Minnesota
Related: About this forum'Native landscape' bill would make Minnesota cities more pollinator friendly, one lawn at a time
Blame George Washington.
Americas first president maintained a lawn at Mount Vernon, copying the style from English manor houses and castles. Being first in war and first in peace also, apparently, made Washington first in landscaping for Americans at least the wealthier ones.
The love of the turf grass lawn has hardly abated since, so much so that it eventually became encased in law. Cities and towns across the country adopted ordinances to impose the ideal of the grass lawn, and then used code enforcement officers and fines to compel compliance.
This week, though, a Minnesota Court of Appeals ruling exposed a conflict between that standard and the desire by some policymakers and homeowners to swap manicured lawns for native plantings. In a ruling written by Judge Denise Reilly, the court found that North Mankatos attempt to force Edward Borchardt to cut back his trees, bushes and grasses wasnt legal.
We conclude that the evidence presented to the city council does not support the city councils determination that the vegetation on Borchardts property constituted a rank growth or that it unreasonably annoyed a considerable number of members of the public, Reilly wrote.
Read more: https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2021/10/native-landscape-bill-would-make-minnesota-cities-more-pollinator-friendly-one-lawn-at-a-time/
bucolic_frolic
(46,979 posts)But I gotta admit a blend of fescues and Kentucky blue keeps on trucking
lark
(24,149 posts)In FL, mimosa plants are one example of this. There are also numerous thorny vines that will take over your yards, trees & bushes & that are poisonous. These too have to be removed. WE leave the little viney weeds that flower, those don't hurt anything, aren't invasive or toxic.
I do intend to plant more red 4 o'clocks near the fence next year. We had lots more butterflies & hummingbirds when we had them previously. They were just in the wrong place. I need to plant them by the fence so they can grow huge & not scratch the cars.
jimfields33
(18,856 posts)The picture in the link shows the lawn in question.
Phoenix61
(17,642 posts)So far I have: 6 black berry bushes, 5 blueberry bushes, 2 loquat trees, a flame grapefruit tree, a Satsuma orange tree, a fig tree, a raised herb garden, and a pollinator garden. If I have to water it someone is getting something to eat.
geardaddy
(25,342 posts)You must live somewhere warm, since you have an orange tree and a fig tree.
Phoenix61
(17,642 posts)geardaddy
(25,342 posts)The bumblebees in our yard are plentiful! We've even seen some honeybees.