Thyme to turf the lawn
/Seriously, people. Why bother with lawn when you can have a no-mow yard filled with interesting shapes, textures and colors? Not to mention bees, butterflies and birds? And a reduced water bill.
Simply remove turf and add the ground cover of your choice. Some of my favorites include: Woolly thyme, creeping thyme, blue star creeper, brass buttons and baby tears.
When designing a lawn-free garden, I often use large groups of ornamental grasses. Taller grasses make excellent privacy screens for blocking unwanted views or muffling street noise. Smaller grasses can be used in huge blocks for impact.
Blue oat grass, fescue and maiden grasses are great for sunny areas. Sedges, liriope and black mondo grass are wonderful in mass plantings and can take a bit more shade. It's like painting with living material. Arrange them in geometric patterns, or free form, like abstract art. You can use huge drifts of perennials in the same way. Think lavender, catmint and salvia for the sun and ferns, hellebores and heuchera for part shade.
In garden design, creating bermed garden beds linked by wide paths is the key to a successful lawn-free yard. Tuck in a seating area, add a water fountain or a bird bath and you have a wonderful outdoor space.
Great plants to try:
Low spreading ground covers
- Alchemilla ellenbeckii
- Leptinella squalida "Platt's Black"
- Oxalis oregana
- Pratia pedunculata
- Soleirolia soleirolii
- Thymus pseudolanuginosus
- T. serphyllum
Taller perennials
- Corydalis lutea
- Heuchera "Palace Purple"
- Lavandula angustifolia "Hidcote"
- Liriope muscari/spicata
- Nepeta "Walker's Low"
- Salvia "Caradona"/"Hot Lips"
Ornamental grasses and sedge
- Calamagrostis "Avalanche"
- Carex "Everest"
- C. "Prairie Fire"
- C. "Evergold"
- Festuca glauca
- Helictotrichon sempervirens
- Miscanthus sinensis "Cabaret"
- M.s. "Morning Light"
- Penisetum "Little Bunny"
- P. "Moudry"