Anonymous wrote:Why just move into a neighborhood with no HOA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do a clover lawn well, no one will care. If by native your mean a field of dandelions, neighbors will not be happy
That is not what it means. Stop perpetuating that stereotype.
It's not what people intend, but if you don't use herbicides and you aren't serious about weeding on a regular basis, it's what happens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in Burke Centre, so under the Burke Conservancy HOA which is no doubt a little high strung about some things. But weeds in the lawn isn't really something they care about as long as you mow it. Whether the neighbors care is probably a street or block by block situation, since there are some streets where it seems like every single house has a perfectly edged golf course for their front lawn and the mowers are there every other day, and then there are other streets (like mine) where we prefer to let things go more natural. We reseed with clover and always choose native plants; the HOA would start getting cranky if I, for example, planted a huge vegetable garden in the middle of my front yard.
Thank you! This is helpful! Do you need permission if you add or extend gardens in the front yard? For instance, I will want to add garden alongside any front walkway if there isn't already, around trees. I'd keep perennials short there, but was also wondering about if I can do a small pollinator garden at all in a front yard. I intend to keep things sectioned off and tidy.
Anonymous wrote:When you plant clover lawn what happens in the winter?
Anonymous wrote:I'm in Burke Centre, so under the Burke Conservancy HOA which is no doubt a little high strung about some things. But weeds in the lawn isn't really something they care about as long as you mow it. Whether the neighbors care is probably a street or block by block situation, since there are some streets where it seems like every single house has a perfectly edged golf course for their front lawn and the mowers are there every other day, and then there are other streets (like mine) where we prefer to let things go more natural. We reseed with clover and always choose native plants; the HOA would start getting cranky if I, for example, planted a huge vegetable garden in the middle of my front yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do a clover lawn well, no one will care. If by native your mean a field of dandelions, neighbors will not be happy
That is not what it means. Stop perpetuating that stereotype.
It's not what people intend, but if you don't use herbicides and you aren't serious about weeding on a regular basis, it's what happens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do a clover lawn well, no one will care. If by native your mean a field of dandelions, neighbors will not be happy
That is not what it means. Stop perpetuating that stereotype.
Anonymous wrote:If you do a clover lawn well, no one will care. If by native your mean a field of dandelions, neighbors will not be happy