Grass
Grass is narrow-leaved green herbage type
of
Plant grown
as lawns or found in the wild in fields. Used as pasture for grazing animals
and can also be cut and dried as
Hay, which
is a grass,
legumes, or other herbaceous plants that have been cut, dried,
and stored for use as animal fodder, particularly for grazing animals such
as cattle, horses, goats, and sheep. Hay is also fed to smaller animals
such as rabbits and guinea pigs. Pigs may be fed hay, but they do not
digest it as efficiently as fully herbivorous animals.
Poaceae (PDF) -
Plants -
Farming -
Soil -
Seeds
Lawn is a field of cultivated and mowed grass.
Lawn is an area of
soil-covered land planted with grasses or (rarely) other durable plants
such as clover which are maintained at a short height with a
lawnmower and used for aesthetic and recreational purposes.
You will Never Mow your Grass Again, well at least not as much...
No-Mow Lawn Mix
Naturally Short Grass with Low Maintenance
Eco-Lawn
Festuca is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the
grass family, Poaceae (subfamily Pooideae). They are evergreen or
herbaceous perennial tufted grasses with a height range of 10–200 cm (4–79
in) and a cosmopolitan distribution, occurring on every continent except
Antarctica.
Ancient gene duplication gave grasses multiple ways to wait out winter.
New research shows how grasses count the short days of winter to prepare
for flowering. The findings provide valuable insight into how
winter-adapted grasses gain the ability to flower in spring, which could
be helpful for improving crops, like winter wheat, that rely on this
process. To get at the use of daylength as a winter signal, Amasino's
group turned to Brachypodium, a grass used in the lab that is related to
crops like corn, rice and wheat. They found that, out of 51 varieties of
Brachypodium, 40 could sense short days as a sign of winter, showing there
was variation for this trait among the varieties. The team found that the
duplicate, named FTL9, has evolved to act as a sort of inverse of its
parent gene florigen. Where florigen builds up in leaves during long days
to cause flowering, FTL9 accumulates during the short days of winter.
While enough florigen makes flowering inevitable, FTL9 only makes
flowering possible by releasing the brakes on florigen once spring
arrives.
How to install an Eco friendly Lawn for a low maintenance grassy landscape
(youtube)
No Mow Grass
Sustainable Lawns and Landscaping
Short Grass Seed Varieties
Buffel
Grass -
Buffalo Grass
Kentucky Blue Grass (Poa Pratensis)
Zoysia is a genus of creeping grasses widespread across much
of Asia and Australia, as well as various islands in the Pacific.
Z Farms
Replace your old lawn with a New Slow Growing Grass using
Lawn
Grass Plugs.
Lawn Plugs -
Grassing
Cutting down on Lawn Mowing will also
reduce Deaths and Serious Injuries:
More than 17,000 Children a year are injured by Lawn Mowers
161,00 injuries
from Lawn Mowers
Risks of Lawn Mowing
Hustler TurfPesticide Lawn
Application: States and local jurisdictions play a major role in
regulating the use of chemicals on lawns. The active ingredient most
widely used on residential lawns in the United States is a chemical
mixture called
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, or 2,4-D, which is sold in differing
formulations under a variety of trade names. Another common herbicide is
glyphosate. Studies of occupational exposure to agricultural pesticides
(including 2,4-D and glyphosate) have found a positive
correlation
with certain
cancers. There is no
scientific standard for how long one should stay off a lawn after it is
treated.
Yet a 2013 study examining the levels of lawn
Pesticides in the urine of dogs found
that herbicides persisted on lawn surfaces for at least 48 hours after
spraying. If you’re trying to get rid of the bulk of the exposure, you
want to be off of [a treated area] for at least two days, and more like
three. Just because it’s dried doesn’t mean it’s not transferable. It may
mist later, or there may be dew in the morning. Even dried chemicals such
as lead and pesticides leave residues on hands and clothes.
The
average homeowner will spend
150 hours a year
maintaining their lawn, but only 35 hours on sex. PESTICIDES: 10
times more herbicides per acre are dumped on lawns than on the fields of
agribusiness. MONEY: Per acre, it costs more to maintain a lawn than it
does to grow corn, rice or sugarcane. Americans spending an estimated
$40 billion a year on Lawn Care. More than
80,000 people to U.S are injured and an
average of 70 deaths annually mowing lawns.
Americas most grown crop is something that no one is eating, no one is
asking for, and no one is quite sure what to do with. It’s your
Lawn. The U.S. devotes a full one-fifth of its land
to agriculture (408 million acres, or 637,500 square miles) for
farmers to grow on, of which corn is the largest food crop.
However, there are almost 50,000 square miles of
Lawn Growing in the U.S.—almost three times as much as corn.
128,000 square kilometers (or about 50,000 square miles) of
growth, three times that of the U.S. land occupied by corn.
This is so ignorant it's not even funny.
The Case Against Lawns
Drought Tolerant Landscaping
Desert Landscapes
Low
Water Landscaping
Low Maintenance Landscaping
Water Use Knowledge
Native Plants -
Plants
Synthetic Grass?
Todd
Valley Farms
Get and Maintain a Healthy Lawn
Scythe is an
agricultural hand tool for mowing grass or reaping crops. It has largely
been replaced by horse-drawn and then tractor machinery, but is still used
in some areas of Europe and Asia.
Scythe beats a Gas Powered Weed Wacker in Grass Cutting
Competition
South West Annual Scythe Festival - June
2010 (youtube)
Sean
Dembrosky presents the different types of blades, demonstrates
proper scything techniques (video)
Tools (building) -
Tools (engineering)
Edible
Landscapes - Growing Food instead of non-edible plants
Edible Lawns
Edible Landscaping
From Lawns to Edible Landscapes
(youtube)
Edible Landscapes London
Pam Warhurst Edible Landscapes (video)
Forest Gardens -
Permaculture
Plant Maintenance
Seeds
Of course growing Grass for Farm Animals
is a totally different type of Grassing:
Forage Seed
Best Forage
Seed Land
Hancock
Seed
Forage is plant material (mainly plant leaves and stems)
eaten by grazing
livestock.
Historically, the term forage has meant only plants eaten by the animals
directly as pasture, crop residue, or immature cereal crops, but it is
also used more loosely to include similar plants cut for fodder and
carried to the animals, especially as hay or silage. The term forage fish
refers to small schooling fish that are preyed on by larger aquatic
animals. While the term forage has a broad definition, the term forage
crop is used to define crops, annual or biennial, which are grown to be
utilized by grazing or harvesting as a whole crop.
Cover Crops -
Seeds