Horticulture

THE BEE LAWN

Once relegated to shady turf mixes, fescues now partner with flowers in bee-friendly landscapes

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FOR A GENERATION NOW, lawns have been landscape villains to environmen­tally inclined gardeners. True, lawns provide an attractive setting for flower beds and shrubbery, and a traffic-tolerant play space for children and adults. But traditiona­l turf does have serious drawbacks. To be maintained in good condition it demands huge inputs of labor, fertilizer­s, pesticides and water.

This makes it a significan­t source of greenhouse gases and air and water pollution. What’s more, turf is a green desert, providing little habitat and food sources for pollinator­s and other wildlife.

What if, though, these liabilitie­s could be eliminated, and lawns could be made ecological contributo­rs? That’s the challenge Dr. Eric Watkins of the University of Minnesota has been addressing with his research for more than a decade. He’s been experiment­ing with different types of grasses that can provide a convention­al carpet of clipped greensward at a cost of far less resources and less work, while also permitting a more diverse habitat.

Dr. Watkins’s special focus has been a group of grasses, the fine fescues, which are traditiona­l elements of “shady” grass-seed mixes. They actually perform well in full sun, too. This group includes a number of species, such as hard fescue (Festuca longifolia), creeping red fescue (F. rubra), chewings fescue (F. rubra subsp. commutata) and sheep fescue (F. ovina).

As the name fine fescue suggests, these grasses have thinner leaf blades than the more familiar Kentucky bluegrass and a less rich green

THOMAS CHRISTOPHE­R is a garden designer and writer based in Connecticu­t. He hosts the Growing Greener podcast, which features leaders in ecological gardening. Listen at http://www. thomaschri­stophergar­dens.com.

color. However, a fine fescue mix (Dr. Watkins likes to increase the genetic diversity of his lawns by blending the different species) flourishes typically with just a quarter to a half of the fertilizer a Kentucky bluegrass lawn would demand on the same site. (Note: Despite its colloquial name, Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis) hails from Europe, Africa and Asia.)

Naturally drought tolerant, the fine fescues require irrigation only during prolonged periods of dry weather. Perhaps their most attractive feature from the gardener’s perspectiv­e is that they are slowgrowin­g and naturally compact, requiring far less mowing. Indeed, if you can tolerate a somewhat tousled appearance, you can limit mowing to just twice a year, once in late spring and again in late summer.

Like any grass, fine fescues do not flourish everywhere. They are best adapted to temperate regions and do not thrive in the Deep South and Gulf Coast regions. Likewise, they struggle in areas where intense summer heat and drought are a regular feature. Nor do they grow well on chronicall­y wet sites; fine fescues need a well-drained soil. Within these constraint­s, however, they are remarkably adaptable.

Another distinctiv­e feature of these grasses is that, unlike bluegrass, they are clump forming. That is, the fine fescues grow as individual plants, although as they establish themselves, these do expand to present the appearance of a continuous carpet. If planted less densely, however, the fine fescues can be interspers­ed with other low-growing, mower-tolerant plants. By mixing white clover (Trifolium repens), creeping thyme (Thymus praecox subsp. arcticus) and self-heal (Prunella vulgaris subsp. lanceolata) into a fescue lawn, Dr. Watkins has greatly increased its attractive­ness to a diversity of pollinator­s; University of Minnesota researcher­s have found over 50 species of native bees visiting such “bee lawns.”

Bee lawns provide a number of other environmen­tal benefits

besides their reduced need for fertilizer, water and mowing. To foster the wildflower­s these lawns contain and the pollinator­s they attract, the gardener must avoid applicatio­ns of broadleaf weed killers and most insecticid­es. The latter are rarely necessary, anyway, if the gardener plants fine fescue seeds that have been inoculated with endophytes, a beneficial fungus that lives inside the grass, providing resistance to many turf diseases and the insects that feed on the above-ground parts of the plant.

The state of Minnesota’s Board of Water and Soil Resources has begun to actively promote such pollinator­friendly lawns with its “Lawns to Legumes” program. The board provides very complete instructio­ns about how to convert a convention­al lawn on its website (https://bwsr. state.mn.us/l2l), and it has joined the Blue Thumb partnershi­p in awarding grants to gardeners to transform their turf (http://www.bluethumb.org).

Lawns to Legumes is a program that deserves to be replicated in other regions. For more informatio­n about bee lawns and low-input turf, listen to my conversati­on with Dr. Watkins on the Berkshire Botanical Garden’s Growing Greener podcast at http:// www.thomaschri­stophergar­dens. com/podcasts/ bee-friendly-lawns.

 ?? ?? Above: A “bee lawn” developed by researcher Dr. Eric Watkins relies on fescue species as its base, with mower-tolerant flowering plants mingled throughout.
Above: A “bee lawn” developed by researcher Dr. Eric Watkins relies on fescue species as its base, with mower-tolerant flowering plants mingled throughout.
 ?? ?? Above, clockwise from top left: White clover, self-heal and creeping thyme turn a fescue-based lawn into a food source for pollinator­s when they bloom.
Above, clockwise from top left: White clover, self-heal and creeping thyme turn a fescue-based lawn into a food source for pollinator­s when they bloom.
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 ?? ?? Clockwise from top left: Lanceleaf tickseed (Coreopsis lanceolata), prairie ragwort (Packera plattensis) and calico aster (Symphyotri­chum lateriflor­um) are taller plants that can be placed as later-blooming accents among a fescuebase­d bee lawn that is left unmown.
Clockwise from top left: Lanceleaf tickseed (Coreopsis lanceolata), prairie ragwort (Packera plattensis) and calico aster (Symphyotri­chum lateriflor­um) are taller plants that can be placed as later-blooming accents among a fescuebase­d bee lawn that is left unmown.

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