this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
283 points (99.6% liked)
Wholesome
763 readers
64 users here now
We’re here to help you have a better day! For all wholesome and heartwarming content including memes, news stories, etc.
We chose Reddthat specifically because no downvotes are allowed. Negative comments will be removed.
Please see our twinned community for more wholesome joy...
!dadforaminute@lemmy.world !superbowl@lemmy.world
Rules:
- Be wholesome. Trolling, passive aggressive, nasty comments aren't allowed.
- No politics. It's not wholesome.
- Don't hate on ANY groups. Racist, transphobic, ableist etc comments aren't allowed.
Positive Communities of Lemmy:
- !goodnewseveryone@piefed.social
- !motivationalmemes@reddthat.com
- !OptimistsUnite@reddthat.com
- !positivity@lemmy.today
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Clover in grass should be the norm, and it was the norm till broadleaf herbicide became the new one. Because it also kills clover.
You shouldn't be spraying herbicide on your lawn, and if you're not there's no reason not to have clover.
It'll grow with the grass, and since it can pull nitrogen out of the air, in areas with poor soil, the clover becomes dense and accumulates nitrogen. Once the soil improves the grass comes back in.
As a huge bonus, clover "learns" the level you mow at. After so long it will just stop growing higher. If a patch is all clover you might only have to mow it a couple times a year.
And you'll start seeing a shit ton of bees, lightning bugs, and all types of insects people always complain disappeared.
Putting clover out is a very small thing that has huge benefits. But people still aren't really doing it.
Good to know, will bear this in mind