Pam PenickLawn Gone!: Low-Maintenance, Sustainable, Attractive Alternatives for Your Yard
G**R
Good guide and motivational book for replacing bluegrass
Review "Lawn Gone" by Pam Penick"Lawn Gone" is a manual for changing from the standard, water hungry, time demanding, flat green landscape to a wide variety of useful areas and/or decorative garden plots. Throughout the book are thousands of suggestions for what to replace your blue grass lawn with, and how to do it. The pictures are beautiful and make me want to tear out my lawn and replace it with those images. The author strongly urges anyone wanting to make these changes to sit down and lay out detailed plans before starting.There are excellent suggestions as to plant choices, providing you check with your local experts before planting things that won't grow in your area, or that will grossly overgrow in your area. There are excellent suggestions as to a multitude of useful areas from edibles to childrens' play areas to peaceful areas for relaxation or mediation, to just comfortable, grass free, private sitting areas. There are plentiful warnings as to Home Owner's Associations, City Ordinances, thug plants, and precautions to check local conditions and plantings before putting a Zone 9 plant in Zone 4. In fact there is a special chapter devoted to HOA's and city ordinances. The author mentions the cost of such changes several times, but the home owner is wise to price check his plans before embarking on an expensive project.The are many suggestions for yards that have become shaded by tree growth. This is a much needed discussion, well handled.The author lives in Texas, and the book is a little slanted toward the Central Texas and the SW, although she has made suggestions for Wisconsin and the Northwest. It is a little light on suggestions for the Midlanders and prairie folk, although many of the suggestions would work there as well.This is a useful guide to upgrading your landscape with thousands of suggestions. The book is motivating, as well as well organized for application. The book is well written and a good read.
M**S
Well presented
We live in Texas where you have to decide whether to water the heck out of your lawn and pay dearly, or have dead grass. This book gave great insight into what we could do to alleviate that problem. Nice illustrations pics & explanations of the different materials you can use. Highly recommend
E**.
Good book, handy reference, specific to our area
This book was helpful while we were redoing our front lawn. Has helpful index in the back. Not perfect, doesn't have everything we tried to look up. But gave us some ideas. Seems up to date. Pictures help to identify kinds of plants. Handy.
M**S
A Book that helps us into a new age of gardening
For way too long, lawns have been a way of life. Originally they were planted to show the owner could afford such luxury and then everyone had to follow this trend. But lawns are a terrible choice for animals and people. They are a monoculture of non-native plants so help cause native plants and animals go extinct. Mowing and fertilizing them contaminates the earth with gas residues, pesticides, artificial fertilizers that kill soil organisms that nourish our plants. Mowing also contributes carbon dioxide to the environment, helping to raise the temperature of the earth. And grass is a water hog and also lets rain runoff.And grass is not very exciting to look at and doesn't serve many purposes in enriching our lives.But help is here. If, you have decided you need to eliminate or reduce your grass, this book is for you. You will get great ideas for grass alternatives and then be able to follow the simple directions for grass removal.And even if you are not ready to remove your grass, this book is eye candy for gardeners. The author writes in an engaging style that makes for very fun reading. I ended up finishing it up in one reading session.
S**N
Good photos of different projects
The author wrote a good book on how to remove a lawn effectively and permanently. Great instruction and the pros and cons for each choice are helpful. The book has lots of good color photos, some with before and after pictures.The author's motivation to write a book about lawn removal seems to have been based on people's aversion to having to mow it, not because lawns waste water. In most instances where plants not patios replaced the former lawn, the new plantings were not chosen to conserve water.Use this book to teach you how to remove the lawn effectively, then buy another book Water-Wise Gardening: America's Backyard Revolutionso your new yard will also conserve resources if that is what you are after.
R**Y
it's a good read!
Pam is well know in blogging circles for her blog, Digging, and for hosting the monthly meme, Foliage Follow-Up, where the non-flowers in our gardens are given their just due. The idea of turning the American obsession with grass into an earth-friendlier approach has been gathering steam for some time. Here we have a practical guide to the whys and hows of the grassless revolution.Many of Pam's followers have already sung the praises of the book's fine photography, supporting the ideas for alternatives to traditional lawns. They note that the book breaks down the planning and execution of lawn replacement into easily identifiable choices and steps. I second all that. Where I diverge, and feel that I have something to add to the conversation, is this: Pam is a wordsmith. She is highly readable. Scattered throughout the text are gems like this:`Devil's Shoestring' (Nolina lindenhameriana) puddles on the ground like a shrugged-off party dress.So by all means, read this book for the useful information it contains, but do not fail to revel in the language. It will deliver every bit as much literary satisfaction as the novel on your bedstand.
A**R
Useful
Cut down lawn removal research immensely
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