Saturday, February 7, 2026
54.5 °f
Magee
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
MageeNews.com
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Message from the Prez
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Schools
  • Videos
  • Ducks on the Pond
  • Home
  • Message from the Prez
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Schools
  • Videos
  • Ducks on the Pond
No Result
View All Result
MageeNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Happenings

Making your garden care-less!

Patrice Boykin by Patrice Boykin
May 9, 2022
in Happenings, Out & About
0
Making your garden care-less!
0
SHARES
4
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Please note that this post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward MageeNews.com a small commission – at no extra cost to you.

By:  Felder Rushing

Getting steamy, time to explore ways to reduce effort, expenses, and task-time – lose some of the “beholden” part of gardening.

Other than living in a woodland—picking through poison ivy—there is no such thing as a landscape that takes care of itself. But a little redesigning and choosing good plants for the right spots can dramatically reduce unnecessary, expensive, time consuming maintenance.

Related posts

PRIORITYONE BANK WELCOMES JENNIFER RODGERS AS VP, DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL AUDIT

PRIORITYONE BANK WELCOMES JENNIFER RODGERS AS VP, DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL AUDIT

February 6, 2026
Get Ready, Magee! Mardi Gras Is Rolling to Main Street 🎭💜💛💚

Get Ready, Magee! Mardi Gras Is Rolling to Main Street 🎭💜💛💚

February 4, 2026

Neil Odenwald, my beloved landscape professor at LSU, showed me how piling limbs and blowing leaves into neat rows to connect trees and shrubs lessened his hauling time while creating rich soil for planting ferns and other shade plants. It broke his wall-to-wall carpet of unused lawn into open pools of green connected with wide, grassy walks, while cutting his mowing time by more than fifty percent. And it all still looked good.

So last year I modified two big, necessarily open areas by covering them with materials that cost less than a new mower and now need nearly zero maintenance. One was covered with landscape fabric and topped with flat, chipped slate (could have used crushed limestone) which is weedless and easy to walk on year-round; the shaded area out back is now beautiful, practical flagstone; in both areas, sixty seconds with a leaf blower and I am done. I use smooth river rocks and metal edging strips along walks and flowerbeds to further define them and make trimming easier and neater, and to help keep grass out and mulch in.

I group all my plants, even those in containers, according to size, tolerance of sun or shade, easy maintenance, and use. Fighting the urge to personally own every flower I fancy, I rarely succumb to the allure eye-popping looks without first checking on if they will be the right size down the road, and if they will end up needing coddling, pruning, spraying, or regular replacing. If a plant in my yard becomes troublesome, or looks bad part of the year, I simply ditch it,and walk around to admire it in someone else’s garden, at their expense.

By the way, forget “plant zones” which are based entirely on average low winter temperatures; ours is the same as that of Seattle, which also gets occasional moderate freezes but cools down at night in the summer. Our plants also need to tolerate torrential rains, prolonged drought, insufferably hot muggy summer nights, and bad soils. And our inability to provide much attention in the summer.

I look for trees, shrubs, vines, groundcovers, flowers, vegetables, and even potted plants from among the countless tried and true species we understand thrive here, both native and proven imports. Find dependable, Mississippi-hardy recommendations through MSU Extension Service or my own free lists (email me via felderrushing.blog).

As for pruning, I now have only three plants that need it regularly: a round boxwood to show folks I know what to do, a holly poodled into green balls on sticks, and a crape I murder every year to get long, limber stems for my woven “wattle” fence. Takes less time than shaving. Oh, and I weed a little regularly, not all in one big huff.

A huge biggee: Stop struggling for a perfect lawn; just mow what grows, enjoy a little clover. If a HOA forces you into expensive, environmentally unfriendly chores, just hire it out.

Bottom lines, other than not starting and getting disheartened over half a dozen or more unfinished projects going at once: Less grass, mow what grows, lose plants that need coddling, group and mulch the rest in interesting combinations.

Making your garden care-less, can help you enjoy more.

 

Felder Rushing is a Mississippi author, columnist, and host of the “Gestalt Gardener” on MPB Think Radio. Email gardening questions to rushingfelder@yahoo.com.

MageeNews.com is an online news source serving Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi.

 

 

Tags: gardenless workMageeNews.com
Previous Post

Share Jesus

Next Post

Jones College celebrates retiring 2022 employees

Next Post
Jones College celebrates retiring 2022 employees

Jones College celebrates retiring 2022 employees

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest News

by Sue Honea
February 6, 2026
0
Senator Andy Berry Weekly Report (January 24, 2025)

  MageeNews.com is the online news source for Simpson and the surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi....

Read moreDetails

Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Diagnosed in Mississippi Poultry Flock

by Sue Honea
February 6, 2026
0
McDonald’s has a big chicken problem

  JACKSON, Miss. – The Mississippi Board of Animal Health (MBAH) has been notified by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National...

Read moreDetails

Be grateful for the joy in your life.

by Sue Honea
February 6, 2026
0
Be thankful.  By Sharon Womack

Be grateful for the joy in your life. Be grateful for your spouse/boyfriend/girlfriend - there are many who would love...

Read moreDetails
Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS Instagram
MageeNews.com

MageeNews.com is THE source for news and views in Simpson County, Mississippi, and beyond.

Recent News

Senator Andy Berry Weekly Report (January 24, 2025)

February 6, 2026
McDonald’s has a big chicken problem

Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Diagnosed in Mississippi Poultry Flock

February 6, 2026
Be thankful.  By Sharon Womack

Be grateful for the joy in your life.

February 6, 2026
Magee, US
Saturday, February 7, 2026
scattered clouds
54.5 ° f
45%
3.47mh
25%
66 f 45 f
Wed
68 f 40 f
Thu
71 f 44 f
Fri
75 f 46 f
Sat

© 2023 MageeNews.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Sue Stuff
  • News
  • Happenings
  • Schools
  • Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Ducks on the Pond
  • Videos

© 2023 MageeNews.com