02 June 2023

Introducing "No Mow May" - and a year 2 update


The "No Mow May" movement began in the U.K. in 2019.  I first encountered the concept in a New York Times article in 2022, reporting on a No Mow May program in Appleton Wisconsin.
Appleton, some 200 miles north of Chicago, is a small college city nestled on the shores of the meandering Fox River. Two assistant professors at a local liberal arts college, Dr. Israel Del Toro and Dr. Relena Ribbons of Lawrence University, knew that No Mow May was popular in Britain. They wondered if the initiative might take root here, too.

They began working with the Appleton Common Council, and, in 2020, Appleton became the first city in the United States to adopt No Mow May, with 435 homes registering to take part...

Dr. Del Toro and Dr. Ribbons studied the impacts of No Mow May on Appleton’s bees. They found that No Mow May lawns had five times the number of bees and three times the bee species than did mown parks. Armed with this information, they asked other communities to participate.

By 2021, a dozen communities across Wisconsin had adopted No Mow May. It also spread to communities in Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois and Montana.

I learned about No Mow May in the fall of 2020 when I was looking to make my own yard more friendly to bees. The following spring, I helped organize No Mow May in Shorewood Hills, Wis., where I live. When I realized how quickly the movement was spreading, I started photographing it across Wisconsin...

Not everyone appreciated the unmown lawns. Allison Roberts, a resident of Prairie du Chien, Wis., participated in No Mow May even though her city hadn’t adopted it. After a few weeks, she awoke from a nap to find police officers pounding on her door.

“Apparently, they were here to ensure I was not dead,” she said.

Nor were her neighbors happy with her shaggy lawn. One of them, unable to stand the sight of it, eventually mowed it without her permission.
The concept was embraced by the Madison suburb of Verona last year.
"Such rules don’t mandate that you let your weeds and grass go shaggy in May, but municipalities simply won’t punish residents who choose to let their lawns go. By June 1, enforcement of lawn length generally resumes, and residents will be required to keep those lawns nice and tidy once again."
In England, a variety of rare plants popped up in some residents' yards:
People who chose not to mow were rewarded with rare plants. More than 250 wild plant species were recorded by gardeners last year, including wild strawberry, wild garlic and very rare plants including adder’s-tongue fern, meadow saxifrage, snakeshead fritillary and eyebright. Many orchids were also seen, including the declining ​man orchid, green-winged orchid, southern and northern marsh orchid and bee orchid.
The StarTribune reports the concept is widespread in Minnesota:
In addition to Edina, Monticello, Vadnais Heights and New Brighton are among the Minnesota cities participating in No Mow May for the first time. Those municipalities will not enforce city codes that restrict lawns from exceeding a maximum turf length (10 inches in Edina and Vadnais Heights, 8 inches in Monticello and New Brighton) during the month of May... ""The best part about it is it doesn't cost anything to do it and it makes such a big difference."
The Arboretum here at the University of Wisconsin in Madison notes that dandelions play a beneficial role in the health of lawn turf:
Dandelion (Taxaracum officinale) is native to Eurasia and naturalized throughout most of North America. The flowers are visited by many pollinators and are an important nectar source early in the season when few other flowers are blooming. Their deep taproots help to loosen and aerate soil as well as pull nutrients like calcium from deep in the soil, which makes the nutrients available to other plants once dandelion leaves decompose. Several bird species also eat dandelion flowers, buds, and seeds.
I found the two embedded lawn sign images online, and since they don't appear to be copyrighted, I took the liberty of printing them out.  Tomorrow I'll attach them to a lawn sign in our front yard to let our neighbors know why the grass is getting long.  And I'll try to update this post from time to time to show what the lawn looks like and how the local bee population is doing.


Addendum May 17:
We are now halfway through the no-mow month, so I thought I'd append a few pix to show how things are going.  Our south-facing front yard has clearly grown past the normal mow height, but doesn't look particularly shabby -


The sign is out by the road to inform passers-by, but to the casual viewer, it looks like a lazy person's home.  There is one clump of post-blossom daffodil leaves (intentionally planted there years ago) and a smattering of dandelions, plus some smaller weeds that I'll inventory toward the end of the month.  One no-mow neighbor has a greater abundance of dandelions -


- and on another unmown lawn the dandelions are almost confluent:


One difference may be that in previous years I have routinely added a commercial "weed and feed" application once or twice a year to eliminate broad-leaf plants like creeping charlie.  The flora is a bit different in the north-facing semishaded back lawn, where violets are appearing -


- along with ajuga and creeping charlie.   More info in a week or two.

Addendum and closure:

More violets.  Wisconsin has fourteen species of native violets, and while they are certainly lovely and beneficial to pollinators, some varieties are extremely aggressive; we have to extirpate them from some flower beds, where they crowd out other plantings.


