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LAWN SUFFERING STOP MOWING WITH THESE LANDSCAPING ALTERNATIVES.


Byline: Pam Waterman Correspondent

We live in a dry Mediterranean climate The Dry Mediterranean climate is a transition climate between the Mediterranean and Desert climates. It is found primarily in the Near East, North Africa, South Eastern Spain, parts of Southern California and Western Australia. , but you'd never know it. Just drive along most residential streets in Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region,  and you see green lawns ooze out Verb 1. ooze out - release (a liquid) in drops or small quantities; "exude sweat through the pores"
exudate, exude, transude, ooze

distil, distill - give off (a liquid); "The doctor distilled a few drops of disinfectant onto the wound"
 in front of houses as if they were growing on the East Coast with its plentiful supply of water.

No logic explains why most homeowners insist on a green lawn in this semi-arid region. We know our water has to be brought to us at great cost to the environment. And the water problem isn't likely to improve in the future, as more people crowd into the Los Angeles basin The Los Angeles Basin is the coastal sediment-filled plain located between the peninsular and transverse ranges in southern California in the United States containing the central part of the city of Los Angeles as well as its southern and southeastern suburbs (both in Los Angeles .

Some changes in our wasteful pattern of cultivating velvety vel·vet·y  
adj. vel·vet·i·er, vel·vet·i·est
1. Suggestive of the texture of velvet; soft and smooth: velvety skin.

2.
, picture-perfect lawns are sure to come when water gets more expensive and California's rhythm of drought returns. Get a head start and begin planning a garden instead of a grass carpet that needs constant mowing, watering and fertilizing. Here are 10 alternatives to growing turf on your property. Each one requires less water than grass.

1. Grow drought-tolerant ground covers. Gazania n. 1. any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers.

Noun 1. gazania - any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers
flower - a plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms
, a bright, daisylike flower, grows either in clumps or as a trailing plant. If you have plenty of sun, ease into a lawn-less future by edging your grass with Gazania ``Burgundy'' or ``Copper King.''

Another choice for sunny spots is ice plant. It will soon be obvious that you get a bigger reward with ground covers than with turf.

Dwarf mondo mon·do   Slang
adj.
Enormous; huge: a mondo list of pizza toppings.

adv.
Extremely; very: a mondo big mistake.
 grass is a good ground cover for a shady area. Although it takes time to become established, mondo grass spreads into an attractive mat in spaces where grass would be much more trouble.

Dozens of ground covers can serve as lawn substitutes: Dalea greggii (trailing indigo bush), Cotoneaster salicifolius ``Repens,'' Ceonathus griseus ``horizontalis,'' Arctotheca calendula Arctotheca calendula

a plant of the family Asteracea. Good forage plant but may contain toxic amounts of nitrate when it grows profusely after the breaking of a long drought. See also nitrite poisoning. Called also Cryptostemma calendula, capeweed.
, cape weed or Coprosma ``verde vista.'' These ground covers can be mixed with each other for more texture and color than any grass lawn could provide.

2. Plant a kitchen garden. OK, this kind of lawn substitute might take some getting used to. But for 20 years, Cynthia Null of Altadena has cultivated vegetables in her front yard area instead of the boring green grass of surrounding homes. Although she hasn't yet made any neighborhood converts to kitchen gardening, her neighbors all know that Null's tomatoes taste better than grass.

3. Plant a succulent garden. All you need to do is stroll through the Desert Garden at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Garden in San Marino to see thousands of interesting succulents that grow in a rainbow of colors with many leaf shapes. This is another lawn substitute that you could ease into. Plant a small succulent section in the sunniest part of your lawn and see how much better it looks and how much less care it takes than turf.

4. Leave it natural. This lawn substitute technique works best when you have a large lovely oak you want to preserve. Few homeowners would be happy with no planting at all around their oaks. You can safely locate a few natives or drought-tolerant plants like Centranthus ruber, Penstemon Penstemon

a North American genus of plants in the family Scrophulariaceae which act as facultative selenium converters; the selenocompounds produced by the plant cause alopecia, lameness, laminitis; called also beard tongue.
 species, Ceonathus griseus horizontalis or Mahonia ma·ho·ni·a  
n.
The Oregon grape.



