"Eco-yards gardening is not simply about replacing chemical weapons with organic weapons in a war against pests. Eco-yards gardening is about replacing the common view of gardening as a war to control our little plots of land with a different view - that of gardening as a way to work in harmony with other beings in nature to revitalize the land we steward so it is shining with health."
I've been trying to grow a vegetable garden this spring, and I happened to find this book on my Mom's shelf. I found it very informative and motivational, especially because the author is local and has been doing all that amazing work in the same climate I'm working with. I will definitely think back to this book when I have my own yard someday.
Reading about the author helps to understand the approach. Bite size info. The notes are at the end of the chapter. I love not flipping back! Dandelion tonic...may try. Plant egos and talking to them to see who will grow the most. Cottonwood fluff as female not causing allergies but the male pollen does. Weeds bring minerals up into the soil.
Great book to help shift your focus from grass lawns to sustainable yards! This book helped me to set a long term goal of reducing my grass lawn size. It is an accessible book that will give you visions of what your yard could be! Check it out!
- Author describes how she feels that a gardener should work with nature, rather than battling to control nature - an eco-yard should support a full, rich diversity - should require less maintenance than a typical yard - micro-organisms are essential to a full, rich ecosystem - bacteria, fungi, protozoa - chapter on why eco-yards - restore the soil, restore water resources, protect human health, protect pets, insects and wildlife - using compost to top-dress lawns and flower beds - weeds: plant all bare areas or cover with mulch - minimize grass - accept some weeds - use of corn gluten to suppress the sprouting of weeds - digging out weeds - the importance of insects - accept some insect activity - use of soap to control insects - bluegrass lawns are not sustainable as they require much water, fertilizer and probably insecticide to thrive - alternate grasses are a better choice - sheep fescue is described in particular - over-seeding - avoid killing old grass with Roundup (probably harms other things) - maintaining lawn - overseed, mow high, leave clippings on lawn, apply compost and compost tea, water wisely, aerate, if needed - replace lawn with beds - cover over method - digging out sod - use mulch - avoid landscape fabric - soil: microbes protect plants - detail on bacteria, mycorrhizal fungi, protozoa and nematodes - impart of fertilizers and pesticides on microbes - amending soil chemistry - how to compost - worm composting - making compost tea - spraying compost tea - designing your eco-yard - water-wise designing - growing vegetables - raised beds - lasagna gardening (layered)
I actually didn't much enjoy reading this book all the way straight through but found the idea incredibly inspiring. I'm looking at my front yard very differently now and instead of repairing the grass there I'm not planning a whole different landscape involving pollinators, perennial edibles, native berry bushes and more.
John bought me the equipment to make compost tea, which I was able make and spray about 3 times before winter set in. I can't wait to start again this spring and see how it affects our garden/lawn.
Part good - working with nature, but really "embodying the Gardener archetype"? Lots of footnotes and research. Very helpful - one to own and refer back to.