they are near a foot tall, however they have also formed a soft mat about an inch off the ground in the walkway. softer than grass, and the prolific yellow flowers on the larger plants on the margins are welcome as well. ~Asheville, NC
This is such a great topic. We moved into a home that is on undeveloped land. The yard looks like a beautiful meadow (the campsite of my dreams). I have since learned that many of the flowers and grasses are actually noxious weeds and invasive plants. I am planning on tackling the weeds and improving the soil. I would love for it to continue to look like a meadow. To support the wildlife, bees and butterflies that come through. Thank you for the great inspiration. I took notes!
Absolutely love Chris!!! Right around the time you started to add her, I started to give up on my favorite gardening channels because they were all west coast and I was like I need something for my area!!! Also 100% satisfied she included clover. I love clover lawns and here in the Midwest so many pump their lawns full of junk to get that neon green "perfect" lawn and I think that's ok for a small area but sad and destructive for large areas where clover wins out in my book for softness and the darker green color. It's so lovely and the wildlife loves it. I think it's fair to do part seeded lawn if you really desire that but if you have a large lawn you should be doing clover and allowing dandelions to exist in the spring. Thank you Chris!
So inspiring and packed with accurate helpful information and processes. Well done, and Thank You! As a native landscaper myself who also has pets, I'd add a note to be CAREFUL with those spring bulbs if you have KIDS OR PETS-- the ones you mentioned are toxic if bulbs or flowers are ingested, including daffodils, snowdrops, and fritillaria, while crocus may give an upset tummy. Tulips are also toxic. Be sure to check the flowers as well-- I saw one or two that aren't great for mouthy little ones, such as the lupin seeds. Beauty and color is my priority as well, so for that fix, here are a few other nontoxic species available that do well in the cold, for starters: muscari--grape hyacinth, african violets, iceplant, stonecrop, snap dragon, or self seeding perennials like bachelor's button or bee balm. Would adore it if you ever add a kid/pet friendly episode too if you can? Happy gardening!
I highly recommend Alpine strawberries as a ground cover. Very shallow roots so they work great growing together with many plants, even just a plant or 3 will quickly fill up a whole bed if its a variety with runners. Very very easy to grow, just in the beginning you need to water frequently while it is establishing their roots. But they are very hardy plants after that. And tend to on their own grow so densely that they quickly keep weeds out. Usually in the second season I don’t really do any weeding in my alpine strawberry beds anymore. And they are absolutely delicious. They are more fragile than strawberries and can’t really be sold commercially for this reason. So you have to grow them or go forging (if they grow in your climate) if you want to get to eat them. But they are really something special. It sort of similar to the taste of strawberries, but a lot more intensely flavoured, and not as sour as strawberries. And they have their own unique taste. I absolutely prefer their taste over strawberries
I really enjoyed this. My neighbors have these perfectly manicured lawns and stone lined flower beds, and although pretty, they are just not me. I wanted something a little more natural within the confines of an hoa of course. This gives me so much inspiration 😊😊😊
I am currrently trying to cover my small garden with bungle! I think it's going to take some majoy time,. but I love how it gets established, and the little purple flowers are amazing!
I have an acre on the edge of the Strait of Juan de Fuca that is an experimental nature habitat filled with wildflowers, wildlife, and weeds. There is always something going on from nature to see. The less I put my hand to the land the more activity there is from larger animals to tiny insects and everything in-between. My philosophy is I benefit from nature and nature benefits from me.
I left my weeds alone, also seeded clover and lawn seeds into weed patch. The main thing was regular mowing on higher end of spectrum. That way the patch was high enough to keep itself shaded from sun but the stronger weeds did not have a chance to bulk up and shade out other seeds. I also wait on mowing when I see the weeds I like making seeds. Like when dandelions become white and fluffy in may, I wait for them to spread the seeds and mow after. It took me 4 years to go from bare dirt and rocks patch to green lawn. But this method makes sure I do not need any fertilisers or watering. The wild weeds are resilient and get back on their feet no matter what negligence. I also started this method in my farm where there are terrible weeds and clay soil. I keep it low by mowing and the second year the patch that is mowed looks much better (more like lawn) than the patch that is trimmed twice a year. Edit: this is in zone 4 and with climate on rainy side, except a dry as bone month here and there due to climate change.
I live in zone 6b and I LOVE wild violets! Those are all awesome options, thank you! Whenever I own my own space, I will slowly get rid of my regular lawn 😂
Yes Chris! Those cover suggestions are great. It's nice having someone on the Epic Gardening team growing in a zone close to home. I'm in SE Alaska so similar climate just more rain here. As I slowly cover our entire yard in raised beds I'm adding clover and native wild flowers to the lawn anywhere it gets patchy. Eventually I'd love to have paths through creeping and lemon thyme.
6 years....Fantastic! I, too, transformed my yard. It is still a work in progress [always]. I am now hoping to convince my new neighbors to get rid of their weeds [with unbreathable plastic underneath!] and consider these beautiful alternatives instead of grass [and I could help with transplants :)].
Loved this video! I’m a San Diego native…transplanted to Vermont. My favorite photo: cardboard covered yard. Because that’s the stage where I am with sporadic piles of wood chips. Thank you for letting me see the green light at the end of the tunnel! Carolyn/Vermont Cat Lady
One of my favorite episodes. I’ve started the ground cover process without doing any research, and I’m happy to see that I’m doing it right. Love me some violets for cover. Also discovered a salsify in my yard which I hope to spread around via its seeds. All about getting rid of the lawn and it’s trappings. 😊
A lot of these like clovers, violets, dandilions have naturally grown in my parent's southern Kentucky yards for all my life, and I always preferred them to grassy lawns anyways. The violets are especially my favorite, as they're the primary ground cover in my mom's shaded backyard and bring so much whimsy.
Another benefit to a lot of the traditional turf grass weeds: most of them are edible and/or medicinal). Prunella, Dandelion, English Daisies, Yarrow, Chickweed, Gill Over the Ground, Plantain, Cheeses, etc... All wonderful. A heads up to folks who like clover lawns (as I do): Watch out for buttercups and hawkweed. Buttercups will drive legumes from a yard over time, and hawkweed, although pretty, is allelopathic, suppressing anything that isn't it.
