No Mow May

No Mow May

  • An Excuse To Be Lazy

    Votes: 134 82.2%
  • Good for the Bees

    Votes: 29 17.8%

  • Total voters
    163

carvers4math

Well-Known Member
Mar 15, 2012
21,352
17,736
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My grandpa always wanted my sister and I to go to their house right after school got out for a couple of days. He would take us to the park, a movie, and ice cream the first day and grandma would show us her needlepoint. The next two days were slave labor digging dandelions. He inspected to make sure we got the whole root. Man was obsessed with them.
 

cowgirl836

Well-Known Member
Sep 3, 2009
51,444
43,320
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It's well intended but not the best. We have mowed twice now. But I refuse to allow spray except for 2 small patches of creeping charlie so we are the dandelion neighbors. Oh well. Couple weeks and then they fade pretty dramatically for the rest of the year. Turfgrass isn't the best anyway. Slowly turning pockets into native perennials or adding trees. Plans to to put native grasses in the ditches someday and then a back section into native prairie type. For now have a new native flower section that is just alive with bees late summer. Really buzzing with activity.

Local library has converted most of their turf into prairie and it's really beautiful all season.
 

snowcraig2.0

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Nov 2, 2007
12,545
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47
Cedar Rapids, IA
It's well intended but not the best. We have mowed twice now. But I refuse to allow spray except for 2 small patches of creeping charlie so we are the dandelion neighbors. Oh well. Couple weeks and then they fade pretty dramatically for the rest of the year. Turfgrass isn't the best anyway. Slowly turning pockets into native perennials or adding trees. Plans to to put native grasses in the ditches someday and then a back section into native prairie type. For now have a new native flower section that is just alive with bees late summer. Really buzzing with activity.

Local library has converted most of their turf into prairie and it's really beautiful all season.
Prairie grass is for hillbillies.
 

besserheimerphat

Well-Known Member
Apr 11, 2006
11,480
15,322
113
Mount Vernon, WA
I mowed the back for the first time tonight, though it was a second mowing for the front. Stalled my mower once and threatened to a couple other times.

I was wanting to let it go a little longer this year after our house sitter scalped the yard last August. It all turned brown and didn't come back until the rain came back in October. By then moss had taken hold. I'd heard that leaving it a little longer in the spring helps the roots go deeper so it stays healthier in the summer heat. But then people got sick and I got busy with work and it got away from me.
 
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alarson

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Mar 15, 2006
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Ankeny
I mowed the back for the first time tonight, though it was a second mowing for the front. Stalled my mower once and threatened to a couple other times.

I was wanting to let it go a little longer this year after our house sitter scalped the yard last August. It all turned brown and didn't come back until the rain came back in October. By then moss had taken hold. I'd heard that leaving it a little longer in the spring helps the roots go deeper so it stays healthier in the summer heat. But then people got sick and I got busy with work and it got away from me.

I usually start shorter and increase as the spring goes on
 
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BoxsterCy

Moderator
Staff member
Sep 14, 2009
48,323
47,244
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Minnesota
It's all ******** about not mowing grass lawns. Grass lawns are pretty much a habitat desert to start with. The lawn no mow grew as an well intended extension of not jumping right in and clearing out dead plants and ground debris from your flower gardens which does help insects. I don't have much grass lawn left, just a couple little patches in the front yard, everything else is ornamental garden. Not close to needing a mow, too dry, but if it did need it I'd not think twice about it.

Got bees bees, lot's of bumble bees and others in the my pachysandra plants which are blooming.
 

06_CY

Well-Known Member
Apr 11, 2006
4,836
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My neighbors are just lazy *****. When they do mow it's half assed.
 

Stormin

Well-Known Member
Apr 11, 2006
45,473
14,346
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It seems there is an abundance of people in my neighborhood this year that are letting the lawn go nuts. Seems like a good way to kill your mower and the rest of the lawn laying that much grass back on top when you finally do cut it.

Set mower at highest setting. Mow less grass off. The taller mowing will allow the grass cut to settle in that higher mowing without covering. Mowing it twice high will size clippings smaller. Never mow lower than 3 inches ever.
 

AgronAlum

Well-Known Member
Jul 12, 2014
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Set mower at highest setting. Mow less grass off. The taller mowing will allow the grass cut to settle in that higher mowing without covering. Mowing it twice high will size clippings smaller. Never mow lower than 3 inches ever.

I think you’re underestimating the length of some of these lawns. There’s no way it won’t chunk up and choke out the remaining grass.
 
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intrepid27

Well-Known Member
Oct 9, 2006
6,011
5,079
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Marion, IA
Is the No Mow May really about pollinators? I thought it was to encourage deeper root growth which will be better when it gets hot and dry. Paging all agronomists.
 

Cyientist

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Aug 18, 2013
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I dedicated a corner to native perennials and love it. Something is always in bloom by early April.

It is one of the best things I’ve done at my house. It is crazy the variety of butterflies and even hummingbirds that find that small patch in suburbia.
 

CtownCyclone

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Jan 20, 2010
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Where they love the governor
We have this 1-2 ft wide strip of grass between our driveway and retaining wall. It's supposed to be St.Augustine grass, but nothing much would ever grow there. About 5 years ago, we planted some white and yellow sweet clover in that strip. I love the smell of sweet clover.

The white sweet clover grows great in that strip, and attracts all kinds of pollinators and butterflies. We cut it down after it dies (Aug/Sep here), and the St. Augustine is now nice and thick under the sweet clover. For some reason we can't get the yellow sweet clover to grow.

Sweet clover can be invasive, so that was a concern, and we keep an eye on that, but ours hasn't spread beyond that strip.

We have a Texas Ranger shrub in the back yard that blossoms throughout the year. It too sits full of pollinators and butterflies when it blooms.

As mentioned above, there are a number of "longer term" things that can be done to help the pollinators throughout the growing season.

St Augustine does a good job of crowding things out.

Also does a good job of making sure you were every damn time.
 

huntt26

Well-Known Member
Apr 10, 2006
10,603
2,255
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po' dUnk
No mow April would make more sense than May. Things grow so fast in May where it's just not practical to let your lawn grow so high (with or without weeds).

Even if you have dandelions and weeds (like myself), a routinely cut lawn looks pretty darn good and still offers opportunities for pollinators.
 

arobb

Well-Known Member
Jan 4, 2014
1,436
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No mow April would make more sense than May. Things grow so fast in May where it's just not practical to let your lawn grow so high (with or without weeds).

Even if you have dandelions and weeds (like myself), a routinely cut lawn looks pretty darn good and still offers opportunities for pollinators.
I spot spray the dandelions and creeping charlie but leave the clover alone for the bees. If I didn't mow for two weeks I would need a bush hog to cut my grass.
 
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