Monday, May 29, 2006
Green Helll - "I am trying to kill my lawn. All 7000 square feet of it. Few things are as stupid as being enslaved to the idea of having your yard look like the top of a billiard table. Perhaps the same sadists that invented the contemporary suburb also invented the lawn. Like the suburbs, where it proliferates like a noxious weed, the lawn serves no purpose, looks sterile, wastes labour and pollutes."
"I am attempting to eliminate the monstrosity that I have inherited when I bought my house and replace it with wild flowers, herbs, and fruit-bearing shrubs. But I am not alone in this endeavor."
link
Eat Your Lawn - Of the 30 most commonly used lawn pesticides, 29 are toxic to birds, fish, amphibians and/or bees. Environmental groups have raised the biggest clamor over the herbicide 2,4-D, which a growing number of studies show to be a possible contributor to non-Hodgkins lymphoma and other cancers.
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Edible Landscapes
"Last summer, my family and I removed our front lawn and replaced it with an edible landscape of fruit trees, berry bushes, herbs and other plants as part of a project by our local art center and Los Angeles artist/architect Fritz Haeg."
"We've been asked plenty of questions about this move, the two most common being,"
'What do your neighbors say?' and 'Has the city fined you?'
"Our answers: 'They like it' and 'No.'"
link
Can I get an amen?
"I am attempting to eliminate the monstrosity that I have inherited when I bought my house and replace it with wild flowers, herbs, and fruit-bearing shrubs. But I am not alone in this endeavor."
link
Eat Your Lawn - Of the 30 most commonly used lawn pesticides, 29 are toxic to birds, fish, amphibians and/or bees. Environmental groups have raised the biggest clamor over the herbicide 2,4-D, which a growing number of studies show to be a possible contributor to non-Hodgkins lymphoma and other cancers.
link
Edible Landscapes
"Last summer, my family and I removed our front lawn and replaced it with an edible landscape of fruit trees, berry bushes, herbs and other plants as part of a project by our local art center and Los Angeles artist/architect Fritz Haeg."
"We've been asked plenty of questions about this move, the two most common being,"
'What do your neighbors say?' and 'Has the city fined you?'
"Our answers: 'They like it' and 'No.'"
link
Can I get an amen?
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