I have some hawkweed growing in the "weed garden." Any tips to get rid of it without an herbicide? We have buttercups in the back yard, but I don't plan on putting anything back there except maybe a blueberry bush and some pumpkins (one spot is shady, other spot gets sun).
We have consistently had great results with clover. We started our garden when we bought our house 7 years ago and we found that the areas we worked In and stored stuff we killed the grass and created a weed issue. We started adding clover and not only does it grow taller and more vigorously than grass it shades out weeds better and it’s great when I need to add some greens to my compost.
I cleaned up an overgrowth of forestry trash full of invasive weeds and sapling trees. After mowing the weeds and using lawn chemicals for a year, I lightly overseeded with White Dutch Clover to improve the soil as fruit trees were also planted in that area. Some of the clover in the grass seemed to be a fail but the following year I noticed quite a bit of clover growing along with wild violets. Also have honeybees to forage on the random flowers by not planting grass as a groundcover. Its a work in progress and I allow it to grow until the dry season for the pollinators. Looking into getting some Crocus bulbs for early spring.
My yard has a bunch of sorrel in it and I didn't know how the seeds were spread until one almost blinded me as I was looking at the pod. Personally it's my favorite because it's just so fun. The neighborhood kids find them amazing lol
I love to have a daisy lawn: they have always green tiny leaves and let the gras look lush, they have lovely blossoms and butterflies love it. And insects like them but not honeybees. So you can run barefoot on it relatively safe. Clover is full of bees when it is blooming. From the look, the safetyness and the lushness it bring I prefer daisy-lawn most. It is very dry-resistant too! It aways looks beautiful and well cared.
I love this idea, especially the less to mow part. My yard got over-run with dandelions, creeping Charlie & wild violets from the neighbor's yard that was unsold/unrented & overgrown for a few years. The bees love it but the neighbors, one is a retired grounds keeper and the other was a landscaper, both have sprayed and grass seeded parts of my yard next to theirs. I had a beautiful carpet of moss in one corner that was poisoned, ugh. I could never sustain this without first creating a hard border of sorts as a buffer zone, to preserve my neighbors love of a pristine grass lawn and my embracing a yard full of flowering weeds.
Take the tip of ordering native wildflowers for your area, and seed them too. Then make cute little signs for the edge of your lawn and label it a “native wildflower preserve”. You might even have a state wildflower foundation (like we have in California with Theodore Payne or also there are the butterfly preservation foundations, so you could do a “native pollinator preserve” and also plant some pollinator habitat plants in a planter or bed nearby), and you could get their logo on a sticker or a yard sign or something to show your support. Get fancy and make a tags for the names of the plants you have so neighbors walking by can take a pic if they like a bloom. Anyone would feel like an asshole seeding or spraying something like that!
@@twobluestripes So funny you mention that, I'm planning to do a pollinator garden! My husband of 25 years died last year, and he was a lover of all things bugs, bees, butterflies and moths. We had perennial flowers as part of his visitation flowers and gave away flower seed packets too, so people could start their own flower patches in honor of him. I've got dozens of seed packets ready for when I get the area ready to direct sow. I'll definitely look for signs to put up, hoping they'll leave it alone. My back yard only borders four neighbors, no public viewing. Someday I'll get to plant the front yard too, with a mix of flowers and veggies. Less to mow! 💜 Bonus, I found my yard is in the Rusty Patch Bumblebee area, so I can apply for grants too.
THANK YOU for covering this! I'm looking into alternatives for lawn as we get ready to break ground to build our house. If anyone else is doing similar work, your local universities do a great job of creating lists of native grasses and soil/light/moisture needs for each
I want to thank you for adding "for cold climates" to your video title. I so often see gardeners here in North Carolina-- sharing plant lists they've found that will not work in our area. My goal when helping gardeners is to help them be successful and I hate for someone to lose interest when something fails simply because they didn't understand regional differences. As a novice gardener I used to read a lot of gardening books and magazines (not much internet then). It took me a while to figure out that I needed to find out where the author was gardening. And if I couldn't find their area, I learned to take their advice with a grain of salt. Imo all content creators really NEED to let their audience know where they are in the world. Thanks again.
So appreciate this as I was doing my own research as when I have a home w/yard one day what I can plant. I’m not a fan of regular grass lawns. From what I researched I want clover. But can wait to see what your suggestions! 💛🌱
So the idea is to build your own mini ecosystem. Very cool! That sounds like so much more fun and interesting than simply trying to maintain "the perfect lawn".
Thanks for this! This is exactly what we’re doing. We’re in early days and appreciate seeing what some time can bring. Thanks too for mentioning specific plant types. Grateful!
I tried adding microclover to my lawn a few years back, but I think it hybridized with the existing white clover and actually created clover with extra-large leaves, which was also extremely aggressive and out-competed the grass, which I didn't like. I would recommend sticking with natural clovers if you want the grass to persist in the mix.
Oooh. Living in the Netherlands, this has been very informative, thank you for posting this! I'll be looking into creeping thyme for my borders and my rock garden. And I'll definitely look into adding clover into my browning lawn ^^"
Love this. These are beautiful, but we have an active dog who needs running room - except for the clover additions, she would tear these options up. One option, we kept mowing, but let our “moss problem” take over. It’s beautiful & very little work.
Thank you so much for this video. As the owner of a tortoise I've been looking into low maintenance, drought tolerant, nontoxic ground cover for my grow zone. I'm thinking white clover with a sprinkle of dandelion(she finds it delicious) might do the trick!
