*A guide to ecological gardening* > *"Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world."* > — Robin Wall Kimmerer, botanist & author --- ## A Little History — Where Did the Lawn Come From? Before the 17th century, a lawn was simply a glade or clearing — a natural opening in woodland, wild and layered, full of herbs, clover, wildflowers and moss. Not untidy, but ecologically intelligent. A place where things grew as they were suited to grow. The close-cropped grass lawn came much later, imported from the estates of the European aristocracy — a deliberate display of wealth and dominance over nature. Before the lawnmower arrived in 1830, maintaining such a lawn required armies of workers with scythes. Only the very wealthiest could afford it. The rest of us simply inherited the ideal, largely without questioning it. What if we took some of the older spirit back? --- ![[LawnsEco.image.jpg]] ## So What's Possible? — The Spectrum Between Lawn and Wilderness Without letting a garden run riot, opening up a green space can be practical and valuable — for children, for recreation, for simply sitting in. There is a wide and beautiful spectrum between a monoculture lawn and full wilderness. **🌸 Let a section grow.** Simply mow for the last time in spring, then put the mower away for summer. Wild plants already living in your lawn will flower and attract pollinators — with no effort from you at all. **🌼 Introduce wildflowers.** Add low-growing natives such as daisies, self-heal, dog violets, and clover directly into an existing lawn — plants that cope with occasional mowing or duck below the blades. **🌿 Try a tapestry lawn.** Replace uniform grass with a mix of low-growing ground cover — thyme, chamomile, clover — creating something lush and considered whilst supporting far more wildlife. ![[Tapestry Lawn example.1.jpeg]] **🍃 Let moss do its thing.** In shady, damp areas where grass forever struggles, moss may simply be the right plant for the job. More on this below. *Further reading: RHS guides to [Wildflower Meadows](https://www.rhs.org.uk/lawns/creating-wildflower-meadows) and [Rewilding Your Garden](https://www.rhs.org.uk/garden-inspiration/wildlife/rewild-your-garden)* --- ## In Praise of Moss Moss is one of the most ecologically valuable plants on earth — ancient, resilient, and endlessly generous. It has been supporting life on this planet for over 400 million years, and it asks almost nothing in return. **💧 A natural sponge.** Moss can absorb water up to ten times its own weight, reducing run-off, preventing soil erosion, and holding moisture during dry spells. Where grass browns and struggles, moss stays quietly green. **🐛 A world of wildlife.** A mossy lawn supports a richer community of life than a standard grass monoculture — habitat for beetles, woodlice, and microscopic invertebrates, a food source for moth caterpillars, and nesting material for birds. In many gardens, the real question isn't *moss or grass* — it's which plant is actually suited to this particular corner? > *"Rather than battle against moss, save time, money and resources by embracing it. If moss is thriving in your lawn, allow it to spread."* > — RHS · [rhs.org.uk/lawns/moss-on-lawns](https://www.rhs.org.uk/lawns/moss-on-lawns) **🌱 No chemicals, no mowing, no fuss.** Moss needs no fertilisers, pesticides, or cutting. Petrol mowers are a significant and often underestimated source of air pollution — eliminating the need to mow at all is one of the simplest wins a garden can offer. **🌍 Quietly capturing carbon.** Like all plants, moss draws carbon from the atmosphere and stores it — doing its small, steady part to cool the planet. No fanfare, no intervention required. **🌬️ A measure of clean air.** Moss is exquisitely sensitive to air pollution and naturally filters sulphur dioxide and carbon monoxide. Where moss thrives, it's a quiet sign of a healthy local environment. **🌿 Simply let it be.** If moss keeps returning to the same spot, that isn't a failure — **it's information**. The ground is telling you, quietly and persistently, what it's suited to grow. For sunny, well-drained areas, grass remains a fine choice. But for the shady corner, the damp patch under the tree, the strip that never quite thrives — moss may simply be the better plant. Letting it do what it does naturally costs nothing, harms nothing, and as it turns out, helps rather a lot. --- ## A Little Wisdom from the Forest In her book *[[Gathering Moss]]*, botanist and Potawatomi Nation member [[Robin Wall Kimmerer]] describes moss as one of the oldest and most resilient life forms on earth — thriving on patience and reciprocity rather than dominance. She invites us to ask what we might learn from a plant that has never needed to control its environment to survive. It's a perspective worth bringing into the garden. --- ## The Principles of Ecological Gardening - Work with nature, not against it - Listen to what the garden is already telling you - Reduce chemicals wherever possible - Leave space for wildness to return - Choose long-term health over short-term tidiness - Support the full web of garden life --- *Curious to know more? Ask us about ecological approaches to your garden — from moss and wildflowers to compost and companion planting. Getting the garden to work with its natural conditions rather than against them is almost always simpler, cheaper, and more rewarding in the long run. This garden is part of something bigger. Let's tend it that way.*