Create A Mowing Edge In Your Low Maintenance
Garden
Edging the lawn with brick or paving, so that
the mower can run over it saving time and energy, means that the
only trimming you will need to do will be occasionally cutting back
any long stems of grass that grow over the paving.
1) Lay paving slabs or bricks on the grass for
positioning, and use a half-moon edger (edging iron) to cut an
edge.
2) Slice off the grass with a spade and remove
soil to the depth of the pavers, plus several centimetres (a
couple of inches). Lay a sub-base of sand and gravel mix, and
consolidate it using a piece of wood and a mallet.
3) For paving slabs, use five blobs of mortar
for each slab, and lay them on top, then tap them hard, using a
mallet. Bricks will just need a small blob of mortar under
each.
4) Make sure the slabs are flush with the lawn,
and use a spirit level to ensure the slabs are laid evenly. Mortar
the joints for a neat finish, otherwise unsightly weeds will grow
in them.
Alternatives To Grass If you like a
green lawn, but don’t enjoy or have time for regular mowing, you
could consider a grass substitute. Those mentioned here are fine
for occasional foot traffic and as a visual focal point, but they
wont stand up to the hard wear of a children’s play area like grass
will.
There are other drawbacks to using grass
substitutes for lawns. You wont be able to use selective lawn
weed-killers on them, so you will have to hand weed as necessary
for a season or two, until the plants have knitted together. Beware
of common stonecrop (sedum acre), an attractive yellow flowered
carpeter sometimes sold as a grass substitute. It may become a
serious weed in your garden.
Thyme A quick spreader with
attractive foliage and flowers, thyme makes a good grass substitute
and is aromatic when crushed. Culinary thyme (thymus vulgaris) is
too tall, so use a carpeter like T.pseudolanuginosus or
T.serpyllum.
Chamomile Another aromatic plant for
lawns is chamomile (chamaemelum nobile, syn. Anthemis nobilis).
Look for the variety ‘Treneague’, which is compact and does not
normally flower.
Clover If clover is a problem in
your lawn, it may make a good grass substitute. Once established it
will keep green for most of the year and will tolerate dry soils.
You’ll only have to mow a couple of times a year, after the flowers
appear, to keep it looking smart.
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