[New Latin Mahonia, genus name, after Bernard McMahon (c. 1775-1816), Irish-born American botanist.]

Noun 1.
 repens in the vicinity of the oak. But no grass inside the drip line. That is, if you want your oak to live a long life.

5. Plant an ivy collection. If conditions are not too difficult, you could substitute ivy for your lawn. Not the fast-growing, unattractive Algerian ivy (why plant a substitute lawn for something that doesn't look any better?), but English Ivy English ivy

see hedera helix.
 and perhaps some of the small- or miniature-leafed forms. This solution works best in a small area. I grow miniature ivies in pots, and I'd love to see a textured pattern on someone's former lawn with five or six different ivy cultivars.

6. Plant a garden of grasses. Many kinds of ornamental grasses are now available at local nurseries. An arrangement of feathery feath·er·y  
adj.
1. Covered with or consisting of feathers.

2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness.



feath
 festucas, Muhlenbergia capillaris (pink hair grass), Miscanthus sinensis (Japanese silver grass), Pennisetum setaceum ``Rubrum'' or red fountain grass and smaller varieties such as common blue fescue fescue (fĕs`ky), any of some 100 species of introduced Old World grasses of the genus Festuca.  will allow you to create a magical landscape that moves with the wind where a still, monotonous lawn used to be.

7. Plant a perennial garden. This type of garden also looks best when there's a smallish area of lawn to give up. But a small area doesn't mean you have to furnish with small plants. Think big. One homeowner I know loves cannas and allows these tall beauties to grow right up to the sidewalk.

8. Plant an herb garden. Dozens of wonderful herbs grow in our climate. Even if you don't Even If You Don't is a single released by the band Ween in 2000 on Mushroom Records. Formats
Enhanced CD single
Includes the quicktime video of "Even If You Don't" directed by Matt Stone & Trey Parker of "South Park".
 use them for cooking, many herbs look good as ornamental plants. One place to get ideas is at the herb garden at the Huntington. On weekends, a representative from the local herb society has a table under the oaks and hands out information.

9. Create a serene oasis with trees, box and gravel. Although this kind of garden will take time to get established, your ultimate reward will be an unusual and lovely space - a space that will be at least one thousand times more interesting than a green lawn.

10. Install a dramatic hardscape hard·scape  
n.
The part of a building's grounds consisting of structures, such as patios, retaining walls, and walkways, made with hard materials.



[hard + (land)scape.]
 and garden in pots. A garden floor of Mexican paver tiles is not maintenance-free but it's certainly less work than a lawn. The biggest expense comes from the materials.

This type of garden is especially appropriate for people who enjoy entertaining instead of growing grass.

There you are - 10 ideas for easing out of the green-lawn straitjacket straitjacket /strait·jack·et/ (strat´jak?et) informal name for camisole.

strait·jack·et or straight·jack·et
n.
. The advantage of most of these suggestions is that you can install them on a gradual basis. And you might find that a small patch of green lawn sets off the beauty of the perennials in the large surrounding beds.

Check your Sunset Western Garden Book for more suggestions. Visit local public gardens and your local nursery.

Professionals in horticulture know a drought is just around the corner. They're familiar with plants to use as grass substitutes. They're just waiting for the public to ask.

CAPTION(S):

4 photos

Photo:

(1 -- cover -- color) 10 Ways to avoid mowing your lawn

Low-maintenance alternatives that simplify your life - and save water

(2 -- color) Growing a garden of succulents - including the wide variety of native California cactuses - is a handy substitute for a needy lawn.

(3 -- color) This lawn is not a lawn at all, just ground cover bracketed by trimmed hedgerows.

(4 -- color) Dwarf mondo grass is a good lawn substitute, growing well in shady areas where grass would be trouble.

Photos by Pam Waterman
COPYRIGHT 2001 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:L.A. Life
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 7, 2001
Words:1087
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