Slaves to the Lawn

24/09/2008

Average Rating: 2 stars

Comments: 4 readers have left a comment

Oh no. It's starting to get warm.

I heard some flies buzzing around the screen door the other day -- one of the signature sounds of the Australian summer.

It sent a prickle down my spine.

You see, our sprinklers broke down a year ago, and we still haven’t fixed them. Partly because the colossal power of my family's combined procrastination could power a second Large Hadron Collider, and partly because the problem does not involve a simple fix, like a new sprinkler head or a pipe join.

Once upon a time some brainiac built a fence at the front of our house. A fence that is purely ornamental and completely useless because it does not have a gate. The fence posts are reinforced with cement, and one of the fence posts is right next to the sprinkler solenoid, so the sprinkler solenoid is also reinforced with cement and no one can get to it.

So we took turns hand-watering the lawn for three months, shouted "Woohoo!" when the rains came, ran back inside the house to the TV/Internet/Wii, and never came out again.

And now, my friends, now we are reaping what we have sown. That is, we have sown the seeds of laziness, and we are going to harvest a bumper crop of hot, sweaty labour.

I don't know about you, but I'm getting awfully sick of the suburban front lawn. The only people with lush, emerald frontage in our neighbourhood are the rich folk who have Jim's Mowing parked on their verge every week, or the sweet pensioner couple who spend all their time in the garden and have forty rose bushes and seventeen bird feeders*.

In our garden, grass refuses to grow where it is meant to (that giant bare patch in the middle of the front yard) and thrives in places where it looks awful (in the flower beds) or requires armour-clad extraction (underneath the bougainvillea). In addition, it demands regular weeding, fertilising, aerating and de-beetling. That's more work than I put into my relationship, and it doesn't even buy me flowers.

If there were an award for most useless home feature, I would like to nominate the front lawn.

(In number two spot would be the water fountains that three of our neighbours have. Here is what these things say to me when I walk past them on the way to the bus stop. Hello! I live in a land of drought and think that having a useless device that evaporates water twice as fast is a good idea! Lalalalala!)

Where was I? Ah yes, the front lawn, one of my many nemeses.

It may look small, that oblong of green between the front door and the verge, but to a human with a garden hose, it takes on the dimensions of an aircraft carrier.

At least we've learnt a lesson from our slothful ways. When you are standing there watering every inch of lawn, as opposed to being detached from the whole experience by an automated reticulation system, you realise that you are wasting an incredible amount of a finite resource.

Many thoughts run through my head as I watch myself sprinkle perfectly good drinking water onto something we can’t even eat or sell. Somewhere, someone much less fortunate than we are, is walking miles and miles through hot, barren ground to acquire a fraction of this amount of water. Slightly more fortunate families share a single tap or well with the rest of the village. The water I am using is enough to do several loads of washing, or water a large crop of fruit and vegetables. It is enough uncontaminated water to clean hands, bodies, food and utensils so that disease doesn’t spread.

Why do we have these frivolous water suckers? What is the point of a front lawn, apart from having something green to cover that bit in between the front door and the verge? No one really uses it, not when most of the fun stuff goes on in the backyard where passers-by can't gawk at you.

Does anyone here treasure their front lawn? Or do you just give it a passing glance on the way from the garage to the front door? If you could get rid of it tomorrow, would you, and what would you replace it with?


* One day that nice couple will move out and those starving corellas are going to develop a taste for human flesh. You mark my words.

Reader Comments

Celia

26/09/2008 at 12:25

Amen to you Angie!
I hate my front lawn with a passion! It breeds evil bindii prickles and no matter how much TLC I give it - it gives nothing back. I would love to pave the whole lot and keep the garden beds, but replace all the plants. My plants would have no reticulation and they either live or die - Survival of the Fittest! Most of my neighbourhood are like Ken and Barbie next door. They have a beautiful vertimowed perfect lawn that they use religiously every weekend to wash their cars. These people run their reticulation in the middle of the winter during thunderstorms, because it is their watering day and "they can".
I wonder if we all got together and changed the suburban landscape if it wouldn't look and feel so much better with lots of native trees for the birds, so there would be no need for them to resort to carnivore behaviour :-)

Jaymez

26/09/2008 at 12:28

I hate front lawns, it is just window dressing for your house and a waste of labour and resources. Newer estates, particularly in more expensive areas are banishing the front lawn. I reckon if there are legions of old couples who want to do gardening, then let them do all the local parks, reserves and median strips and the gardens of local shire offices, thus giving them the pastime they enjoy, reducing our rates and improving the standard of gardens.

marike

01/10/2008 at 11:33

Front lawns Ba!!!!! Yeach !! They are only good for keeping the sand at bay. Paving is an alternative, yet costly and extremely hot in the height of our summer. So what does one do I ask?? Yes there is always the native garden alternative, but most people dont have pride in such a garden, its to messy, to unkept! Dah! They want to show off and make a monument to their castle entrance, no matter the cost on the environment. Go figure!!

bignanna

14/10/2008 at 10:42

Been away for 3 weeks, went out the back to hang the washing (dog following), dropped washing basket, yelled out a almighty scream, hubbie come running out, "what's wrong love," there's a jungle in the back yard, can't see the dog I've lost her. Its amazing when you are home how the grass does not grow but go away and you have a jungle. Two hours later and one sweaty hubbie I could hang the sheets out.

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