SolveYourProblem
Hedges Article Series
I
Want To Create
The Perfect Hedge
Local
Hedge Planting: Going Native
When you chose to go native with local hedge
planting, there are many ways you will benefit besides just
having a beautiful lawn. The following paragraphs will discuss
some of the many benefits of choosing to go native with local
hedge planting as your landscape choice.
One of the greatest
advantages of going when using local hedge
planting is that this type of landscape will require very little
to no maintenance at all. Most native plants and hedges grow
well together, and usually grow to predictable sizes. Normally,
native plants and shrubbery do not require fertilization, watering,
or any chemical compounds, at all. Native plants and shrubbery
are known to adapt to their local conditions, including:
-
weather conditions
-
native
bugs
-
soil
composition
Another one of the many benefits of choosing to go native
with local hedge planting for your landscape beds is the amount
of money you will save on this type of landscaping. While the
cost of having your native plants and hedges put into your
landscape beds may be an amount higher than you would pay for
a traditional landscape bed, the cost of maintaining it will
be much less. Because native plants and hedges will effectively
take care of themselves, as stated, there will be little or
no maintenance required when you want to maintain the beauty
of your native landscape. With little or no maintenance required,
you can effectively cut the cost of hiring a professional lawn
care company for maintenance, which can save you an average
of $700 a year, according to some reports. Using your hedge
in place of a fence is also cost saving.
As well as saving you time and money, selective native shrubbery
and plants for your landscape can also aid in reducing
health concerns due to pesticides and chemical fertilizers used to
plant and maintain traditional landscape beds. Studies have
shown that suburban homes often have lawns with an average
of 10 times more chemical compounds per acre as rural areas.
When precipitation hits landscape beds, and chemically treated
lawns, a small amount of those chemicals wash into drinking
water. Water is treated with chlorine, in order to kill all
bacteria, but there are seldom tests run on drinking water,
for pesticides and fertilizers containing carcinogens and mutagens,
which can cause cancer and birth defects. Choosing native plants
and hedges for your landscape will help to eliminate these
health threats, because native plants and hedges do not require
chemical pesticides or fertilizers.
Air
pollution is also decreased when you choose to go native.
Traditional landscape maintenance often requires machinery
that will create exhaust fumes and form chemical drifts, not
to mention the noise. Lawn mowers have been proven to put off
an average of 10 times the pollution as an automobile, while
weed trimmers average about 21 times the pollution as an automobile.
Commercial leaf blowers are the worst with an average 34 times
the pollution of an automobile. Going native can eliminate
all of these tools, and help decrease air pollution.
The final benefits of going native are the benefits native
plants and shrubs hold to our native song birds. Mainly because
of loss of habitat, song birds have decreased in population
at an average rate of 7 percent per year for the last several
decades. Song birds include the species:
-
thrushes
-
grosbeaks
-
hummingbird
-
cardinals
Adopting a native landscape plan for your lawn can provide
wonderful habitats for these song birds, and help put a stop
to their rapid decline. And while providing homes for these
birds, you will be provided with the added pleasures of their
existence in your yard, as well as the music they provide.
Going native with your landscape holds so many more benefits
than choosing to be traditional. With selective native shrubbery
and plants for your landscape, you are not only benefiting
yourself, but you are also benefiting society as a whole for
several reasons, such as:
-
helping to decrease air pollution
-
providing
homes for song birds
-
helping
to decrease water pollution
On top of these benefits, when you use hedges you will save
yourself a load of time and money as opposed to building a
fence.
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