Full list of all of Chris' lawn alternative suggestions:
→ GardenStraw: bit.ly/3O4XlS1
Available from many seed providers:
→ Buckwheat
→ Borage
→ Sweet alyssum
→ Winter field peas
→ Native wildflower seeds (buy from a local source)
→ Clover (Microclover, Red clover, Crimson clover, White Dutch clover)
→ Self heal
→ Chamomile
→ Yarrow
Perennial ground covers available from most garden centres:
→ Lamb’s ear (Stachys byzantina)
→ Mediterranean creeping thyme (Thymus longicaulis)
→ Creeping thyme, multiple species and varieties of Thymus praecox and Thymus serpyllum
→ Wooly thyme (Thymus praecox subs. britannicus)
→ Alpine Strawberry (Fragaria vesca)
→ Bugleweed (Ajuga reptans)
→ Wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens)
→ Redwood sorrel (Oxalis oregana)
→Wild ginger (Asarum canadense)
→ Bulbs: Crocus, Galanthus (snowdrops), Fritillaria, Narcissus (daffodil)
Make a video on zero waste landscape.
if memory serves, when i grew chamomile it had a scent that drew flies. might want to start small with it.
Thank you, I am IN VANCOUVER (or rather in the GVRD, the surrounding area), so it's GREAT to learn of another resource IN MY AREA, as decades of experience have reinforced the suggestion so kindly shared with me so long ago: LEARN what thrives (but is not overly invasive or pernicious) IN YOUR biome/microbiomes...thus TALK TO gardeners IN YOUR AREA, and ASK QUESTIONS, such that their SHARED KNOWLEDGE increases your own. I've met countless strangers who have been INCREDIBLY kind with their PRESCIOUS experiences/knowledge. Thanks for INTERwebs/Introducing me to this woman.
Chris + Epic Gardening - Thank you for this video. The "soft" creeping thyme at 4:13 is exactly what I am need for a project. Do you have any more information on the specific variety???
A lot of these are edible and medicinal as well!
So inspirational! My back garden had a dying lawn choked by weeds, and after putting in raised beds I seeded the ground with clover. It's a carpet now, and the soil went from dusty dry to rich and healthy - I was super excited when I found my first worms in the dirt after a few years. And we get so many bees and butterflies.
Same! Clover has completely transformed my old clay soil and now it’s a haven for pollinators, butterflies and birds.
Us as well! I joke that our lawn is like a Disney movie with all the animal life enjoying the clover. So many more birds, bees, butterflies, rabbits. Now when the grass is going more dormant in the heat of summer the clover is still lush and green. AND... I discovered clover jelly. So good!
@@InHimAlone
Do u make your own clover jelly? From the clover in your yard?
@@emeraldwaters7289 Yes! It is very simple to do and there are many recipes online. It is a little tedious to pick all the flowers, but I have my kids help. We leave enough behind for the bees.
Can I ask what clover you used? I have never been a fan of grass, and now that I own a house, I am hell bent on not wasting my money or time on any grass lol. I just bought some white clover seed to start. What was your success in applying the seed? Throw the seed, and then add top soil?
My husband, the non-gardener, once looked out at the yard and asked, "Didn't we use to have grass?" Not any more. Garden beds have replaced it, along with paths of pine bark nuggets. The flower beds get compost and mulch, so the soil improves every year. My new project is to place vegetables and herbs among flowering plants. The bees love the flowers and herb combinations. Did you know that daylilies were originally grown in China for food? Observe hot and sour soup for tiger lily buds.
Hostas are also grown as a food crop in Asia. The young shoots taste similar to asparagus, but I actually like them more than asparagus (and I love asparagus). I usually harvest about 1/3 of the shoots and let the rest of the plant grow. You can't tell anything was taken.
Gotta love a husband like that! You're free to go wild.
That's awesome! Take a trip to the woods and make some compost tea from the dried leaves and mycilium growing.
You just know if we ever move some dumbass buyer will tile it all 🥲
I didn't know that they had them in China, but I aware that the rhizomes are edible.
I live in a small town and have been converting our backyard. The deer love it and for the past 8 years have decided to have their babies there. We are watching a pair of fawns graze now. They are welcomed here.
We have a clover lawn and I absolutely love it. It always full of pollinators
> It always full of pollinators
The downside of that is - don't run around outside in the yard barefoot! ;-)
Hi, how has it been in terms of maintenance? I believe it's great! However what I'm interested most in, is if you get any unwanted plants aka weeds?
@@herculesmclovin It's very easy. I think we've mowed the grass 4 times since the spring. We did have a few spots were the clover didn't take as well and weeds were able to come up (we just spot seed them). But where it is nice and thick is only clover, it smothers out anything else. We don't water and our 'lawn' is nice and green all summer.
@@tristinlovett3815 awh okay thanks ✨ :)
Wow. Pictures?
So glad you brought up native wildflowers! I live in Missouri and just recently found out that natural prairie and glade habitats are swiftly disappearing, and the insects and animals with them. Invasive species are VERY important to know, recognize, and remove, but you can of course use non-native plants that won't take over the space.
You are speaking my language. I have always wondered, who decided a plant was a weed? Undesirable? Thank you for sharing your knowledge and support of plants.
Used to work for a prairie restoration company and can remember that even during the most severe droughts the prairies where always green and lush
We have a clover garden. It started by accident and then turned into a happy positive! We bought our home 4 years ago from someone who extensively sprayed pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers (like the rest of our neighbors still do). We stopped all that and moved around patches from hearty areas of the lawn to the barren and scorched areas. Let nature take its course and we now have the lushest, prettiest lawn full of white and red clover and tons of native "weeds". Our neighbors water their lawn, we don't, the lawns look pretty similar health-wise. :)
Wondering if you have resources (blogs YT, books, etc) that you found helpful in your process? Or others could share too! I live in zone 7a & have lawn I'm converting but I have some challenges. If you or others have ideas for me/others that allow a gradual conversion - so appreciate! Congrats on your living carpet success!
@@kellkatz If you have a local university or college that has an agricultural program, sometimes they have good resources or partner with counties to provide services, information, and education for residents. For us, it was more of a case of "we are getting a dog and don't want to use chemicals because our parents never used them so let's see what happens". I will say that it was a rough first 2 years and the lawn still has some less-than-lush areas where the clover hasn't taken over yet. It was a very intuitive process. When we created our garden, placed it in an area where the drainage was poor due to the previous owners using sand to fill in where they had an aboveground pool rather than fill dirt. The area had sunken in and eroded so we had to raise that up with top soil. Our town luckily gives that away for free so we just had to borrow a friend's truck. Then we expanded the garden past the sandy area and transplanted some of the patches of lawn where there was already clover into areas where crabgrass was taking over due to the lack of fertilizer. We tried seeding in some patchy areas, but did not have much luck. I think a lot of it is a wait-and-see approach. And time, lots of time. I hope that helps a little and good luck on your conversion!
