Grass is Greener
from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 24 Jun 13:20
https://mander.xyz/post/14536841

#science_memes

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Neato@ttrpg.network on 24 Jun 14:00 next collapse

TIL clover is a legume. Neat.

flora_explora@beehaw.org on 25 Jun 07:29 next collapse

Peanuts too ;)

Classy@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 12:13 collapse

As is the locust tree! The one with the huge spikes on it

Omega_Man@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 14:04 next collapse

I don’t understand the dandelion hate. They are puffballs for maybe two weeks tops. The rest of the time they’re either invisible or beautiful flowers.

Also, I’m like the only yard with fireflies in my neighborhood.

fossilesque@mander.xyz on 24 Jun 14:07 next collapse

I harvest them to make lotion etc.

<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/f32ad975-bfa4-42e3-9fb9-83e39919b2cb.jpeg">

Gork@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 15:10 next collapse

Lotion, as in it puts it on it’s skin or it gets the hose again?

fossilesque@mander.xyz on 24 Jun 15:36 collapse
Omega_Man@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 15:49 collapse

My gran used to pick them and make dandelion wine.

SinJab0n@mujico.org on 25 Jun 16:04 collapse

Hol’ up, can u pls elaborate on that? prefereably with a recipe

rockerface@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 15:24 next collapse

I like the smell of yellow dandelions too. Had a lot of those around in the town where I grew up

prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 11:40 collapse

I’ve been supporting pollinators and bugs at my house since I moved here.

I have a portion of my yard set aside for lightning bug habitat.

So many this year … that my neighbor got a bug zapper. I hate that fucking thing.

Omega_Man@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 12:34 collapse

What kind of monster doesn’t like lightning bugs?

prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 14:53 collapse

I think they’re just angry at bugs in general, bug zappers are just … dumb.

Varyk@sh.itjust.works on 24 Jun 14:27 next collapse

Are there clover lawns?

Oh,yup. Wow, they’re popular.

Okay

www.thespruce.com/all-about-clover-lawns-6362145

Num10ck@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 15:22 next collapse

you might like the movie: Cloverfield

ChicoSuave@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 17:08 next collapse

That’s a bit in the weeds of gardening technique. If OP wants a simpler documentary about living with cloverfields, check out 10 Cloverfield Lane.

Varyk@sh.itjust.works on 24 Jun 17:20 collapse

Just finished cloverfield.

Not a single goddam clover in the whole goddam movie.

Good movie though.

moistclump@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 04:44 collapse

I planted one!!!

<img alt="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3ed173ea-3860-4860-bc1e-2c6a23d4f7df.jpeg" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3ed173ea-3860-4860-bc1e-2c6a23d4f7df.jpeg">

Varyk@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 05:33 collapse

Oh wowwwww.

Was it grass before and you had to tear that up first?

Did the Clovers propagate by themselves after you put in a few patches?

Tell me as much of the story as possible if you have the time and inclination.

Also, do you take naps on the clovers and does it stain your clothes?

It’s difficult for me to imagine having a clover lawn and not sleeping on it.

You just go outside and grab some clovers to cook sometimes and stuff haha.

Do pests live in there?

I want to live under the clover roof.

Oh it looks so nice.

nepenthes@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 05:55 collapse

Not who you asked, but here is another one:

<img alt="clover lawn pic. Very bright green" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1528b7dd-1d6a-4a9a-bd6c-0a4bd66c71a8.jpeg">

Planted by my septuagenarian father with just seeds and water. This is three six weeks in. He had to water a bunch at first while it was taking root, but it should need less water than grass. The grass prior was pretty toast, but he took the time to remove crabgrass.

I will take a nap on it next time I visit and let you know :)

EDIT: MB, not three weeks-- six weeks! Apparently, I have experienced a time warp (again) 🙄 SOZ!!

Varyk@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 06:16 collapse

Whooooa yusss, all clover lawns are welcome. That’s awesome.

That’s good to know that your dad was able to put it in so simply too.

Wow! It looks so lush for 3 weeks since, that’s amazing.

I heard about alternative lines a while ago and decided I didn’t want grass, but I had never considered clover and that seems pretty great

prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 11:45 collapse

Not for nothing it is often desired to mix grasses in with clover.

Monocultures are rarely ever good.

