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sandturtle

Rock garden, groundcovers or...? Dandelion troubles.

9 years ago

(Skip to the pictures below, including a few google map overhead views of his backyard to give you an idea of his current landscaping arrangement.

You can also view more pictures of the backyard from multiple angles here: http://imgur.com/a/znctg )

Looking for advice/ suggestions on how to approach our particular landscaping dilemma. I'll try to keep everything in point form to make it easier to read.

- A few days ago my brother asked me to help him this upcoming week with a complete landscaping overhaul of his backyard lawn area which has been getting totally overwhelmed by dandelions (for years, it seems).

He moved into the home early last year, so he's already had one full season of trying (and failing) to battle the issue.

- He lives in Southern Ontario (Canada) in an area with a hardiness zone rating of 5b [-26.1'C (15'F) to -23.3'C (-15'F)]. Summers here can get fairly hot (anywhere from mid 20's - mid 30's Celsius).

- Dandelions from the public/ government owned land behind his house (and the homes of everyone else on the street along that same fence line) are blowing into his backyard through the chain-link fence and making it nearly impossible to keep up with weeding and other maintenance and prevention requirements.

He says the public field area gets cut maybe twice a year, at most, and is otherwise usually left with up to foot high+ grass/ weeds, etc, for most of the growing season.

Many neighbors have simply given up and surrendered to the fact that they can't win against the onslaught of dandelions because the upkeep requirements are too demanding and time consuming.

- He'd like to be able to keep a nice lawn but he knows that any grass re-seeding/ re-sodding/ soil restoration efforts would probably be a waste of time and money due to the constant barrage of dandelion seeds blowing into his yard on a constant basis from that back field area.

- Chemical approaches are off the table (no weed killers or anything like that. The safe alternatives such as boiling water etc, are basically a no-go as well due to the sheer amount of dandelions he's dealing with and the assumption that there are probably countless dormant seeds just waiting to sprout up at any time).

- As I would imagine is so often the case in many gardening and landscaping advice seeking scenarios like this - he's yet another person looking for suggestions about quick and simple solutions that won't set him back thousands of dollars in materials alone.

- Because he has minimal time to tend to his yard/ garden, in general (other than the odd biweekly/ monthly grass trimming maintenance efforts) so far he has been throwing around ideas based around these two main potential low maintenance solutions to his dandelion problem:

1. Complete removal of the remaining grass (now primarily dandelion) covered areas of the backyard and then adding in a rock garden instead (as seen in the pictures, he has quite a few stepping stones in place already and most of the perimeter of the yard is occupied by shrubs, mulch, his waterfall and other misc. rocks and plants - so making the transition into a complete rock garden wouldn't be that big of a change on an aesthetic level).

2. Same complete removal of the grass/ weeds, but then buying massive quantities of hardy groundcover plants (he was thinking Irish moss or related) and hoping they are all able to catch/ spread really quickly and are able to outcompete the dandelions for occupancy of the yard space.

In either case he wants to use a lot more mulch to fill in gaps, etc, and put landscape fabric down under whatever medium he goes with. He'd also like to find whisky barrel planters (but I'm wondering how many would be ideal given the space and present layout he's dealing with?)

This post was edited by sandturtle on Sat, May 31, 14 at 21:13

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