Our front lawn is the only one I can see on the block with a bunch of clover in it. I weeded out the front garden area, letting the sorrel take over the back section. The mallow and creeping charlie was getting to be a bit much, so we pulled most of it out to make room for pumpkins and put in a rock garden on one side. I'm trying to keep as many dandelions as I can, and let the local weeds have the bottom of the hedgerow (minus the climbing vine ones, don't want to suffocate the hedge bushes).
Plus, you can harvest the clover blossoms, dry them, and use them for tea! It is an extremely nutritious herb that contains lots of vitamins and minerals, and it helps fortify the nervous system and balance hormones. The taste isn’t bad, pretty mild.
Win win!
Loved this! Thank you for normalizing a mixed lawn! Over the past 4 years I have allowed my yard to fill in with grass, clover and dandelion.
I may or may not be responsible for giving my landlord a clover 🍀 problem
😂
You have no idea how badly I have wanted to seed bomb my rental with crimson clover! Lol
Clover is good for the lawn
@@didthatreallyjust but not of it overtakes and you have a return my land to me the way you got it clause...
Priceless! I heard recently that in horticulture classes they are being taught that a "traditional" turf lawn with grasses is considered invasive.... I agree. And IF I ever have my own yard again (hopefully soon), I hope to eventually, slowly, but surely replace those invasive species with something more productive. Why spend time and energy growing stuff that is useless... Unless of course you have livestock that can graze it. I don't think too many HOA's would appreciate sheep or goats grazing lawns in their subdivisions. They probably wouldn't aprpeciate my changes either. Thus why I do not want to ever live where there is an HOA.
We've got a clover lawn now and it's so much greener and prettier than grass. Our city also gets water from lake Ontario so we never have water shortages, and the groundwater and evaporated water goes back to the lake, so wasting water is much less of an issue for us
I noticed more content that is outside of your region ( San Diego area)- so I appreciate the title letting us know it’s for cold climates. Do you have a video about lawn alternatives for warm and drought climates like San Diego ? Thanks!
Not yet! I usually am a fan of mulch, chips, straw, or xeriscape
Look up the natives in the region. The native plants will do well in the type of soil and the weather once they are established.
Plant grass not weeds don't make our neighborhoods look like crap
@@joshuaarmbrust6918 i am in CA. We don't get rain and I am only allowed to water on Sundays and Wednesdays. It is impossible to get grass to establish here if you dont already have it. Believe me, I would love grass but it is not gonna happen anytime soon.
I second the native plant comment. We have some native grasses and sedges here in Mohave County that I'm planning to integrate, as well as some native flowers. Lawn is great for pathways or heavy traffic areas, but your pollinators will thank you if you basically turn your yard into a native meadow in places you don't frequently traverse. A bonus is that a lot of native plants have edible parts or have been used by indigenous peoples for medicinal use
BONAP (Biota of North America Program) is a really good resource for finding native plants by county
I used to seed about 3 of my 5 1/2 acres with a mix of red clover and creeping red fescue. They stay beautiful all year round and when they bloom it was a beautiful carpet of vivid green and red!💜
Is red clover a perennial?
@@cathy3951 both reseeded yearly but I filled in every couple of years. I would recommend the lower growing perennial red clover not Crimson clover.
Great video, appreciating this since I live in colder climate! Also Chris is so clear at explaining and sharing information, as a non native speaker it’s easy to listen and understand her and her garden is gorgeous!
I have a large backyard (about 14,000 sq ft) and fescue grass. I have a couple big live oaks and a pond as well. I bought my house about 5 years ago, and the grass was in okay shape, but also had quite a few patches, especially in the shade of the live oaks, and was a lot of work to maintain. 3 years ago, I just threw out a ton of clover seeds and creeping thyme seeds all over the back yard and used a compost roller to roll out composted cotton burrs to anchor the seeds down and fertilize a little. And OMG, it has been 3 seasons now, and my back yard is a lush flower field of about 50% lush fescue grass, and the other 50%, mixed in all over the place, a combo of the beautiful thyme and clover. It was a brilliant decision and it is my oasis now.
This video brought me so much joy. I love seeing lawns becoming more and more beautiful and natural. Thank you from Canada 🇨🇦
I love what Chris did with her lawn! I'm not a fan of 'traditional' lawns either and I wish folks would get away from the idea that their lawn must look perfect to be acceptable.
In their proper place I see nothing wrong with lawns. A good lawn is so comfortable to walk on and lie on ... but it does take water and fertilizer.
@@justgivemethetruth plus the constant mowing is a big down side. But less so, once mowers go electric and the grid is cleaned up
I love Chris' spots on your channel. She's very technical, clear and good at teaching.
It only took one season of working at a farming co-op to learn one solid lesson, natural practices are still the most effective. Everything you buy at the store is an upsell. We used all the same language and practices as this video here; cardboard sheeting, compost, sew, mulch, drench, and end of season, chop & drop.
I've never cared much about grass and choose to focus my attention on my garden beds I've been lazily seeding white Dutch clover into my fescue lawn in Virginia 7a the past two years because I've always liked white clover and thought it would be good for the pollinators. I now have a lush, beautiful green lawn with zero effort (no watering and no fertilizer ever) other than flinging some seeds out 2 springs in row. 🍀🍀🍀 There were a lot of great suggestions in this video! I'd never heard of some of these groundcovers and will be keeping an eye out for some of them in the future.
Chris is such a wonderful addition to the team, it's great to learn from someone that has a climate similar to mine
Hi what is Chris 's max and min temperature and humidity? Xxx
Thanks for this. My backyard in 5b is semi-shaded under a huge 80 year old locust tree that we’d never want to get rid of - consequentially, our “lawn” is about half “weeds” that you mentioned. I always stress about the thought of how much work it would be to “fix” the yard, but I really like your more natural style and it’s given me some new ideas to chew on!
Some weeds are pretty. I saw a yard full of dandy lions and the small purple flowers i dont remember the name of. It was really pretty. I also say an abandoned golfing rangen with a huge field covered in yellow, super pretty.