Clover is awesome but it’s not a hardy plant, it tears and crushes easily, so mixing some native grasses in with it will increase its durability.

That said if you can just plant clover and let wildlife seed the rest then you’re in business.

Varyk@sh.itjust.works on 25 Jun 12:07 collapse

Got it, thanks. I like a mix in a lawn, i let my last backyard grow wild for half a year to see what happened. It was pretty cool, lots of honeybees showed up.

prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works on 26 Jun 14:23 collapse

If you can find pollinator mixes for your area they’re great to over seed clover with.

When I do no mow may the wildflowers I over seed grow faster and taller than the grass

pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 14:27 next collapse

The message of the saying is that you only think that grass is greener because you’re not living with it. The grass isn’t actually greener on the other side of the fence

Sotuanduso@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 14:55 next collapse

Grass looks greener from the side than from directly above.

pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 13:54 collapse

are you sure about that

Sotuanduso@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 14:09 collapse

From the side, the blades obscure the dirt. Either that, or my neighbor’s grass really is greener.

pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 14:46 collapse

okay so that would apply if you could see the dirt, but if we’re just talking about a thick turf layer it seems like the top would be greener because that’s where most of the reflection is going

Sotuanduso@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 15:14 collapse

If the grass is laying flat against the ground, I guess. But it usually just leans. Either way, this is outside the scope of my statement.

pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 15:41 collapse

well, you’re saying the grass looks less green because of the dirt, but then you’re not talking about how green the grass is you’re talking about seeing dirt

jherazob@beehaw.org on 25 Jun 07:23 collapse

<img alt="Pretty much this" src="https://i.imgur.com/OjHKWrn.gif">

GluWu@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 14:48 next collapse

My whole property is nutrient void clay. Its greener where I piss.

ThrowawaySobriquet@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 15:53 next collapse

Daikon radishes. They grow in about anything and are especially good at clay busting. Grow a bunch then let them die back. Till them in and repeat until you get enough environment for the worms to take over the tilling. You can keep piling on radishes with something like clover and peas to add some nitrogen fixers. This is more a pasture revitalization technique, but if you don’t mind being the weird radish guy for two or three years (depending on local conditions), you could do it on a smaller scale for a lawn

GluWu@lemm.ee on 24 Jun 17:26 collapse

It only rains like a dozen times a year. I’ve got some decent work on the ground for my garden, there’s worms even! But I don’t have the time or water to really do several acres. I just kill invasives and water the natives. I have tons of native desert wild flowers but I still need to kill like an acre of buffle grass(I think that’s what its called, super hardy invasive African grass). I have a lot of native seeds for larger plants and trees that I’m going to sow and hope they grow after I leave.

ThrowawaySobriquet@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 01:15 collapse

Oh, so you’re in a real live desert. That’d be way too much work. I bet you have some beautiful natives growing out there. Sucks about the grasses, tho. I have enough trouble with bermuda grass, I can only imagine the problems from something that could be invasive in a desert

zerofk@lemm.ee on 25 Jun 06:56 collapse

So it is indeed greener where you water. Try the body thing next and let us know.

venoft@lemmy.world on 24 Jun 19:50 next collapse

Wait, clover is a legume? How tiny are their peas?

lseif@sopuli.xyz on 25 Jun 06:32 collapse

average size. actually if they were any bigger it would be uncomfortable.

adj16@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 00:03 collapse

I actually have serious doubts that plants grow better in the complex soup of fats and proteins that a body turns into. In fact I’m pretty sure I remember reading that the romanticized idea of turning your body into a tree after you die basically doesn’t work for this reason!

oxideseven@lemmy.ca on 25 Jun 12:12 collapse

Biologist here, the body itself isn’t what grows the “greener grass”. It’s just the start of a long biological process that will lead to ecological growth.

A tree isn’t going to feed directly off of the body. But the decay process will provide nutrients to the tree. We’re talking about insects and fungus at various levels of the process here. You can look up things like the Trophic Levels and Nutrient Cycles for more details on this whole process.

TLDR would be that the corpse floods the area with nutrients and maybe even kills off the plants with over abundance of nitrogen, but then fungus and bugs move in, then bigger bugs and small animals, and so on and then better plant systems. It’s kind of neat.

Shou@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 14:58 collapse

That’s dope! I can become compost! I hope my leftovers get used by a tree. Trees are cool.