|
Lawns Don't Waste
Water, People Do!
In recent years, much attention and controversy has surrounded the water
requirement of the lawn. Misinformation and hidden agendas have fueled
this controversy. However, there are some well documented facts about
the American lawn.
The lawn is an integral component of the landscape. The lawn is certainly
the best recreational surface for children and athletes. The lawn has
a tremendous mitigating effect on the environment, reducing heat loads
and noise, plus can contribute to water and air pollution.
A lawn is second only to a forest or pastures in the ability to harvest
water and recharge groundwater resources. And as a design component, the
lawn provides landscape unity and simplicity while inviting participation
in the landscape.
The lawn has become a focus in reducing landscape water use because of
the tremendous opportunity for abusive use of irrigation water in the
name of maintaining the lawn. Within the traditional landscape, the lawn
has received the major portion of the total landscape irrigation. Lawn
irrigation can be reduced, while the homeowner continues to derive the
many benefits of turfgrass.
Specific strategies to reduce lawn irrigation include:
- Place lawn areas into landscape irrigation zones based on water
requirements, so that lawns can be watered separately from other landscape
plantings
- Select adapted, lower-water demand turf species and varieties
- Use irrigated lawn areas only in areas which provide function (i.e.,
recreational, aesthetic, food traffic, dust and noise abatement, glare
reduction, temperature mitigation
- Use non-irrigated lawn areas where appropriate
- Increase mowing heights to decrease lawn water use and stress
- Decrease fertilizer rates and properly schedule fertilizations
By implementing these strategies, homeowners can reduce lawn irrigation
requirements and still reap the many benefits of a cool, green lawn.
Reviewed by: Dr. Gil Landry, UGA Extension
Turf Specialist
on May 4, 1999 (770)228-7300
UGA CAES Drought Information
|