Honestly, you could get 1 to 2 east to care for plants for ground cover and let it be. Another option was soneone else i watched who looked at where the grass became dried and planted in islands. Stripping out the dry grass in a circles/oval shape and planting that way over years. Costing less money and eventually less maintenence. Another was moss. You can still walk on it but it does well in shaded areas.
Ajuga is small purple 'weed' blooming April-June !
As a Landscape Architect, I'm LOVING this video... how about one for HOT climates? (I'm now in South Carolina, and lived in San Diego for 7 years...)
Saw a comment down below, I’ll reiterate that same sentiment. I think it’s really awesome that the channels multi tasking in different climates. It’s so much more relevant to the audience. Ty guys!!! Maybe I’m giddy because I’m close to one of them!!!
Beautiful. This senior had to share my experience while living in Quebec. Both my back and front garden were invaded by grubs and my beautiful lawn turn into brown mess. Then the whole backyard was full of dandelions. Initially I was getting discouraged because they grow faster than my hard work of digging. It took me 3 years to finally get rid of those pesky dandelions. Now my neighbours call my front and back "Botanical Garden" as I planted perennial flowers. I have few veggies at the back but I concentrate more on flowers. Some even take pictures when they pass by. I'm in my garden most of the day watching bees, birds, monarch butterflies and few rabbits.
Oh I know that is so beautiful!!❤❤❤
I live in a neighborhood that seems to compete on who has the most perfect lawn. I hear lawnmowers going all day and evening here. I must say that it does look beautiful and it makes the neighborhood look elegant and it makes the houses look stately. However I think I may change my backyard. This is the time on the planet to start growing your own food and use water wisely.
Just keep it in your fenced in backyard,. Out of sight out of mind. Less complaimts👍
When I see perfectly manicured lawns I now just think boring!
There are a lot of ground covers that will stay low growing and will be lush and green year round. They require no mowing or little mowing and will still stay neat as a pin. Only edging is needed and your no mow "lawn" will soon be the envy of the neighborhood.
@@swedishrainbow_garden7672 any suggestions?
İ have been ripping up grass around our house patch by patch , i think if anyone complained I'd rather up my insurance and torch the place than maintain a short grass lawn
Ugh the incessant drone of leaf blowers and gas lawnmowers it is insane
The thoughts that come to my mind are not stately, but rather green puke , decadence , trashy , i was never a fan of short grass lawns even before i learned they were a waste
I love this idea. During our drought that lasted a couple of years, here in the Northeast, most of my grass died because I refuse to waste water on grass. My yard was still quite green because the native plants in the soil took the place of the grass. They just needed the grass out of the way. It is beautiful and in the spring many native flowers bloom in a variety of colors. Also started adding straw to my veg garden and use ollas because of this channel. We are no longer in a drought but I enjoy saving on water and this is just a good practice to use always and it just looks really pretty.
Many of us have our own water supplies instead of relying on government to sell us water - water the lawn and it goes right back into the ground where it came from. No waste here. Maybe some of you just need a better method of getting water instead of adapting to poor government leadership in your area.
Thanks! the lawn where I live is beautiful. I've identified 39 non-grass species in it. It's durable- never needs chemicals, water, frequent moving, and stands up to use. It blooms, often in large patches of color- where we skip mowing for a few times (we never need to mow more than every other week). Our lawn is an active biome that supports native species.
Lawns are effectively 'deserts' in biodiversity terms so choosing the aforementioned approach in the video, means you're not only doing your bit for biodiversity, your also attracting more pollinators to the rest of your garden, especially the vege patch, & ensuring better cropping.
I am a fan of grass lawns because I use the clippings in the garden as a mulch and for compost. Having said that, there are some sections of my lawn that I think would be better served by some kind of grass alternative ground cover. Thanks for the video
This is where the invasive properties of mint can be a huge benefit. In addition to the creeping thyme mentioned, I'd also recommend oregano and peppermint. Oregano spreads pretty fast and is used in a ton of recipes, so it's always useful to have around. Peppermint is one of the most hardy and aggressive mints, and also the most potent, which makes it good at repelling certain pests.
My whole front lawn has been taken over by creeping thyme. At first we tried to fight it but now we like it.
Planting invasive species is never a good idea...every area has native ground covers that can be used
"...Peppermint is one of the most hardy and aggressive mints, and also the most potent..."
Not to mention all those mojito's!
@@Eryalb Funnily enough the native ground cover in this area is Creeping Charlie, often considered a weed, but it's a wild mint that is also edible, albeit on the very mild side.
@@FrozEnbyWolf150 That's cool that it's a native one. I've just been learning a lot about how damaging invasive species are so when I hear mint I assume the worst
Chris has a lush paradise going on. I love seeing all of those massive and colorful flower spikes! I can't wait to have some of my own in my garden.
Just make sure lupins are native to your area. They are classed as an invasive species in some countries and once you have them they are almost impossible to get rid off.
I have seen more houses in my area. That have tons of ground covered plants, or a mix of lawn and ground cover. It looks so good. So much color you can play with. So attractive.
Exactly what I need!!!! We don't have any traditional lawn anymore in our house but perennial plants. Now our new project is to add ground covers (instead of just woodchips) and beautify it. Thanks to Chris.
We've been trying to figure out what random stuff is growing in our yard and just by happy accident ended up with a pretty large patch of wild strawberries. We mowed over them once before finding out what they are, but they produced a bunch of flowers and berries already. They did grow up within our grass so I've been weeding the larger invasive ones, but now we want to make intentional areas of it among other native ground covers. The color of the strawberry leaves are nice and the bees loved the flowers.
I've experimented with all kinds of lawn alternatives and have to say that I'm going back to turf for my front lawn. All of those recommendations create high maintenance gardens (lawns) that DO REQUIRE constant weeding, trimming, dividing, edging, mulching etc. Some of those plants wander and have to be edged. Many of them grow taller than 12" which is not allowed in my city. Yes, reduce the size of the lawn you have to mow every week but think ahead to long term maintenance.
