Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
central_cali369

Good candidates for replacing a lawn?

Central_Cali369
15 years ago

I've been chewing on the thought of replacing my front lawn for quite some time now, especially with the possibility of our water being rationed soon. I've already reduced the amount of lawn by taking bits and strips away from the edges. So far, I've used Verbena Peruviana (the common hybrid verbena) and Allysum, but i'm sure there are more options. I've recently planted a couple of sedums, to explore how those would do here. If they do well, i could possible use some of those. And on the plus side, i could propagate the ones i have and cultivate my own stock to plant since i would be doing this with a limited budget. I'm would really like to use succulents (clumping aloes would look really cool - I think), but am really open to just about anything. Do any of you have pics of lawn-less yards or sections of yards? I would love to see them to get ideas.

Here are a couple of pictures of the lawn I am looking toward replacing:

This shot shows pretty much all of the yard (except for the left-most extent which isn't much)

{{gwi:65216}}

This is the Left-most extent. The area around the majesty palm is the area with verbena and allysum. It seems to work pretty well in that spot.

{{gwi:65215}}

Looking from the near-center toward the right

{{gwi:566129}}

And looking from the same spot straight foreward

{{gwi:65217}}

Comments (7)

  • susi_so_calif
    15 years ago

    Check out using Dymondia in your climate zone. It does great here in zone 9-10 in full sun to very light shade, and is a low-water virtually no-maintenance ground cover. Takes foot traffic, occasional car traffic (we park on it in our driveway area), and never needs mowing.

  • calistoga_al ca 15 usda 9
    15 years ago

    From your photo it is apparent you are in the valley winter fog. The main reason we plant a lawn is for the summer cooling effect around the house. If this is not an important consideration and for your front yard, foot traffic should not be an issue, you have many choices possible. Al

  • bahia
    15 years ago

    I would second the recommendation for Dymmondia, particularly if you need/want to be able to walk on it. I also use things like Myoporum parvifolium 'Dwarf Pink Form' as a very fast growing, and also very low growing drought tolerant ground cover, as it only gets 2 to 3 inches tall, is dark green foliaged and densely covers the ground, and doesn't need much irrigation. Other succulent ground covers I like to use would include Sedum palmeri, Sedum rubrotinctum and others, Senecio mandraliscae and S. serpens, Crassula multicava(frost tender but extremely drought tolerant. None of these succulents is really appropriate as walk on ground covers, but work well if you heavily plant and have stepping stones for access. Carex tumulicola and C. pansa are two other turf substitutes I have used that use much less water than turf, but look much like lawn.

  • gardenguru1950
    15 years ago

    OPTIONS:

    1. a natural soft "meadow" of drought-tolerant grasses and grasslike plants -- no mowing:

    Autumn moor grass (Sesleria autumnalis)
    Berkeley sedge (Carex tumulicola)
    European meadow sedge (Carex remota)
    Meadow moor grass (Sesleria heuffleriana)
    Â and the below

    2. a semi-natural meadow of drought tolerant grasslike plants -- can be mowed and walked on:

    California meadow sedge (Carex pansa)
    Catlin sedge (Carex texensis)
    Valley meadow sedge (Carex praegracilis)

    3. green, low groundcover for the "expanse of green"; many choices  including walk-on:

    Acaena ÂBlue Haze BLUE HAZE BIDI-BIDI
    Arenaria balearica CORSICAN SANDWORT
    Carex praegracilis (C. pansa) CALIFORNIA MEADOW SEDGE
    Carex subfusca RUSTY SEDGE
    Chamaemelum nobile CHAMOMILE
    Dymondia margaritacea DYMONDIA
    Erodium reichardii CRANESBILL
    Herniaria glabra GREEN CARPET
    Sagina subulata SCOTCH "MOSS", IRISH "MOSS"
    Thymus x citriodorus LEMON THYME
    Thymus herba-barona CARAWAY-SCENTED THYME
    Thymus polytrichus ÂPink Chintz WILD THYME
    Thymus serpyllum CREEPING THYMES

    4. blooming groundcover for interest; many choices (not necessarily "walk on")

    5. seeded clover, birdÂs-foot trefoil (cheap, quick, easy)

    6. interesting plants and plantings such as:

    Succulents
    Rock garden plantings
    "Mediterranean chapparal"

    7. Additional or extended hardscaping  patio, courtyard

    8. synthetic lawn. Yes -- TodayÂs new versions are not too bad

    Joe

  • Central_Cali369
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Thanks Susi, The Dymondia does look promising here. I'm going to seek out a source. I could probably plant a dymondia corridor in the "trails" where we instinctively walk. The rest i was thinking of plating really dense with succulents. I saw these pics and really liked the layout. I'm wondering if i could repoduce the same layout. I know i'd have to substitute some plants (king palms, Agave Attenuata, looks like an aloe barbarae) since those aren't permanent plants here. Maybe i could use Aloe Dichotoma, or Agave Attenata? And the queens would take the place of the palms.

    http://www.rogersgardensvote.com/garden/entries/
    (The Rob Nelson entry from Hungtington Beach, Skoropada from Aliso Viejo, Keller from Costa Mesa, and Duda from Rossmoor.) I already have Aloe Marlothii, Aloe Dichotoma, Aloe Broomi, Aloe Arborescens, Aloe Striata, Aloe Saponaria, Agave Desmettiana Variegata, Agave Paryii, Agave "Sharkskin" and Yucca Guatemalensis to work with.

    Bahia, thanks for the succulent suggestions. I am already testing out sedum rubrotinctum, but sedum palmeri i will look for. Senecio mandraliscae is one i've had my eye on, mostly for it's blue color.

    Calistoga, the front lawn is really very small. When the queen palms have a complete canopy, they will shade 80-90% of what is now lawn so the cooling effect isn't something we're tring to keep the lawn for. And you have a good eye! yes, i'm north of Fresno.

  • susi_so_calif
    15 years ago

    Mixing aloes with other succulents sounds like a great idea. I highly recommend Debra Lee Baldwin's beautiful book, Designing with Succulents, for inspiring ideas. I'm doing a very low water front garden with lots of succulents, and what I've learned since I started planting it 2 years ago is that I want to use fewer different succulents with more plants of each kind of succulent. It was getting too spotty looking for my taste because I had basically planted 1 of everything I could get my hands on to start with. I've also found that some sedums are much more drought-tolerant than others, and also that they grow much faster than I was expecting.

    Good luck!

  • davissue_zone9
    15 years ago

    This site is always worth a look

    Here is a link that might be useful: steppables