Milkweeds always have shown up in our lawn because we have them in the flower beds, and the rhizomes extend outward in every direction.  Normally these spikes succumb to mowing; this year they get a reprieve of a few weeks.


This is the front lawn on May 23, after three weeks of not being mowed.  Shaggy, but not overtly offensive to the more conventional neighbors.


In contrast, this lawn that I drove past elsewhere in town is dominated by dandelions going to seed.  We have dandelions too, but when the yellow blossoms close, we walk around and "deadhead" the plants, pulling off what would become the seedhead,  because our goal is to feed the pollinators, not the fructivores eating seeds.


So as May came to a close we had lots of the usual clover -


- plus a variety of smaller "weeds" whose names I haven't taken time to look up:



The "escaped" milkweeds have not been of benefit to pollinators because they blossom in late June.  But they have been there for the arriving Monarchs, so the day before the neighbor teen came over to mow, we harvested all these milkweed to look for Monarch eggs and early instars. 


One of our next-door neighbors also had opted to pursue a no-mow policy in May.
For those worried about how to mow grass that is over a foot tall, I'll point out that the blades of grass are still only maybe 3-5" tall.  What towers above them is the seedhead on a tall thin spike.  At this point the seeds were not mature enough to actually fall and overseed the lawn, and those seedheads are no impediment to a standard home power mower.


The main front yard.  I don't consider it unattractive, though it is obviously unconventional.  I enjoyed being outside working on a windy day and watching the "amber fields of grain" waving in the wind.  


After mowing, June 6.  Back to a standard suburban cookie-cutter boring monoculture of grass.  No worse for the experiment, and if anything the grass seems to me to be a bit more lush


We'll be doing this again next year.   I encourage others to do the same.

Update 2023
One significant change since last year is that our city has passed an ordinance encouraging the "No Mow May" concept.  Participants can obtain a yard sign -


- which explains to passers-by why the lawn looks unkempt, adding the option of "low-mow" (infrequent mowing) for those squeamish about the untidiness.


In deference to my own neighbors, I was vigorous this year in deadheading dandelions when the yellow blooms changed to white; that means a lot of stooping over while walking the yard, plucking those seedheads before they open, and putting them in a waste container -


- where they pop open wondering where the wind is.  The contrast between our lawn and the one next door is most evident in the height of the grass in the last week of May -


- but the important feature is the scattering of "weeds", which this year I decided to document.  

I'll take a moment here to offer the highest praise possible for a phone app called "Seek," from iNaturalist.  It is an absolutely superb image-recognition program that allows you to point your phone at plants, insects, mammals, fish, fungi, arachnids, birds etc etc and get an instant identification.  I needed it for all the little ground-hugging "weeds"  that I've never learned to properly identify.

This is the Ajuga reptans ("Carpet Bugle") that is "invading" our lawn:


We had it in a part of our garden and it moved out on its own and we love to see it spread.  For most of the year it is a low-lying ground cover with green/russet leaves, but in the spring it pops up this inflorescence that the bumblebees love.  We mow around it in the spring, then mow over it for the rest of the year.

I mentioned the White clover (Trifolium repens) last year:


What's not to like about clover in a lawn?  Most homeowners obliterate it with the application of broad-spectrum broad-leaf herbicides, but it requires less water (via a deep root system that helps aerate the lawn), needs no fertilizer, and as a legume it adds nitrogen to the soil.  I'm seriously considering seeding additional clover into some portions of our yard.  

I do understand that some homeowners hate Creeping Charlie (Glechoma hederacea):


In previous years I have poisoned it and pulled it by hand, but up close it's really an attractive little plant that thrives in the wet shady parts of the lawn that the grass doesn't like anyway.   Same withe the Mouse-ear chickweed (Cerastium fontanum) -


- and the Black Medick (Medicago lupulina) -


- which is a variety of clover.  AFAIK, it's main "offense" is that it isn't grass.

The other "weeds" I documented in the grassy part of the yard this year included Wormseed Wallflower, Lesser periwinkle, Corn speedwell, Bird's-foot Violet, and Bitter Wintercress.  

I'll close with a relevant quotation from A. A. Milne:  "Weeds are flowers, too, once you get to know them."

The lawn has now been mowed.  It looks a bit ragged, but will "normalize" to the view of passers-by as the summer proceeds.  

25 comments:

  1. Even better, get rid of the lawn. When we moved into our house in 2013, we dug up the lawn and dumped on truckfuls of woodchips, then started planting perennials as well as annual flowers. The bees (and other critters) love our salvias, penstemons, artichokes, etc.