I so appreciate Chris joining epic gardening!! Kevin has done an amazing job making his videos useful to as many people as possible but it’s nice that he realizes his expertise can’t cover everything, especially things that don’t apply to his area or specific interests. I’m really enjoying Chris’s videos!!
I love watching people talk about their passions but especially gardening
Use native ground covers! In Florida we often use our native sunshine mimosa and frogfruit. Perennial peanut is sometimes used even though it's not native
My neighbor got sick of mowing so she planted 5 everbearing strawberry plants and let them run all over! Now she never has to mow again!!
Aren't they like Snake magnets?
@@deniss.6205 There's only Garter snakes where I'm at
She has such a pretty garden. I like the pops of purple and especially those giant flowers along the hedge.
This is great information and very well presented. Traditional American lawns are highly overrated, extremely high maintenance and stressful to the environment. Glad to see people moving away from that and considering other options.
Yes, now the problem is getting our city bylaws to accept lawn alternatives on the grass areas by the sidewalks in front of our homes
@@catherinedesilets8960 yup that is the next great battle , city grass
In my area when it gets really hot my lawn area goes dormant. That includes all plants considered weeds after a while. It technically isn't bare ground. The roots are still holding the soil there. In the fall it greens up. Then in the spring the Dandelions provide a thick yellow carpet. I am sure some people hate that, but they are trained to think they are blemishes in lawns. The reality is most of the Dandelion seeds don't germinate. I have seen birds eat the seeds. I don't recommend Grape Hyacinth because it will spread by tiny seeds and tiny bulbs. I would suggest growing bulb flowers in pots to make redoing beds easier. I like tulips because they tend to stay put. I recently had some Chicory and some Amaranth varieties blow in. They ad diversity, but their height can be a problem in places. This year I had huge areas of tiny violet looking flowers all over in places. They look pretty until they turn into a brown mesh. Even if my area wasn't in a permadrought; I still would not waste water on a lawn.
I’m literally in the midst of doing this! Patience is a virtue, because as fast as they say that ground cover is - it still takes awhile to fill in 😅 The whole lawn cycle (water to grow just to cut) was just not it for me.
Us too! It makes me so bitter to take care of a plant that doesn't serve us. (grass)
Clover literally takes like ten minutes to turn your yard into a trailer park. 😂
Living in North Vancouver myself, Chris’ insight is so very helpful. Our short growing season and brutal rain really makes it hard to relate to others who live in more forgiving climate zones. Love her stuff
?????WTF ….. if you can’t grow in North Van. Give up gardening. Short growing season?? In who’s universe does north van have a short growing season?
@@grandenauto3214 I have a north facing townhouse patio mostly shaded out by my building and trees with the mountains to the north. I get barely 4 hrs of full sun during peak summer because of it, so I for one have a short growing season. I’d love to grow dragonfruit and tropicals like EG, but I have to grow what works for my little area. Hence why I praise Chris for highlighting those options.
I know the lucky ones do, but not everyone on the north shore has a south facing backyard garden with 10hrs of full sun. I would love a place like that, but I don’t have $2m, and I have to settle with what I have.
I have a north facing balcony and planters, our maple trees like this location and are growing really well on the balcony. We have hostas, brunneras and ferns that need shade. Ferns can come on multiple colours and sizes. There are great videos on shade gardens that might be helpful
Love this!! My yard is Northwest super shady and wet. The only things that grow are ferns, moss, and lots of mushrooms. I let the leaves and pine needles pile up and encourage the natural vegetation.
I love watching this type of video. I live outside of Houston and am doing the opposite though. Getting rid of the water hogging flower beds and mulch that blows/washes away all the time. Letting native grass and wildflowers (lots and lots of blue bonnets) take over. The native grass needs very little water and much less mowing, no fertilizer or weed killer. The wildflowers mean we start mowing at least a couple months after our neighbors. Just look around and see what Mother Nature is doing and mimic that for your area and you'll save yourself a ton of work.
This video is timed perfectly! Thanks for the ideas and the full list of plants Chris has suggested. My mom and I were just having a conversation about lawn alternatives. I feel that convincing folks about lawn alternatives can be a tough sell but if they realize they can also save money that can help I think.
I'm a fan of patchwork lawns. Taking different groundcovers/herbs/perennial&annual flowers to create a patchwork carpet for my lawn. Different textures and colors to make it stand out
Switching my lawn to clover a decade ago has changed everything for the better. I now love walking around barefoot, and doing yoga each morning on my clover lawn is magical. It’s definitely helped the quality of my soil.
Can you advise me why my clover did not grow back this year when it was beautiful last year
Part of what was my Lawn, and now serves as a garden path, is covered in Buttercups. On the edges of the path they are near a foot tall, however they have also formed a soft mat about an inch off the ground in the walkway. softer than grass, and the prolific yellow flowers on the larger plants on the margins are welcome as well. ~Asheville, NC
This is such a great topic. We moved into a home that is on undeveloped land. The yard looks like a beautiful meadow (the campsite of my dreams). I have since learned that many of the flowers and grasses are actually noxious weeds and invasive plants. I am planning on tackling the weeds and improving the soil. I would love for it to continue to look like a meadow. To support the wildlife, bees and butterflies that come through. Thank you for the great inspiration. I took notes!
Absolutely love Chris!!! Right around the time you started to add her, I started to give up on my favorite gardening channels because they were all west coast and I was like I need something for my area!!! Also 100% satisfied she included clover. I love clover lawns and here in the Midwest so many pump their lawns full of junk to get that neon green "perfect" lawn and I think that's ok for a small area but sad and destructive for large areas where clover wins out in my book for softness and the darker green color. It's so lovely and the wildlife loves it. I think it's fair to do part seeded lawn if you really desire that but if you have a large lawn you should be doing clover and allowing dandelions to exist in the spring. Thank you Chris!
So inspiring and packed with accurate helpful information and processes. Well done, and Thank You! As a native landscaper myself who also has pets, I'd add a note to be CAREFUL with those spring bulbs if you have KIDS OR PETS-- the ones you mentioned are toxic if bulbs or flowers are ingested, including daffodils, snowdrops, and fritillaria, while crocus may give an upset tummy. Tulips are also toxic. Be sure to check the flowers as well-- I saw one or two that aren't great for mouthy little ones, such as the lupin seeds. Beauty and color is my priority as well, so for that fix, here are a few other nontoxic species available that do well in the cold, for starters: muscari--grape hyacinth, african violets, iceplant, stonecrop, snap dragon, or self seeding perennials like bachelor's button or bee balm. Would adore it if you ever add a kid/pet friendly episode too if you can? Happy gardening!
THANK you for introducing we, your CREW, to yet another knowledgeable, delightful gardener: THIS ONE FROM MY AREA, which is so immediately applicable.
I highly recommend Alpine strawberries as a ground cover.
Very shallow roots so they work great growing together with many plants, even just a plant or 3 will quickly fill up a whole bed if its a variety with runners.
Very very easy to grow, just in the beginning you need to water frequently while it is establishing their roots. But they are very hardy plants after that.
And tend to on their own grow so densely that they quickly keep weeds out. Usually in the second season I don’t really do any weeding in my alpine strawberry beds anymore.
And they are absolutely delicious.
They are more fragile than strawberries and can’t really be sold commercially for this reason. So you have to grow them or go forging (if they grow in your climate) if you want to get to eat them.
But they are really something special.
It sort of similar to the taste of strawberries, but a lot more intensely flavoured, and not as sour as strawberries.
And they have their own unique taste.
I absolutely prefer their taste over strawberries
I really enjoyed this. My neighbors have these perfectly manicured lawns and stone lined flower beds, and although pretty, they are just not me. I wanted something a little more natural within the confines of an hoa of course. This gives me so much inspiration 😊😊😊
I am currrently trying to cover my small garden with bungle! I think it's going to take some majoy time,. but I love how it gets established, and the little purple flowers are amazing!
I have an acre on the edge of the Strait of Juan de Fuca that is an experimental nature habitat filled with wildflowers, wildlife, and weeds. There is always something going on from nature to see. The less I put my hand to the land the more activity there is from larger animals to tiny insects and everything in-between. My philosophy is I benefit from nature and nature benefits from me.
I left my weeds alone, also seeded clover and lawn seeds into weed patch. The main thing was regular mowing on higher end of spectrum. That way the patch was high enough to keep itself shaded from sun but the stronger weeds did not have a chance to bulk up and shade out other seeds. I also wait on mowing when I see the weeds I like making seeds. Like when dandelions become white and fluffy in may, I wait for them to spread the seeds and mow after. It took me 4 years to go from bare dirt and rocks patch to green lawn. But this method makes sure I do not need any fertilisers or watering. The wild weeds are resilient and get back on their feet no matter what negligence.
I also started this method in my farm where there are terrible weeds and clay soil. I keep it low by mowing and the second year the patch that is mowed looks much better (more like lawn) than the patch that is trimmed twice a year.
Edit: this is in zone 4 and with climate on rainy side, except a dry as bone month here and there due to climate change.
I live in zone 6b and I LOVE wild violets! Those are all awesome options, thank you! Whenever I own my own space, I will slowly get rid of my regular lawn 😂
Where can we get wild violets?
Hey Epic Gardening! Could you do another video like this for warm/hot climates, maybe drought tolerate plants? Thanks, from Central California 💜
I second this!! Drought tolerant, if possible even extreme weather change tolerant plants if they are a thing.
Definitely
@@epicgardening thank you!
@@epicgardening I THIRD this! How about PHOENIX!!! sooooo hooooooottttttt
Agreed. We need this information now more then ever due to watering restrictions.
Woah! She's a gem! Thanks for introducing us to her:) What a beautiful spirit she is.
Yes Chris! Those cover suggestions are great. It's nice having someone on the Epic Gardening team growing in a zone close to home. I'm in SE Alaska so similar climate just more rain here. As I slowly cover our entire yard in raised beds I'm adding clover and native wild flowers to the lawn anywhere it gets patchy. Eventually I'd love to have paths through creeping and lemon thyme.
That sounds really lovely :) I hope it turns out!
6 years....Fantastic! I, too, transformed my yard. It is still a work in progress [always]. I am now hoping to convince my new neighbors to get rid of their weeds [with unbreathable plastic underneath!] and consider these beautiful alternatives instead of grass [and I could help with transplants :)].
Loved this video! I’m a San Diego native…transplanted to Vermont. My favorite photo: cardboard covered yard. Because that’s the stage where I am with sporadic piles of wood chips. Thank you for letting me see the green light at the end of the tunnel!
Carolyn/Vermont Cat Lady
I'm in love with your Lupine!! 😍 And what a wealth of information. Thanks, Chris!
One of my favorite episodes. I’ve started the ground cover process without doing any research, and I’m happy to see that I’m doing it right. Love me some violets for cover. Also discovered a salsify in my yard which I hope to spread around via its seeds. All about getting rid of the lawn and it’s trappings. 😊
A lot of these like clovers, violets, dandilions have naturally grown in my parent's southern Kentucky yards for all my life, and I always preferred them to grassy lawns anyways. The violets are especially my favorite, as they're the primary ground cover in my mom's shaded backyard and bring so much whimsy.
I’m so jealous of that lupine! So beautiful!
Chris is great. For some reason I listen to her. She's a scientist, botanist and a great host.
Another benefit to a lot of the traditional turf grass weeds: most of them are edible and/or medicinal). Prunella, Dandelion, English Daisies, Yarrow, Chickweed, Gill Over the Ground, Plantain, Cheeses, etc... All wonderful. A heads up to folks who like clover lawns (as I do): Watch out for buttercups and hawkweed. Buttercups will drive legumes from a yard over time, and hawkweed, although pretty, is allelopathic, suppressing anything that isn't it.
I have some hawkweed growing in the "weed garden." Any tips to get rid of it without an herbicide?
We have buttercups in the back yard, but I don't plan on putting anything back there except maybe a blueberry bush and some pumpkins (one spot is shady, other spot gets sun).
THANK YOU! I really appreciate the low growing perennials that grow in the North!
Love this. I added Clover to my front yard and it is looking so much healthier.