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  2. I love the sign! I think even my lawn perfectionist neighbors would be ok with a month of shaggy lawn if they knew it was for an environmental reason and would not last all summer. Thanks for sharing! - Ohioan

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  3. I went "no mow" at the beginning of the pandemic. It was wonderful. Almost waist high and one day a turkey decided to take a nap in the middle of it. My wife was concerned about the neighbors and fire hazard so I eventually did mow it. I aspire to make the yard a meadow.

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  4. i am not cutting parts of my lawn this year because i want to see a hayfield, swaying in the breeze, when i get home in the evening.

    I-)

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  5. And when you mow, cut at like 2.5" and don't pretend you're a golf course.

    Furthermore, it would be nice if lawns were just not as encouraged. HOAs should not be allowed to mandate them, and garden design should move much, much more towards local flora and away from invasive species. Garden Centers and big box stores should be encouraged to offer much more local flora. There are so many local flowers, plants and trees that are beautiful, but they're so hard to get.

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  6. Wonderful idea!! I’ll be sharing this with our STRATA.

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  7. If all the bees are in your garden who pollinates the farm?

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    Replies
    1. More habitat = more bees. Especially encouraging native bees.

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  8. This is a great idea ~ but our HOA would have a hissy fit!

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  9. We are participating just north of Chicago. I saw my first bee yesterday! We put in a small section of prairie last fall and will be putting in in a couple more patches this weekend! Appreciate the post and the yard signs!

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  10. oops. I accidentally deleted someone's very nice comment about Lyme in yards. If you want to rewrite it, I'll ok it. sorry.

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  11. Thanks for the many interesting diversions! Re: mowing, what happens to the tick population? I've been more or less successfully managing my Lyme's symptoms for over a decade now with a no-sugar no-yeast diet (rather than drugs), but I reluctantly mow play areas and around garden beds to reduce the chance of the opportunistic buggers attaching themselves to my grandkids. Fortunately, there is plenty of edge for the pollinators here in my rural piece of heaven in NE Pennsylvania, but perhaps urban and suburban yards don't have enough space to provide a buffer from tick zones? I'd rather mow than spray a 'deterrent' on clothes or kids. (poison IS poison, afterall...)

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  12. Nice violets! They look very tall?

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  13. The deer tick is linked to a new tick-borne disease called the Powassan virus.

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  14. The other side - after mowing tall grass, birds (and dragonflies) come to eat the insects that have been living on the ground, hidden by the tall grass, and who are now exposed.

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  15. Walking or driving through the neighborhood, are you normally looking at lawns? No, you look at the houses, outbuildings, flower beds, gardens, cars in the driveway, garden gnomes, bird feeders, because the green 2” high lawn is boring. Might as well be astroturf. Yet we spend billions of dollars and billions of man hours maintaining those boring yards that we do nothing with except labor. What a damn waste.
    Got ticks? a couple chickens will clear that up.
    But what about winter? Eat the chickens.

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  16. On the portions of my lawn that I have not mowed this year, the stalks of my 'amber waves of grain' are turning golden yellow and the seeds are turning reddish. I am tempted to collect the grass seeds (maybe next week) to use for reseeding?

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    Replies
    1. Maybe. I don't know. I asked Mr. Google and found pros and cons -

      https://takeayard.com/reseeding-lawns/

      https://homeguides.sfgate.com/seed-lawn-letting-grass-grow-46697.html

      https://www.naturesseed.com/blog/should-you-ever-let-your-lawn-go-to-seed/

      https://www.wrightmfg.com/articles/three-dangers-of-letting-lawns-go-to-seed/

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    2. Thanks for those links!

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  17. After letting everything grow for all of May, I discovered a huge patch of woodland strawberries at the very back of my property. Hundreds of plants. I've let them grow and now there are tons of pencil-eraser sized strawberries peeking out! I have seen more finches and, of course, rabbits. The ticks this year were especially bad. My dog was a magnet.

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  18. " ... looks like a lazy person's home"

    I have always thought people who - often weekly - trim their grass, are anal and controlling, and heavily invested in living up to a herd mentality while delighting in their ticky tacky, monotone, Stepford Wives type, suburban life.

    But then I still wear odd coloured socks at my advanced age.

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    Replies
    1. Couldn't just be that they like the look of a freshly mowed lawn?

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  19. > that some homeowners hate Creeping Charlie

    For one, the flowers stink. It takes over and kills off other grasses / plants. But, bumblebees seem to like it?

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  20. We had clover, dandelions and creeping charlie in the front. In the back, wood strawberries, clover, thistle, dandelions and a bunch of yet unidentified plants. Beginning last year, I leave a small un-mowed patch in the back. Approximately a 3x5 area. Interesting to see what will come up. Thanks for recommending the SEEK app. I will check it out.

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  21. The thought that I might be punished by the authorities because I do not mow my lawn as regularly as they consider desirable is very strange to me. But then I do not live in the "land of the free".

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