We have consistently had great results with clover. We started our garden when we bought our house 7 years ago and we found that the areas we worked In and stored stuff we killed the grass and created a weed issue. We started adding clover and not only does it grow taller and more vigorously than grass it shades out weeds better and it’s great when I need to add some greens to my compost.
It's so amazing to get gardening videos from my home city so I know the climate will work! Thanks Chris and Kevin!! Can't wait to see more
I cleaned up an overgrowth of forestry trash full of invasive weeds and sapling trees. After mowing the weeds and using lawn chemicals for a year, I lightly overseeded with White Dutch Clover to improve the soil as fruit trees were also planted in that area. Some of the clover in the grass seemed to be a fail but the following year I noticed quite a bit of clover growing along with wild violets. Also have honeybees to forage on the random flowers by not planting grass as a groundcover. Its a work in progress and I allow it to grow until the dry season for the pollinators. Looking into getting some Crocus bulbs for early spring.
I’m working on covering my bare areas with ajuga, lamb’s ears, clover, creeping thyme, camomile and yarrow. Thanks for the suggestions!
My yard has a bunch of sorrel in it and I didn't know how the seeds were spread until one almost blinded me as I was looking at the pod. Personally it's my favorite because it's just so fun. The neighborhood kids find them amazing lol
I love to have a daisy lawn: they have always green tiny leaves and let the gras look lush, they have lovely blossoms and butterflies love it. And insects like them but not honeybees. So you can run barefoot on it relatively safe. Clover is full of bees when it is blooming. From the look, the safetyness and the lushness it bring I prefer daisy-lawn most. It is very dry-resistant too! It aways looks beautiful and well cared.
I love this idea, especially the less to mow part. My yard got over-run with dandelions, creeping Charlie & wild violets from the neighbor's yard that was unsold/unrented & overgrown for a few years. The bees love it but the neighbors, one is a retired grounds keeper and the other was a landscaper, both have sprayed and grass seeded parts of my yard next to theirs. I had a beautiful carpet of moss in one corner that was poisoned, ugh. I could never sustain this without first creating a hard border of sorts as a buffer zone, to preserve my neighbors love of a pristine grass lawn and my embracing a yard full of flowering weeds.
Take the tip of ordering native wildflowers for your area, and seed them too. Then make cute little signs for the edge of your lawn and label it a “native wildflower preserve”. You might even have a state wildflower foundation (like we have in California with Theodore Payne or also there are the butterfly preservation foundations, so you could do a “native pollinator preserve” and also plant some pollinator habitat plants in a planter or bed nearby), and you could get their logo on a sticker or a yard sign or something to show your support. Get fancy and make a tags for the names of the plants you have so neighbors walking by can take a pic if they like a bloom. Anyone would feel like an asshole seeding or spraying something like that!
@@twobluestripes So funny you mention that, I'm planning to do a pollinator garden! My husband of 25 years died last year, and he was a lover of all things bugs, bees, butterflies and moths. We had perennial flowers as part of his visitation flowers and gave away flower seed packets too, so people could start their own flower patches in honor of him. I've got dozens of seed packets ready for when I get the area ready to direct sow. I'll definitely look for signs to put up, hoping they'll leave it alone. My back yard only borders four neighbors, no public viewing. Someday I'll get to plant the front yard too, with a mix of flowers and veggies. Less to mow! 💜
Bonus, I found my yard is in the Rusty Patch Bumblebee area, so I can apply for grants too.
THANK YOU for covering this! I'm looking into alternatives for lawn as we get ready to break ground to build our house. If anyone else is doing similar work, your local universities do a great job of creating lists of native grasses and soil/light/moisture needs for each
I want to thank you for adding "for cold climates" to your video title. I so often see gardeners here in North Carolina-- sharing plant lists they've found that will not work in our area. My goal when helping gardeners is to help them be successful and I hate for someone to lose interest when something fails simply because they didn't understand regional differences.
As a novice gardener I used to read a lot of gardening books and magazines (not much internet then). It took me a while to figure out that I needed to find out where the author was gardening. And if I couldn't find their area, I learned to take their advice with a grain of salt.
Imo all content creators really NEED to let their audience know where they are in the world. Thanks again.
Yarrow is SO lovely in lawns and feels wonderful on bare feet.
Creeping thyme and borage! I use those to cover the soil around my tomatoes, in addition to basil. Works great.
So appreciate this as I was doing my own research as when I have a home w/yard one day what I can plant. I’m not a fan of regular grass lawns. From what I researched I want clover. But can wait to see what your suggestions! 💛🌱
So the idea is to build your own mini ecosystem. Very cool! That sounds like so much more fun and interesting than simply trying to maintain "the perfect lawn".
Very informative. Thanks so much!
Love how quick and full of informatiin this is. Well done. Thank you!
Ground covers is a real art. Would be great to have a video specifically on how to plan and plant them.
Great video.
Excellent advice, thank you. I've been slowly covering the poor quality but well draining soil in my yard with various species of sedum.
Thanks for this! This is exactly what we’re doing. We’re in early days and appreciate seeing what some time can bring. Thanks too for mentioning specific plant types. Grateful!
I tried adding microclover to my lawn a few years back, but I think it hybridized with the existing white clover and actually created clover with extra-large leaves, which was also extremely aggressive and out-competed the grass, which I didn't like. I would recommend sticking with natural clovers if you want the grass to persist in the mix.
Thank you, Chris! i live in the same city, and i learn something every time you post!
Oooh. Living in the Netherlands, this has been very informative, thank you for posting this!
I'll be looking into creeping thyme for my borders and my rock garden. And I'll definitely look into adding clover into my browning lawn ^^"
Here in sweden all lawns i've ever seen have tons of different plants mixed in with the grass, especially clover, moss, and broadleaf plantain.
Love this. These are beautiful, but we have an active dog who needs running room - except for the clover additions, she would tear these options up. One option, we kept mowing, but let our “moss problem” take over. It’s beautiful & very little work.
Thank you so much for this video. As the owner of a tortoise I've been looking into low maintenance, drought tolerant, nontoxic ground cover for my grow zone. I'm thinking white clover with a sprinkle of dandelion(she finds it delicious) might do the trick!
I would love to see a full year time lapse of this garden. Wonderful place. Greetings from 60.lat N.